Cloris Leachman (born April 30, 1926) is an American actress and comedian. In his career for more than seven decades he has won eight Primetime Emmy Awards (record tied with Julia Louis-Dreyfus), Daytime Emmy Award, and Academy Award for his role in The Last Picture Show (1971).
As Miss Chicago Leachman competed in the 20th Miss America contest and was placed in the Top 16 in 1946. Leachman's longest running role was a nosy and cunning owner, Phyllis Lindstrom on CBS sitcom The Mary Tyler Moore Show and its spin-off, Phyllis , in the 1970s.
He also appeared in three Mel Brooks films, including Young Frankenstein (1974), starring as Beverly Ann Stickle in the NBC sitcom 'The Facts of Life' from 1986-1988, and appeared to be Daisy May Moses at The Beverly Hillbillies (1993).
In the 2000s, Leachman had a recurring role as Grandma Ida on Fox's sitcom, Malcolm in Middle, and appeared as a roaster on Comedy Central Roast of Bob Saget in 2008. He was a contestant in the seventh season of ABC's reality competition series "Dancing with the Stars" in 2008, paired with Corky Ballas. He was 82 at the time and was the oldest contestant to dance in the series. From 2010 to 2014, she starred as Maw Maw on Fox sitcom Raising Hope . He is currently playing the role of Zorya Vechernyaya on the Starz drama American Gods .
Video Cloris Leachman
Kehidupan awal
Leachman was born in Des Moines, Iowa, the eldest of three siblings. He attended Theodore Roosevelt High School. His parents were Berkeley Claiborne "Buck" Leachman (1903-1956), who worked at the family Leachman Lumber Company, and Cloris (nÃÆ' à © e Wallace; 1901-1967).
The youngest sister, Mary, is not in the show business. Middle sister Claiborne Cary (1932-2010) is an actress and singer. The maternal grandmother is a Bohemian (Czech) descendant.
As a teenager, Leachman appeared in a drama by local youth at the weekend at Drake University in Des Moines. After graduating from high school, he enrolled at Illinois State University to study drama, and later, University of Northwestern, where he became a member of Gamma Phi Beta and classmate future comic actor Paul Lynde. He began appearing on television and movies soon after competing in Miss America in 1946.
Maps Cloris Leachman
Careers
Initial career
After winning a scholarship in the Miss America contest in the Top 16, Leachman studied acting under Elia Kazan at Actors Studio in New York City. He served as a substitute for the role of Nellie Forbush during Rodgers and Hammerstein's original South Pacific escape. A few years later, he appeared in the production of William Inge's Broadway, Come Back, Little Sheba, but left the show before reaching Broadway when Katharine Hepburn asked her to become a star in William Shakespeare's As You Like It.
Leachman appeared on many live television broadcasts in the 1950s, including programs like Suspense and Studio One . He made his feature film debut in addition to Carnegie Hall (1947), but had his first real role in the classic Robert Aldrich noir Kiss Me Deadly , released in 1955 Leachman was pregnant for several months during filming, and appeared in a scene on a dark highway wearing only a trench coat. A year later, he appeared before Paul Newman and Lee Marvin at The Rack (1956). He appeared with Newman again in short roles at Butch Cassidy and Sundance Kid (1969).
He continues to work primarily on television, with appearances on Rawhide and in the episode of The Twilight Zone It's a Good Life and the sequel "It's Still A Good Life" in the series revival UPN 2002-2003. During this period, Leachman appeared opposite John Forsythe on the popular anthology of Alfred Hitchcock Presents in an episode titled "Premonition". He later appeared as Ruth Martin, the adoptive mother of Timmy Martin, in the last half of the fourth season (1957) of Lassie . Jon Provost, who plays Timmy, said, "Cloris does not feel challenged by that role, basically, when he realizes that everything he does is baking a cake, he wants to get out." He was replaced by June Lockhart in 1958.
That same year, she appeared in an episode of One Step Beyond titled "The Dark Room", where she described an American photographer living in Paris. In 1960, he played Marilyn Parker, Janice Rule's roommate character, Elena Nardos, in The Mask of Vengeance's "Checkmate" episode. In 1966, he became a guest star on Perry Mason as Gloria Shine in the "Crafty Kidnappers Case". In the late 1970s, Leachman starred in an episode of the Girl as Don Hollinger's sister, Sandy.
Awards
Leachman won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her performance at The Last Picture Show (1971), based on bestseller book by Larry McMurtry. She plays an abandoned wife of a high school gym teacher, with whom Timothy Bottoms' character has an affair. Director Peter Bogdanovich had predicted during production that he would win an Academy Award for his performance. The section was originally offered to Ellen Burstyn, but Burstyn wanted another role in the film.
Leachman also won a record of eight Primetime and one Daytime Emmy Awards and has been nominated more than 20 times, primarily to play Phyllis Lindstrom on The Mary Tyler Moore Show . Lindstrom was a recurring character on the program for five years and was later featured in the spin-off series, Phyllis (1975-1977), which Leachman won the Golden Globe Award. The series lasts for two seasons. The cancellation was in part due to the death of three regular cast members or recurring in the short term: Barbara Colby (mysteriously murdered in the Los Angeles park), and Judith Lowry and Burt Mustin (who played a newly married couple at the event); both in their 80s and died of natural causes).
In 1977, he became a guest star on The Muppet Show, episode 2.24. In 1978, he won the Sarah Siddons Award for his work in the Chicago theater. In 1987, he hosted the VHS launch of Schoolhouse Rock! and depicts the evil wizard Griselda for the production of Disney Cannon Tales Hansel and Gretel . In 1986, he returned to television, replacing the character of Charlotte Rae, Edna Garrett as a mother who resided on The Facts of Life. Leachman's role as Edna's sister, Beverly Ann Stickle, could not save the long-running series, and it was canceled two years later.
She has a voice-acting in a variety of animated films, including My Little Pony: The Movie (as the devil's witch's mother from Gloom Volcano), A Troll in Central Park (as Queen Gnorga), Iron Giant , GenÃ,ùÃ,ó , and especially as the sound of the Dola sky pirate in features of Hayao Miyazaki 1986 Castle in the Sky . Dubbed by Disney in 1998, Leachman's performance in the film received almost unanimous praise. Leachman plays grief, greedy, Canadian Slavs "Grandma Ida" on the Fox sitcom of Central Malcolm, where she won two Emmy Awards for Extraordinary Guest Actress in Comedy Series (in 2002 and 2006). She was nominated to play the character for six consecutive years. The win marks four decades in a row with the Emmy Primetime Awards for acting, since the 1970s.
Then television credits include the successful Lifetime Television miniseries Beach Girls with Rob Lowe and Julia Ormond. Leachman was nominated for the SAG Award for his role as a former wine jazz singer and grandmother Evelyn in the Sony Spanglish features opposite Adam Sandler and TÃÆ'à © a Leoni. He has replaced the sick Anne Bancroft in that role. The film reunites it with writer, producer and director James L. Brooks. That same year, she appeared with Sandler again in the remake of The Longest Yard. She also appeared in the Kurt Russell Sky High comedy as a school nurse with an X-ray vision. In 2005, she guested as a neighbor to Charlie Harper, Norma in an episode (# 3.9, "Madame and Her Special Friend") of Two and a Half Men .
In 2006, Leachman's performance with Sir Ben Kingsley and Annette Bening at HBO specials. Harris earned her an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Actress in a Mini Serial or TV Movie and a SAG Award nomination for an Extraordinary Appearance by a Female Actor in a Television Movie or Serial Mini. On May 14, 2006, he was awarded an honorary doctorate in fine arts from Drake University.
Leachman was inducted into the Hall of Fame Television Academy in 2011. That same year, he was ranked # 23 on the TV Guide Network specifically for Cute Women on TV.
On June 20, 2014, Leachman received an honorary degree from his alma mater, Northwestern University.
In 2017, he received the PETA Lifetime Achievement Award for his dedication to animal rights issues.
Mel Brooks
Leachman appeared in three Mel Brooks films, including Young Frankenstein (1974), which only mentions his character's name, Frau BlÃÆ'ücher, raises a harsh brusque horse (this is a tribute to the cinematic stereotype of the villain). Leachman tells Brooks that BlÃÆ'ücher is German for "glue", though not), High Anxiety (1977) as crazy villain and psychiatrist Charlotte Diesel, and Madame Defarge in World History: Section I .
In 1989, Leachman starred in the short NBC short comedy at Brooks The Nutt House in a double role as the head of the housekeeper's hotel. Frick (a variation of the Frau BlÃÆ'ücher character) and Mrs Nutt, the senile owner of the hotel (which is shown only in a two-part pilot).
She auditioned to revive her role from Young Frankenstein in the 2007 Broadway production as opposed to Megan Mullally (who replaced Kristin Chenoweth) and Roger Bart. However, Andrea Martin actually acted instead. Brooks said that Leachman, 81, was too old for the role. "We do not want him dead on stage," he told Army Archerd columnist, a statement that left Leachman offended. However, due to Leachman's success on Dancing with the Stars, Brooks reportedly asked him to re-portray his role as Frau BlÃÆ'ücher in the production of Broadway Young Frankenstein after the departure of Beth Leavel. , who had replaced Martin. Broadway production shut down before this could happen.
Dancing with the Stars
Leachman was a contestant in the seventh season of Dancing with the Stars , paired with Corky Ballas, the oldest of the professionals and the father of two-time champion Mark Ballas. Leachman is the oldest person to compete in the event to date.
Existing projects
Leachman plays the role of Memaw in the movie I Can Only Imagine , which tells the story behind the song by the same name by MercyMe.
Personal life
From 1953 to 1979, Leachman married the Hollywood impresario, George Englund. His ex-mother-in-law is character actress Mabel Albertson. The marriage resulted in five children, four sons and one daughter: Bryan (died 1986), Morgan, Adam, Dinah, and George. Some of them are in show business. His son Morgan played Dylan on Light Guiding during the 1980s and early 1990s.
The Englund people were Bel Air's neighbors from Judy Garland and Sid Luft, and their sons, Lorna and Joey Luft, in the early 1960s. Lorna Luft states in his memoirs of Me and My Shadows: A Family Memoir that Leachman is "the type of mother I only see on TV". Knowing the turmoil at Garland's house but never mentioning it, Leachman prepares food for the children and makes them feel welcomed when they need a place to stay.
Leachman was also a friend of Marlon Brando, whom he met while studying under Elia Kazan in the 1950s. She introduced her to her husband, who was close to Brando as well, directed her at The Ugly American and wrote a memoir about their friendship called Marlon Brando: The Way It Never Been Done Before (2005).
In a parody of the cover of the famous magazine cover of Vanity Fair Demi Moore, Leachman filed au naturel on the cover of Alternative Medicine Digest in 1997, painted with a picture of the fruit. A vegetarian, he also posed only wearing lettuce for the 2009 PETA ad. He starred in comedy 2013 and neutral comedy for PETA, unfolding a condom with his teeth.
Leachman describes himself as an atheist, asserting that mythology associated with traditional religion is man-made.
His autobiography Cloris: My Autobiography was published in March 2009. He wrote bestsellers with Englund, his ex-husband.
Leachman's grandson, Anabel Englund, is a singer. Besides Anabel, Leachman has five other grandchildren - Portia, Skye, Arielle, Jackson, and Hallelujah - and one great-grandson, Braden.
Movieography
Awards
See also
- List of vegetarians
References
External links
- Cloris Leachman on Twitter
- Cloris Leachman on IMDb
- Cloris Leachman in the TCM Movie Database
- Cloris Leachman on Broadway Internet Database
- Gross, Terry (3 June 2009). "Interview" (streaming audio) . Fresh Air . NPR.
Source of the article : Wikipedia