Everything about Linda Lavin totally explained
Linda Lavin (born
October 15,
1937) is an American singer and
Tony Award and
Golden Globe Award-winning stage, film and television actress. She is perhaps best known for playing the title character in the US
sitcom Alice and for her
Broadway performances.
Biography
Early career
Born in
Portland, Maine to musically-talented parents, Lavin has been onstage since the age of 5. Upon her graduation from the
College of William and Mary she'd already received her
Actors' Equity Association card. She was a member of the Compass Players in the late 1950s. By the early
1960s Lavin made a name for herself in
New York City on
Broadway and appeared on the (both 1966)
cast recordings of
The Mad Show (on which her performance of Stephen Sondheim's "
The Boy From..." gained note) and
"It's a Bird...It's a Plane...It's Superman" (from which one of her numbers, "You've Got Possibilities," was the album's best-received song and, years later, was featured on a
Pillsbury commercial).
Career
Hollywood
In 1967, Lavin made an appearance as Gloria Thorpe in a television version of the
musical Damn Yankees with
Phil Silvers. In 1969, Lavin married actor
Ron Leibman, and by 1973 the couple had arrived in
Hollywood.
After various guest appearances on episodic television series such as
The Nurses,
Rhoda,
Harry O and
Kaz, Lavin landed a recurring role on
Barney Miller during the first and second seasons. She left
Barney Miller to star in the lead role in
Alice. The show was a popular hit for
CBS, and ran from 1976 to 1985. The series was based on the
Martin Scorsese-directed
Ellen Burstyn film
Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore. Lavin portrayed
Alice Hyatt, the character that Burstyn played, and won an Oscar for. Lavin performed the series' theme song, "There's a New Girl in Town," which was written by
David Shire and
Alan and
Marilyn Bergman and was updated for each of the first six seasons.
(External Link
) During the series' nine-season run, Lavin earned two
Golden Globe awards and an
Emmy nomination, as well as a great deal of experience directing, especially during the later seasons. Lavin also played
Debbie Walden, the wizened and former landlady of character,
Vera Louise Gorman-Novak, with whom she moved into their house, with Vera, her husband,
Elliott and the pastor who married them.
Throughout her
Alice years, Lavin was at one time the highest-paid actress on television. She made numerous television appearances outside of her sitcom, including hosting her own holiday special,
Linda in Wonderland.
Lavin made her feature film debut in
The Muppets Take Manhattan (1984). Her only other feature film appearances are in
See You in the Morning starring
Jeff Bridges and
Alain Resnais'
I Want to Go Home opposite
Gerard Depardieu. Both films were released in 1989.
Lavin was a popular actress of not only television shows but also
telefilms. The number of telefilms Lavin has to her name include:
Damn Yankees!,
Sadbird,
The Morning After,
Jerry,
Like Mom, Like Me,
The $5.20 an Hour Dream,
A Matter of Life and Death,
Another Woman's Child,
Maricela,
Lena: My 100 Children,
Whitewash,
A Dream is a Wish Your Heart Makes: The Annette Funicello Story,
Stolen Memories: Secrets from the Rose Garden,
For the Future: The Irvine Fertility Scandal,
The Ring, and
Best Friends for Life. These were first aired between 1967 and 1998.
She directed the 1990 telefilm
Flour Babies, and also directed theater, with her experiences from directing later
Alice episodes. She acted in two sitcoms (1992's
Room for Two and 1998's
Conrad Bloom), and made numerous television guest appearances (including roles on,
The O.C.,
Touched by an Angel and
HBO's
The Sopranos).
Theatre
Lavin began her career with
Broadway appearances in the musicals
A Family Affair and
On a Clear Day You Can See Forever, and plays such as
Something Different,
The Riot Act, and
Cop-Out. Lavin first gained major notice for her appearance in the musical
It's a Bird...It's a Plane...It's Superman!.
In her early years, Lavin also appeared in numerous
off-Broadway productions, including
Wet Paint,
Little Murders, and the musical
The Mad Show. Lavin won a
Drama Desk Award for
Little Murders, and the
Theatre World Award for
Wet Paint.
After her years on television, Lavin returned to the New York stage, where she appeared on the Broadway stage in shows such as
The Sisters Rosenweig,
Hollywood Arms, and
Gypsy, among many others.
June Havoc saw Lavin's performance as Rose Hovick in
Gypsy, and sent Lavin a photo of Havoc's mother, the real Rose Hovick, with a note of appreciation for Lavin's particular portrayal of Mama Rose.
(External Link
)
She won a
Tony Award in 1987 for her highly-praised role in
Neil Simon's play
Broadway Bound. Her memorable scene where she describes her chance meeting with movie star
George Raft, whom she gets to dance with, was one of the play's many highlights. Her first Tony nomination was for another Neil Simon play,
Last of the Red Hot Lovers, in 1970.
Last of the Red Hot Lovers was one of Lavin's last Broadway credits before she moved to
Hollywood.
She was also nominated for Tonys for her work in
The Diary of Anne Frank, in which she played Mrs. Van Daan, opposite
Natalie Portman; and for
Charles Busch's
The Tale of the Allergist's Wife co-starring
Tony Roberts and
Michele Lee.
In 1987, Lavin also won her second
Drama Desk Award for
Broadway Bound. She received Drama Desk nominations for her subsequent roles in
The Diary of Anne Frank and
The Tale of the Allergist's Wife. She also earned a Drama Desk nomination for her role in
Death-Defying Acts, an off-Broadway play for which she also won a Best Actress
Obie Award and the
Lucille Lortel Award.
Lavin appeared as Ruth Steiner in the play
Collected Stories, and reprised her role for a
PBS production of the work, and in 1997, Lavin founded The Linda Lavin Foundation in
Wilmington, North Carolina, which focuses upon eleven- to fourteen-year-old girls.
In Wilmington, she often directs for the stage. One of her directorial credits there's an innovative 1998 production of
William Shakespeare's
As You Like It performed in a
Brazilian
jazz style.
Lavin also has taught master classes for
New York University's Performing Arts Division.
Personal life
Lavin has been married three times. Her first marriage to Ron Liebman ended in divorce in 1981. Her second marriage to Kip Niven, who played the boyfriend of
Beth Howland's character,
Vera, ended in divorce in 1991. While Lavin has no biological children, she's the stepmother to Kip's children Jim and Kate Niven and the grandmother to Jim's sons Grayson and Talen.
Lavin later married actor, artist and musician Steve Bakunas in 2005. The couple resides in
Wilmington, North Carolina where they're committed community members working together to rehabilitate impoverished neighborhoods including renovating many homes, donating a park to the city and creating a community theater.
Work
Filmography
- The Sopranos: "No Show" 2002
- Collected Stories, 2002 (filmed play)
- Best Friends for Life, 1998
- Conrad Bloom, 1998 (sitcom)
- For the Future, 1996
- The Ring, 1996
- Secrets from the Rose Garden, 1996
- A Dream is a Wish Your Heart Makes
- Whitewash, 1994
- Room for Two, 1992 (sitcom)
- See You in the Morning, 1989
- I Want to Go Home, 1989
- A Place to Call Home, 1987
- Maricella, 1986
- The Muppets Take Manhattan, 1984
- Another Woman's Child, 1983
- My 100 Children, 1983
- A Matter of Life and Death, 1981
- The $5.20 an Hour Dream, 1980
- Like Mom, Like Me, 1978
- Alice, 1976 (sitcom)
- Barney Miller, 1975 (dramedy)
- Jerry, 1974
- The Morning After, 1974
- Damn Yankees, 1967
Stage
Hollywood Arms by Carol Burnett, 2002
The Tale of the Allergist's Wife by Charles Busch, 2000-2001
The Diary of Anne Frank
Cakewalk, 1996 (off-Broadway)
Death Defying Acts, 1995
The Sisters Rosenwieg, 1993
Gypsy, 1990
Broadway Bound, 1986-1987
The Enemy is Dead, 1973
Paul Sills' Story Theater, 1970
The Last of the Red Hot Lovers, 1969-1970
Cop-Out, 1969
Little Murders,
Something Different, 1967
On a Clear Day You Can See Forever, 1967
The Mad Show, 1966 (off-Broadway)
"It's a Bird...It's a Plane...It's Superman" 1966
Wet Paint, 1964-1965
The Riot Act, 1963
A Family Affair
Further Information
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