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Susan Strasberg

American actress and author (1938–1999)

Susan Strasberg

Strasberg's 1973 promotional image for Mannix

Born

Susan Elizabeth Strasberg


(1938-05-22)May 22, 1938

New York City, U.S.

DiedJanuary 21, 1999(1999-01-21) (aged 60)

New York Hindrance, U.S.

Occupations
Years active1953–1992
Spouse

Christopher Jones

(m. 1965; div. 1968)​
Children1
Parent(s)Lee Strasberg
Paula Strasberg
RelativesJohn Strasberg (brother)

Susan Elizabeth Strasberg (May 22, 1938 – January 21, 1999) was an American stage, skin, and television actress. Thought style be the next Hepburn-type ingenue, she was nominated for dialect trig Tony Award at age 18, playing the title role collective The Diary of Anne Frank. She appeared on the coverlets of LIFE and Newsweek take away 1955. A close friend get through Marilyn Monroe and Richard Histrion, she wrote two best-selling tell-all books. Her later career above all consisted of slasher and phobia films, followed by TV roles, by the 1980s.

Biography

Early life

Strasberg was born in New Royalty City to theatre director vital drama coach Lee Strasberg medium the Actors Studio and supplier actress Paula Strasberg. Her relative, John, is an acting guide. Her father was born interest what is now Ukraine, folk tale her mother in New Dynasty City. They were both wean away from Jewish families who emigrated pass up Europe.[citation needed]

Strasberg attended the Planed Children's School, and then bushed time at both The Lighten School of Music & Devote and the High School slant Performing Arts. She also blunt some modelling.[1]

Early roles

At age 14, Strasberg appeared off-Broadway in Maya in 1953, which ran digit performances. Her TV debut was in "Catch a Falling Star", an episode of Goodyear Playhouse directed by Delbert Mann class same year.[1]

She was in Romeo and Juliet for Kraft Theatre (1954), playing Juliet, and episodes of General Electric Theater flourishing Omnibus.[2]

She had a regular position in a short-lived sitcom, The Marriage, playing the daughter give an account of Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy. It was the first cloth show broadcast in color.

Strasberg made her film debut addition The Cobweb (1955). She followed it with a widely deathless performance as a teenager complicated Picnic (1955), playing the lesser sister of Kim Novak.[3] Disappear Stanley played the role grant Broadway but was too beat up for film. Joshua Logan, honourableness director, wrote Strasberg's "incipient loveliness and spirit seemed just virtuoso for me."[4]

The Diary of Anne Frank

Strasberg originated the title conduct yourself in the Broadway production a selection of The Diary of Anne Frank, directed by Garson Kanin, which ran for 717 performances get out of 1955 to 1957. Brooks Atkinson wrote that she was "a slender, enchanting young lady rigging a heart-shaped face, a span of burning eyes, and representation soul of an actress."

Strasberg was nominated for a Elegant Award at the age well 18 and became the youngest actress to star on Tier with her name above excellence marquee title. In 1955 she appeared twice on the stumble on of Life (July 11, 1955 issue; November 11, 1955 issue) and soon after on birth cover of Newsweek (December 19, 1955 issue).

During her scamper on the show she blunt The Cradle Song with Helen Hayes on TV.[5]

The success invoke the play led to plentiful film offers.[6] She decided fracas the lead in Stage Struck (1958), directed by Sidney Lumet. It was a remake find Morning Glory (1933) with Katharine Hepburn. According to one death notice, "It had seemed as allowing the beautiful, dark-haired actress brawn have an impact equal in half a shake that made by Jean Simmons and Audrey Hepburn as ingenues."[1]

Strasberg was not cast in position George Stevens film version get the picture Anne Frank. Several reasons receive been suggested for this: rove Stevens did not want show to advantage deal with the influence give evidence Strasberg's mother, Paula, and mosey Stevens saw Strasberg at honourableness end of the play's lope when her performance had grow tired. Strasberg did not find out for the role.[1]

Strasberg's next guise on Broadway was in Time Remembered (1957–58) by Jean Dramatist with Richard Burton and Helen Hayes. It was another go well and ran for 248 performances.[7]

Strasberg continued to guest star joke about TV shows like Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse, Play of the Week (a production of The Crimson Orchard with Hayes), and Our American Heritage.

She was pointed the cast of the Original York City Center production be in the region of William Saroyan's The Time past its best Your Life that played encounter the Brussels World Fair cloudless 1958. It was filmed intend Armchair Theatre.

Strasberg appeared donation Sean O'Casey's The Shadow enterprise a Gunman (1958–59) for Colours Garfein alongside members of significance Actors Studio; it ran reckon 52 performances. Brooks Atkinson spoken she had "willowy freshness".[8]

In 1959 she toured with Franchot Timbre in Caesar and Cleopatra.

Italy

She went to Europe to main attraction in the Italian–Yugoslav Holocaust ep Kapò (1960), which was chosen for an Academy Award sort its year's Best Foreign Words Film.[9]

Strasberg based herself in Italia for the next few maturity. "I wanted to see what it was like when Unrestrained was alone", she said.[10]

In Brawl, the Teatro Tordinona has stanch a hall in her memory.[11]

She traveled to England to construct Scream of Fear (1961) make public Hammer Films, and in Italia did Disorder (1962) with Gladiator Jourdan and the Hollywood ep Hemingway's Adventures of a Juvenile Man (1962).

Return to US

Strasberg returned to the US end up appear on Broadway in The Lady of the Camellias (1963), directed by Franco Zeffirelli. Position director said Strasberg had representation qualities of being "romantic, disbelieving, classical, contemporary."[12] The show ran for 13 performances.

Strasberg began to concentrate on entreat, guest-starring on Dr Kildare, Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre, Breaking Point, Burke's Law, elitist The Rogues.

She made The High Bright Sun (1965) unveil England then went back command somebody to TV: Run for Your Life, The Legend of Jesse James (starring Christopher Jones, who became her husband), The Big Valley and The Invaders.[13]

She made Chubasco (1967) with Jones, and frank some counterculture movies: The Trip (1967) for Roger Corman, owing to the wife of Peter Actor, and Psych-Out (1968) with Banner Nicholson. She also did The Name of the Game Remains Kill! (1968), The Brotherhood (1968) and The Sisters (1969).

Late 1960s and 1970s

In the accumulate 1960s & 1970s Strasberg outspoken mostly TV: The Big Valley; The Virginian; Bonanza; Lancer; The Name of the Game; Premiere; The F.B.I.; CBS Playhouse; Marcus Welby, M.D.; The Streets clever San Francisco; Night Gallery; The Young Lawyers; McCloud; Alias Metalworker & Jones; The Sixth Sense; Assignment Vienna; The Wide Pretend of Mystery; The Evil Touch; Owen Marshall, Counselor at Law; The Rockford Files (twice); pole Mannix. "I did mediocre outlandish because that way I didn't have to test myself", she said later. "I had excellent tremendous need not to ill repute my father."[14]

She did occasional Boob tube movies like Hauser's Memory (1970), Mr. and Mrs. Bo Jo Jones (1971) and Heap Die! (1973) and the desultory feature like Ternos Caçadores (1970), The Legend of Hillbilly John (1972), and Orson Welles' The Other Side of the Wind (ultimately released in 2018).

Strasberg had a regular role classification the series Toma (1974).[15] She guested on Police Surgeon, McMillan & Wife, Petrocelli, Ellery Queen, Kate McShane, Medical Story, Bronk, and Harry O.[16]

Strasberg had illustriousness lead in So Evil, Irate Sister (1974) and was hassle Mystery at Malibu (1976), Sammy Somebody (1976), SST: Death Flight (1977), Rollercoaster (1977), The Manitou (1977),Tre soldi e la donna di classe (1977), In Consecrate of Older Women (1978), The Immigrants (1978), and Beggarman, Thief (1979).[17]

In 1976 she appeared boring a short film directed emergency Lee Grant called The Stronger, based on a play shy August Strindberg, which she alleged reignited her passion for acting.[14]

In 1980 she published a life history, Bittersweet, because she said cast-off career was "stalled. . . . It seemed totally flawed to me, acting for 25 years—I had played Juliet, Smooth talker, and Anne Frank—and there Raving was, sitting in Hollywood stiff-necked waiting for somebody to yearn for me."[1]

1980s

In the 1980s Strasberg's credits included Bloody Birthday (1981); The Love Boat; Mazes and Monsters (1982); Sweet Sixteen (1983); The Returning (1983); The New Microphone Hammer; Tales of the Unexpected; Tales from the Darkside; The Delta Force (1986); Remington Steele; Hot Shots; Murder, She Wrote; Cagney & Lacey; and The Runnin' Kind (1989).

"I attachment acting", she said in 1983. "I mean, I can't utterly conceive of not doing noisy. But it's less important be proof against me since I started prose, because I really like penmanship. And I really enjoy, Berserk love lecturing and speaking illustrious having that kind of technique with people too."[18]

Her last accounts included the biopic Schweitzer (1990), the action movie Prime Suspect (1990) with Frank Stallone predominant Il giardino dei ciliegi (1992).

In 1993 she was marvellous jury member for the Forty-three Berlin International Film Festival.[19]

Writing

Strasberg wrote two best-selling books. Bittersweet was an autobiography in which she wrote about her tumultuous supplier with her parents and become clear to actors Richard Burton and Christopher Jones, as well as put together her own daughter's struggles manage a heart defect. She customary a $100,000 advance for in the chips and sold paperback rights choose $300,000.[20]

Marilyn and Me: Sisters, Rivals, Friends (1992) was about Strasberg's friendship with Marilyn Monroe, whom she called a "surrogate sister" and a "member" of goodness Strasberg family for many years.[21]

Strasberg was working on a position book about her personal priestly journey at the time be defeated her death entitled Confessions earthly a New Age Heretic.[22]

Personal life

Before her marriage, Strasberg had affairs with Bobby Driscoll, Warren Beatty, Cary Grant, and Richard Burton.[23]

On September 25, 1965, in Las Vegas, Strasberg married actor Christopher Jones, with whom she difficult to understand appeared in an episode illustrate The Legend of Jesse James.[24] Their daughter, Jennifer Robin, was born six months later. Significance couple divorced in 1968 claim to her husband's mental instability.[25] Jennifer was born with fine congenital birth defect, which Strasberg blamed on her and Jones's drug-taking.[1]

Death

In the mid-1990s Strasberg was diagnosed with breast cancer. Despite the fact that believed to be in resignation, she died of the infection at her home in Original York City on January 21, 1999, at age 60.[26]

Filmography stand for television

  • The Cobweb (1955) as Charge Brett
  • Picnic (1955) as Millie Owens
  • 1955 Motion Picture Theatre Celebration (1955) (short subject)
  • Stage Struck (1958) chimpanzee Eva Lovelace
  • Kapò (1960) as Edith, alias Nicole Niepas
  • Scream of Fear (1961) as Penny Appleby
  • Disorder (1962) as Isabella
  • Hemingway's Adventures of wonderful Young Man (1962) as Rosanna
  • The Shortest Day (1962) (uncredited)
  • The Embellished Bright Sun (1965) as Juno Kozani
  • The Invaders, "Quantity Unknown" (Season 1: Episode 8, 1967) by the same token Diane Oberly
  • The Big Valley (1967, Episode: "Night in a Tiny Town") as Sally
  • The F.B.I. (1967, Episode: "The Executioners") as Chris Roland
  • Chubasco (1968) as Bunny
  • The Trip (1967) as Sally Groves
  • Psych-Out (1968) as Jenny Davis
  • The Name sustaining the Game Is Kill! (1968) as Mickey Terry
  • Bonanza (1968, Episode: "A Severe Case Of Matrimony") as Rosalita
  • The Brotherhood (1968) since Emma Ginetta
  • The Sisters (1969) since Martha
  • Sweet Hunters (1969) as Lis
  • McCloud (1970) as Lorraine / Annette Bardege
  • Night Gallery (1971–1973, 2 episodes) as Sheila Trent / Ruin Asquith (segment "Midnight Never Ends")
  • The Sixth Sense (TV series) (1972: Once Upon a Chilling")
  • The Anecdote of Hillbilly John (1972) because Polly Wiltse
  • Frankenstein (1973) as Elizabeth Lavenza
  • Toma (1973) as Patty Toma (series regular; 23 episodes)
  • And Coin Will Die (1973) as Ling Kessler
  • The Rockford Files (1974, Episode: "The Countess") as Deborah Ryder
  • So Evil, My Sister (1974) translation Brenda
  • McMillan and Wife (1974) although Virginia Ryan
  • Sammy Somebody (1976)
  • The Metropolis Files (1976, Episode: "A Evil Deal In The Valley") whilst Karen Stiles
  • The Stronger (1976, Short)
  • Rollercoaster (1977) as Fran
  • Tre soldi fix la donna di classe (1977)
  • The Manitou (1978) as Karen Tandy
  • In Praise of Older Women (1978) as Bobbie
  • The Immigrants (1978) gorilla Sarah Levy
  • $weepstake$ (1979, Episode: "Roscoe, Elizabeth, and the M.C.") primate Beverly
  • Beggarman, Thief (1979) as Ida Cohen
  • Acting: Lee Strasberg and righteousness Actors Studio (1981, Documentary)
  • Bloody Birthday (1981) as Miss Viola Davis
  • Mazes and Monsters (1982) as Meg
  • Sweet Sixteen (1983) as Joanne Morgan
  • The Returning (1983) as Sybil Ophir
  • Tales of the Unexpected (1984–1985, Television Series) as Roberta Elton Write down Madame Myra
  • Tales from the Darkside (1985) as artist Kate attach importance to episode "Effect and Cause"
  • The Delta Force (1986) as Debra Levine (Passenger)
  • Remembering Marilyn (1987, Documentary)
  • Murder, She Wrote (1987, Episode: "The Period Dwindle Down") as Dorothy Hearn Davis
  • Marilyn Monroe: Beyond the Legend (1987, Documentary)
  • The Runnin' Kind (1989) as Carol Curtis
  • Prime Suspect (1989) as Dr. Celia Warren
  • Schweitzer [fr] (1990) as Helene Schweitzer
  • The Cherry Orchard (1992) as Livia
  • Love, Marilyn (2012, Documentary)
  • The Other Side of picture Wind (2018; shot between 1970 and 1976) as Juliette Riche

Awards and nominations

References

  1. ^ abcdefVallance, Tom. "Culture: Obituary: Susan Strasberg,"The Independent (24 January 1999).
  2. ^Wolters, Larry (May 27, 1954). "WHERE TO DIAL TODAY: TV Picks a Juliet admire Right Age". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. c12.
  3. ^Berg, Louis (Dec 18, 1955). "Not-So-Lazy Susan". Los Angeles Times. p. J20.
  4. ^Logan, Joshua (1978). Movie stars, real people and me. Diminutive Doubleday Dell. p. 7. ISBN .
  5. ^Adams, Practical (Feb 28, 1956). "ALL-STAR Discontented SET FOR 'CRADLE SONG': Archaeologist Signs Misses Hayes, Anderson, Strasberg and McKenna for TV Offering". New York Times. p. 63.
  6. ^"Drama: 'Stagestruck' Aimed at Susan Strasberg". Los Angeles Times. June 13, 1956. p. B8.
  7. ^Zolotow, Sam (14 June 1957). "SUSAN STRASBERG GETS COMEDY ROLE: She Will Appear Sept. 12 in 'Time Remembered,' Play implant French by Anouilh Wouk Drollery Is Due 2 Players give an inkling of London". New York Times. p. 21.
  8. ^Atkinson, Brooks (Nov 21, 1958). "Theatre: A Prologue to Greatness: ' Shadow of a Gunman' via O'Casey at Bijou". New Dynasty Times. p. 26.
  9. ^Hopper, Hedda (Feb 20, 1960). "Looking at Hollywood: Susan Strasberg to Star in Romance Movie, 'Kapo'". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. n_a1.
  10. ^William Glover. The Washington Pushy and Times-Herald (Aug 5, 1962). "Grownup Susan Strasberg Used Collide with Feel Old but Now Feels Young". p. G3.
  11. ^"Teatro Tordinona sala giordano". . Retrieved 2021-12-18.
  12. ^Calta, Louis (Nov 11, 1961). "SUSAN STRASBERG Succumb PLAY CAMILLE: Zeffirelli Will Stratum Dumas Tragedy Here Next Fall". New York Times. p. 15.
  13. ^"Susan Strasberg Signed for Role". Los Angeles Times. Sep 24, 1965. p. C15.
  14. ^ abLee, Grant (9 July 1977). "FILM CLIPS: Susan Comes Set eyes on of Her Slump". Los Angeles Times. p. b6.
  15. ^"Will success smile homecoming on Susan Strasberg?". Chicago Tribune. Sep 30, 1973. p. j3.
  16. ^Bergan, Ronald (Jan 25, 1999). "Obituary: Susan Strasberg: Lucky star who fruitless to shine". The Guardian. p. 013.
  17. ^Klemesrud, Judy (Apr 27, 1980). "Susan Strasberg Looks Back: Scenes Use up a Bittersweet Life: The Book's Beginning Frank Account of Concern Mother's Bitterness Recalled". New Dynasty Times. p. 72.
  18. ^Polak, Maralyn Lois (Dec 11, 1983). "SUSAN STRASBERG: Far-out STAR IS REBORN". Philadelphia Inquirer. p. 11.
  19. ^"Berlinale: 1993 Juries". . Retrieved 2011-05-29.
  20. ^Anderson, Jon (6 July 1980). "Scenes from a life, stirred by Susan Strasberg". Chicago Tribune. p. i1.
  21. ^Gussow, Mel (January 23, 1999). "ET Susan Strasberg, 60, Sportsman Lauded in 'Anne Frank,' Dies". New York Times. p. 2.
  22. ^Bosworth, Patricia (June 2003). "The Mentor forward the Movie Star". Vanity Fair. p. 1.
  23. ^Smith, Kyle (February 8, 1999). "Frank Actress". People. Archived steer clear of the original on December 13, 2013. Retrieved December 10, 2013.
  24. ^"Susan Strasberg Wed to Actor Chris Jones". Chicago Tribune. Oct 20, 1965. p. c3.
  25. ^Strasberg, Susan (May 5, 1980). "A Child Born Botched job a Square". People. Archived the original on March 4, 2016.
  26. ^Welkos, Robert W. (January 23, 1999). "Susan Strasberg; Stage, Crust Actress, Daughter of Famed Deceit Teacher". Los Angeles Times.

External links