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Linda Lavin

American actress and singer (1937–2024)

Linda Lavin

Summary

American actress and singer (1937–2024)

FieldValue
nameLinda Lavin
imageLinda Lavin in Wet Paint 1965 (cropped).jpg
captionLavin in a publicity photo in 1965
birth_date
birth_placePortland, Maine, U.S.
death_date
death_placeLos Angeles, California, U.S.
educationCollege of William & Mary
HB Studio
known_forAlice
Broadway Bound
Barney Miller
occupation
awardsAmerican Theater Hall of Fame
years_active1958–2024
spouse{{plainlist
* {{marriageRon Leibman19691981enddivorced}}
* {{marriageKip Niven19821992enddivorced}}

HB Studio Broadway Bound Barney Miller

Linda Lavin (; October 15, 1937 – December 29, 2024) was an American actress and singer. Known for her roles on stage and screen, she received several awards including three Drama Desk Awards, two Golden Globe Awards, two Obie Awards, and a Tony Award, as well as nominations for a Daytime Emmy Award and a Primetime Emmy Award. She was inducted into the American Theater Hall of Fame in 2010.

After acting as a child, Lavin joined the Compass Players in the late 1950s. She made her television debut in Rhoda and had a recurring role in Barney Miller (1975–1976). She gained fame for playing the title role of a waitress at a roadside diner in the CBS sitcom Alice (1976–1985), a role for which she was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series and won two consecutive Golden Globe Awards for Best Actress in a Television Series – Musical or Comedy. She later starred in NBC's sitcom Sean Saves the World and the CBS sitcom 9JKL and took recurring roles in the legal drama The Good Wife (2014–2015) and the sitcom B Positive (2020–2022).

On stage, she won the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play playing a strong-willed mother in the Neil Simon play Broadway Bound (1987). She was Tony-nominated for her roles in Last of the Red Hot Lovers (1970), The Diary of Anne Frank (1998), The Tale of the Allergist's Wife (2001), Collected Stories (2010), and The Lyons (2012). She is also known for acting in It's a Bird... It's a Plane... It's Superman (1966), On a Clear Day You Can See Forever (1967), Gypsy (1990), The Sisters Rosensweig (1993), and Follies (2011). She made her film debut in The Muppets Take Manhattan (1984), and later had roles in I Want to Go Home (1989), See You in the Morning (1989) and Being the Ricardos (2021).

Early life, family and education

Lavin was born in Portland, Maine, the younger daughter of David Joseph Lavin, a businessman, and Lucille Dorothy (née Potter), an opera singer. The Lavin family were active members of the local Jewish community. Her family was musically talented, and Lavin was on stage from the age of five.

She attended Waynflete School and Deering High School before enrolling in the College of William & Mary.

She studied acting at HB Studio in New York City.

Career

Early years

In the summer of 1958, she played one of the leads in The Common Glory, an outdoor drama written by Paul Green and staged at an amphitheater on campus. Upon her graduation from college, she had already received her Actors' Equity Association card. She was a member of the Compass Players in the late 1950s.

Theater

In 1960 Lavin appeared at the East 74th Street Theater in George Gershwin's Oh, Kay!, with Penny Fuller and Marti Stevens.

Lavin began her career with Broadway appearances in the musical A Family Affair (1962) and plays such as The Riot Act (1963) and Carl Reiner's Something Different (1967). In his New York Times review of John Guare's two one-act plays, Cop-Out (1969), Clive Barnes wrote: "Miss Lavin...carries versatility almost to the point of paranoia, and camps up a storm."

Lavin in a publicity photo for ''Alice'' (1977)

Lavin also appeared in numerous Off-Broadway productions, including the revue Wet Paint (1965), the musical The Mad Show (1966) (in which she introduced the cabaret standard "The Boy From...", written by Stephen Sondheim and Mary Rodgers), and Little Murders (1969). Lavin won the Theatre World Award for Wet Paint and a Drama Desk Award for Little Murders. In 1975, she appeared in the Shakespeare in the Park production of The Comedy of Errors at the Delacorte Theater.

She "arrived at showbiz stardom with a featured role" in the musical It's a Bird...It's a Plane...It's Superman (1966). She received her first Tony Award nomination in 1970, for her role in the Neil Simon play Last of the Red Hot Lovers (1969). Clive Barnes, in his review for The New York Times, wrote: "Linda Lavin, eyebrows, [sic] flaunting like telegraphed messages, mouth twitching and pouting, voice as dry as thunder and with a cough like electric static, is beautiful as Elaine, the sex cat feeling coolly kittenish and looking for a safe tin roof." Lavin's last Broadway credit before she moved to Hollywood was in Paul Sills' Story Theatre in 1971.

In 1984, Lavin played the character of "The Mother" in Luigi Pirandello's Six Characters in Search of an Author in a production directed by Robert Brustein at the American Repertory Theatre in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

After more than a decade away, Lavin returned to the Broadway stage in 1987, winning a Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play and her second Drama Desk Award for her role as Kate in Simon's play Broadway Bound. In his review in The New York Times, Frank Rich wrote: "One only wishes that Ms. Lavin, whose touching performance is of the same high integrity as the writing, could stay in the role forever." Theatre critic Charles McNulty wrote of her performance that it "is widely considered one of the most memorable in contemporary Broadway history, winning not just awards but praise approaching the level of myth. The theater critic Gordon Rogoff, extolling 'the power available only to an actor at the height of her own command of detail,' went so far as to describe Lavin's portrayal as 'one of those textbook lessons in great acting...' "

She then starred on Broadway in Gypsy as Mama Rose Hovick, replacing Tyne Daly in July 1990. June Havoc saw Lavin's performance in Gypsy and sent Lavin a photo of Havoc's mother, the real Rose Hovick, with a note of appreciation for Lavin's portrayal of the character.

Her subsequent Broadway roles included The Sisters Rosensweig, as a replacement Gorgeous Teitelbaum starting in September 1993 and Mrs. Van Daan in The Diary of Anne Frank (1997–1998), opposite Natalie Portman, for which she garnered a Tony nomination as Featured Actress in a Play. In 1995 she appeared in the Off-Broadway Death-Defying Acts, which consists of three one-act plays; Lavin performed in the Elaine May (Hotline) and Woody Allen plays (Central Park West). She was nominated for a Drama Desk Award (Outstanding Actress – Play) and won an Obie Award (Performance) and the Lucille Lortel Award. She also directed theater during this period.

She played Marjorie in The Tale of the Allergist's Wife (2000–2001), co-starring Tony Roberts and Michele Lee, for which she was nominated for a Tony Award, Leading Actress in a Play, and Drama Desk Award, and "nanny" for Helen (young Carol Burnett, played by Sara Niemietz and Donna Lynne Champlin) in Hollywood Arms in Chicago and on Broadway in 2002.

In 2010, Lavin appeared as Ruth Steiner in a Broadway revival of the play Collected Stories opposite Sarah Paulson as her student, reprising her role for a PBS production of the play, and received a fifth Tony nomination for the role. She appeared in the new play by Jon Robin Baitz, Other Desert Cities, Off-Broadway at the Mitzi Newhouse Theater (now the Vivian Beaumont Theater) at Lincoln Center, beginning in previews in December 2010, closing February 27, 2011. Lavin was featured in the Kennedy Center (Washington, DC) production of the musical Follies, from May 2011 to June 2011, as Hattie Walker.

She appeared in the premiere of the Nicky Silver play The Lyons at the Off-Broadway Vineyard Theatre, beginning in September 2011, through November 11. Ben Brantley, The New York Times reviewer, commented: "Watching Ms. Lavin, I found myself thinking of Nora from Ibsen's Doll's House – well, a pursed-lipped, lemony-sour, older Nora in pseudo-Chanel, one who's never at a loss for what to say and when to say it. Rita may be a little behind schedule in discovering herself, but no one can fault the hair-trigger timing of the actress playing her or the surprising dimensions she finds within one-liners." She reprised her role in the Broadway production, which opened at the Cort Theatre on April 23, 2012, and closed on July 1, 2012.

Lavin in 2014

Lavin appeared in the Nicky Silver play Too Much Sun, which opened Off-Broadway at the Vineyard Theatre on May 18, 2014. Ben Brantley, in his review for The New York Times wrote: "And it's an unconditional treat to witness an actress like Ms. Lavin tuned so precisely into the writer's wavelength that script and performance become a marriage of true minds."

Lavin appeared in 2015/16 on Broadway at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre in a Manhattan Theatre Club production of Richard Greenberg's Our Mother's Brief Affair.

In January 2017, Lavin appeared in New York City Opera's production of Leonard Bernstein's Candide at the Rose Theatre at Lincoln Center in the role of The Old Lady.

In 2020, Lavin performed "The Boy From..." as part of Take Me to the World: A Sondheim 90th Birthday Celebration. Writing in The New York Times, critic Ben Brantley called her performance of the song "deliciously undersold," and noted that she had introduced it 54 years earlier.

Cabaret and recording

She appeared on the 1966 cast recordings of The Mad Show performing Stephen Sondheim's "The Boy From...". From It's a Bird...It's a Plane...It's Superman, one of her numbers, "You've Got Possibilities", was the album's best-received song and was called "The one memorable song...flirty, syncopated" by the Dallas Observer.

Lavin appeared in cabaret and concert performances. In 2005 she appeared at the Empire Plush Room in San Francisco, accompanied by Billy Stritch and her husband, Steve Bakunas. The Talkin' Broadway reviewer summed up her performance: "Linda Lavin is funny, warm and full of personality." In April 2006 she performed at Birdland (New York) "with her critically acclaimed cabaret act The Song Remembers When", with Billy Stritch. She performed with the Wilmington Symphony (Wilmington, North Carolina) in March 2012.

Her recording Possibilities was released by Ghostlight Records in 2012. Steven Suskin wrote: "There is still that sweet, friendly sound of long ago (and 'sweet' and 'friendly' are not words you'd use to describe Lavin-the-actress)."

Television

In 1967, Lavin made an appearance as Gloria Thorpe in a television version of the baseball musical Damn Yankees with Phil Silvers. In 1969, Lavin married actor Ron Leibman, and by 1973, the couple had moved to Hollywood, California. After various guest appearances on episodic television series such as The Nurses, Rhoda, Harry O, and Kaz, Lavin landed a recurring role as Detective Janice Wentworth on Barney Miller during the first and second seasons (1975–1976).

Alice]]'' (1976)

She left Barney Miller to star in the lead role in Alice, which was a sitcom success that ran from 1976 to 1985 on the CBS network. The series was based on the Martin Scorsese–directed Ellen Burstyn film Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore. Lavin portrayed Alice Hyatt, a waitress and aspiring singer, the character that Burstyn had played. 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. During the series' nine-season run, Lavin won two Golden Globe Awards and received a Primetime Emmy Award nomination, and gained experience directing, especially during the later seasons. Lavin also played a dual role in Alice, as Debbie Walden, the wizened and former landlady of the character Vera Louise Gorman-Novak. Lavin also made numerous television appearances outside of Alice, including hosting her own holiday special for CBS, Linda in Wonderland (1980). She acted in two sitcoms, Room for Two (1992–93) In Room for Two, she played a mother who moved in with her daughter, played by Patricia Heaton, who has a show on a local television station. The daughter gives Lavin's character her own segment, called "Just a Thought", at the end of her program.

She made numerous television guest appearances, including roles on The Muppet Show (1979), Law & Order: Criminal Intent, The O.C., Touched by an Angel (1999), and HBO's The Sopranos (2002).

She also appeared in many other telefilms between 1967 and 1998, including: Sadbird, The Morning After, Jerry, Like Mom, Like Me, The $5.20 an Hour Dream, 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. Lavin produced and starred in A Matter of Life and Death, the 1981 telefilm based on the work of nurse thanatologist Joy Ufema. She directed the 1990 telefilm Flour Babies.

Lavin provided the voice of the Mother Vulture in the animated series Courage the Cowardly Dog for the episode "Watch The Birdies".

After working in theater for many years, Lavin was cast in the NBC television sitcom Sean Saves the World (2013–14) playing Sean Hayes' pushy, meddling mother Lorna. The Los Angeles Times interviewer noted: "A highlight of the show is the wonderful chemistry between Lavin and Hayes, who exchange repartee and quips with breezy ease. And the cast seems smitten with her."

In 2015, she guest starred as a judge approached to stop an execution in the episode of Bones titled "The Verdict in the Victims".

Lavin played Judy Roberts in the CBS sitcom 9JKL (2017–18) alongside Mark Feuerstein and Elliott Gould. In 2019, Lavin joined the cast of the Netflix comedy/horror Santa Clarita Diet, starring Drew Barrymore and Timothy Olyphant. In 2020, Lavin performed the song "The Boy From..." from The Mad Show in Take Me to the World: A Sondheim 90th Birthday Celebration. Lavin appeared in the CBS comedy B Positive, which aired from 2020 to 2022, in a recurring role as Norma, one of the senior citizens at a local retirement home.

In June 2024, it was announced that Max Mutchnick and David Kohan had created a The Golden Girls-like TV series set in Palm Springs, with Matt Bomer, Nathan Lee Graham and Nathan Lane as Bunny Schneiderman. Lavin played Lane's mother, Sybil Schneiderman. The series, Mid-Century Modern streams on Hulu. At the time of her death, seven of ten episodes of the series had been filmed, and Lavin's character was subsequently written out of the series in the episode "Here's To You Mrs. Schneiderman."

Directing and teaching

While residing in Wilmington, North Carolina, Lavin worked as a stage director. One of her directorial credits was a 1998 production of William Shakespeare's As You Like It, updated to a Brazilian jazz style. In both Wilmington and New York City, she taught master classes in acting and singing.

Film

Lavin made her feature film debut in The Muppets Take Manhattan (1984). Her other feature film appearances include See You in the Morning, starring Jeff Bridges; Alain Resnais's I Want to Go Home, opposite Gérard Depardieu (both 1989); and The Back-up Plan (2010).

Personal life

Lavin and her husband Steve Bakunas at the Kennedy Center, 2011

Lavin was married three times. Her first marriage to actor Ron Leibman ended in divorce in 1981. Her second marriage, to actor Kip Niven, whom she met on the set of Alice, ended in a bitter divorce in 1992. While Lavin had no biological children, she was a stepmother during her second and third marriages. She married Steve Bakunas in 2005. The couple resided in Wilmington, North Carolina, where they were committed community members who were working together to rehabilitate impoverished neighborhoods including renovating many homes, donating a park to the city and creating a community theater, the Red Barn Studio. In 1997, Lavin founded The Linda Lavin Arts Foundation in Wilmington, "to promote and foster the advancement of the performing and visual arts, with special emphasis on arts in education. Her foundation has created a theater program called Girl Friends, whose purpose is to raise the self-esteem of at-risk teenage girls of the inner city."

In September 2012, Lavin announced that she intended to sell her home in Wilmington and return to New York City. Lavin and Bakunas thereafter resided in New York City until her death. She continued to work in California as well.

Lavin continued performing after being diagnosed with lung cancer. She died from cardiopulmonary arrest due to complications of the disease in Los Angeles on December 29, 2024, aged 87.

Acting credits

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
1967Damn Yankees!Gloria Thorpe
1974The Morning AfterToni
1978Like Mom, Like MeAlthea Gruen
1980The $5.20 an Hour DreamEllen Lissick
1981A Matter of Life and DeathNurse Joy Ufema
1984The Muppets Take ManhattanKermit's Doctor
1986MaricelaMrs. Gannett
1987A Place to Call HomeLiz Gavin
Lena: My 100 ChildrenLena Kuchler-Silberman
1989See You in the MorningAunt Sidney
I Want to Go HomeLena Apthrop
1995A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes: The Annette Funicello StoryVirginia Funicello
1996Stolen Memories: Secrets from the Rose GardenEarline
The RingRuth Liebman
For the Future: The Irvine Fertility ScandalMarilyn Killane
1998Best Friends for LifeSarah "Coop" Cooper
2002Collected StoriesRuth Steiner
2010The Back-up PlanNana
2012WanderlustShari
2013A Short History of DecaySandy Fisher
2015The InternPatty
2016Manhattan NightNorma Segal
Bakery in BrooklynIsabelle
2017How to Be a Latin LoverMillicent Dupont
2019Nancy Drew and the Hidden StaircaseFlora
2021Naked SingularityJudge Cymbeline
Being the RicardosOlder Madelyn Pugh
2022Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick RulesBarb (voice)
2025One Big Happy FamilyLenorePosthumous release

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1974RhodaLinda MonroeEpisode: "The Shower"
1975Harry OAliceEpisode: "Group Terror"
1975–1976Barney MillerDet. Janice WentworthRecurring role, 5 episodes
1976PhyllisMargaret GatesEpisode: "Widows, Merry and Otherwise"
1976–1985AliceAlice HyattMain role, 202 episodes
1977FamilyAnnie LaurieEpisode: "Annie Laurie"
1978The Hanna-Barbera Happy HourHerselfEpisode #1.3
1979KazHelen 'Frenchy' RussoEpisode: "A Fool for a Client"
The Mary Tyler Moore HourHerselfEpisode #1.9
The Muppet ShowHerselfEpisode: "Linda Lavin"
1980Linda in WonderlandHostess, herselfMusical variety television special
1982Lily for President?Alice HyattTV special
1983Another Woman's ChildTerry DeBray
1992–1993Room for TwoEdie KurlandMain role, 26 episodes
1994WhitewashMrs. Steunberg (voice)TV special
1998Conrad BloomFlorie BloomMain role, 13 episodes
1999Touched by an AngelAmanda RandolphEpisode: "Jagged Edges"
2002The SopranosDr. Wendi KoblerEpisode: "No Show"
Courage the Cowardly DogMama Bird (voice)Episode: "Watch the Birdies"
Law & Order: Criminal IntentUrsula SussmanEpisode: "Shandeh"
2004–2005The O.C.Sophie Cohen3 episodes
2013, 2023Bob's BurgersHelen / Gertie (voice)Episodes: "It Snakes a Village", "Radio No You Didn't"
2013–2014Sean Saves the WorldLorna HarrisonMain role, 15 episodes
2014–2015The Good WifeJoy Grubick3 episodes
2015BonesJudge MichaelEpisode: "The Verdict in the Victims"
2016MomPhyllis2 episodes
2017–20189JKLJudy RobertsMain role, 16 episodes
2018Madam SecretaryJune O'CallaghanEpisode: "E Pluribus Unum"
2019Santa Clarita DietJeanRecurring role, 4 episodes
BrockmireLorraineEpisode: "Banned for Life"
2020Yvette Slosch, AgentYvette SloschMain role, 13 episodes
Room 104EnidEpisode: "No Dice"
2020–2022B PositiveNorma GoldmanRecurring and main role, 32 episodes
2024ElsbethGloria BlecherEpisode: "A Classic New York Character"
No Good DeedPhyllis Adelman3 episodes
2025Mid-Century ModernSybil SchneidermanMain role, 8 episodes (posthumous release)
Criminal Minds: EvolutionConnie LaMontagneEpisode: "Time to Say Goodbye" (posthumous release)

Theater

YearTitleRole
1962A Family AffairVarious
1963The Riot ActBarbara
1964–1965Wet PaintPerformer
1966It's a Bird...It's a Plane...It's SupermanSydney
The Mad ShowPerformer
1967On a Clear Day You Can See ForeverDaisy Gamble, Melinda Welles
Something DifferentBeth Nemerov
Little MurdersPatsy Newquist
1969Cop-OutPerformer
1969–1970Last of the Red Hot LoversElaine Navazio
1970Paul Sills' Story TheaterVarious
1973The Enemy is DeadLeah
1974Rich and FamousPerformer
1986–1987Broadway BoundKate
1990GypsyRose Thompson Hovick
1993The Sisters RosensweigGorgeous Teitelbaum
1995Death Defying ActsDorothy/Carol
1996CakewalkLillian Hellman
1998The Diary of Anne FrankMrs. Van Daan
2000–2001The Tale of the Allergist's WifeMarjorie
2002Hollywood ArmsNanny
2004Finishing the PictureFlora Fassinger
2008The New CenturyHelene Nadler
2010Collected StoriesRuth Steiner
2011FolliesHattie Walker
2011–2012The LyonsRita Lyons
2014Too Much SunAudrey Langham
2016Our Mother's Brief AffairAnna
2022You Will Get Sick#2

Awards and nominations

YearAwardCategoryNominated workResultRef.
2010American Theater Hall of Fame
2015Critics' Choice Television AwardsBest Guest Performer in a Drama SeriesThe Good Wife
1990Daytime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Children's SpecialCBS Schoolbreak Special (for "Flour Babies")
1969Drama Desk AwardsOutstanding PerformanceLittle Murders
1987Outstanding Actress in a PlayBroadway Bound
1995Death Defying Acts
1998Outstanding Featured Actress in a PlayThe Diary of Anne Frank
2000Outstanding Actress in a PlayThe Tale of the Allergist's Wife
2008Outstanding Featured Actress in a PlayThe New Century
2011Other Desert Cities
2012Outstanding Actress in a PlayThe Lyons
1978Golden Globe AwardsBest Actress in a Television Series – Musical or ComedyAlice
1979
1980
1995Obie AwardsDistinguished Performance by an ActressDeath Defying Acts
2012The Lyons
1979Primetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy SeriesAlice
1965Theatre World AwardsDistinguished PerformerWet Paint
1970Tony AwardsBest Featured Actress in a PlayLast of the Red Hot Lovers
1987Best Leading Actress in a PlayBroadway Bound
1998Best Featured Actress in a PlayThe Diary of Anne Frank
2001Best Leading Actress in a PlayThe Tale of the Allergist's Wife
2010Collected Stories
2012The Lyons
2007TV Land AwardsFavorite Working MomAlice

References

References

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