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Thread: Actress Dody Goodman dead at 93

  1. #1
    Elite Member HWBL's Avatar
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    Default Actress Dody Goodman dead at 93

    Her name might not immediately ring a bell, but I think most
    will know and remember her from her many zany roles.
    I thought she was hilarious. R.I.P. and thanks for the laughs.

    Source: CNN.COM

    'Mary Hartman,' 'Grease' star Goodman dies at 93

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Dody Goodman, the delightfully daffy comedian known
    for her television appearances on Jack Paar's late-night talk show and as
    the mother on the soap-opera parody "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman," has
    died at 93.

    Goodman died Sunday at Englewood (New Jersey) Hospital and Medical
    Center, said Joan Adams, a close family friend. The actress had been ill
    for some time and had lived in the Actors Fund Home in Englewood since
    October, Adams said.

    Goodman, with her pixyish appearance and Southern-tinged, quavery
    voice, had an eclectic show-business career. She moved easily from
    stage to television to movies, where she appeared in such popular films
    as "Grease" and "Grease 2," playing Blanche, the principal's assistant,
    and in "Splash."

    It was on "The Tonight Show" when Paar was the late night TV program's
    second host in the late 1950s that Goodman first received national attention.
    Her quirky, off-kilter remarks inevitably got laughs and endeared audiences.

    "I was just thrown into the talking," Goodman said in a 1994 interview with
    The Associated Press. "I had no idea how to do that. In fact, they just
    called me up and asked me if I wanted to be on 'The Jack Paar Show.'
    I didn't know who Jack Paar was. They said, 'We just want you to sit and
    talk.' "

    After a falling out with Paar, other chat shows took up the slack,
    including "The Merv Griffin Show" and "Girl Talk." And there were roles
    on TV series, too, most notably her appearances as Martha Shumway
    (Louise Lasser's mother) on "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman," starting in
    1976, and guest shots on such shows as "Diff'rent Strokes," "St.
    Elsewhere" and "Murder, She Wrote."

    In later years, Goodman was a regular in "Nunsense" and its various
    sequels, appearing off-Broadway and on tour in Dan Goggin's comic
    musical celebration of the Little Sisters of Hoboken. She started out
    playing Sister Mary Amnesia, later graduating to the role of Mother
    Superior.

    "Dody had the most impeccable comic timing," Goggin said. "When we
    had her in the show, she was the only person on Earth who could walk
    on stage, say, 'Are you ready to start?' and bring the house down.
    Within seconds, the audience was eating out of her hand."

    The actress was born Dolores Goodman on October 28, 1914, in
    Columbus, Ohio, where her father ran a small cigar factory. She
    arrived in New York in the late 1930s to study dance at the School
    of American Ballet and the Metropolitan Opera Ballet School, and later
    graduated to Broadway musicals.

    The actress performed regularly on stage in the 1940s and early '50s
    as a chorus member in such musicals as "Something for the Boys," "One
    Touch of Venus," "Laffing Room Only," "Miss Liberty," "Call Me Madam,"
    "My Darlin' Aida" and "Wonderful Town," in which she originated the role
    of Violet, the streetwalker.

    "I had to make so many transitions into other things," Goodman said
    in the AP interview. "When I first came out of dancing, I did revues."

    It was the early to mid-'50s, when small, topical nightclub revues flourished.
    Goodman, a natural comedian, thrived in them. She performed in shows by
    Ben Bagley and Julius Monk, and in Jerry Herman's first effort, a revue
    called "Parade."

    In more recent times, she appeared on David Letterman's late-night talk
    show.

    "He understands my sense of humor. I will do a dumb thing for fun. That's
    how I got the reputation for being dopey and dumb. I don't like dumb jokes
    but I will do dumb things for a laugh," she said in the AP interview.

    Goodman, who never married, is survived by seven nieces and nephews, 11
    great nieces and nephews and 15 great-great nieces and nephews, Adams
    said.





    Warren Beatty: actor, director, writer, producer.

    ***** celeb

  2. #2
    Elite Member msdeb's Avatar
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    remember her from Grease? she played Blanche the secretary. She was also in Mary Hartman Mary Hartman! awww RIP
    I've been bad.

  3. #3
    Elite Member Belinda's Avatar
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    I loved her in Grease! RIP Dody.

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