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Louise Lasser

Louise Marie Lasser (born April 11, 1939)[1] is an American actress, television writer, and performing arts teacher and director. She is known for her portrayal of the title character on the soap opera satire Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman. She was married to Woody Allen and appeared in several of his early films.[2] She is also a life member of The Actors Studio and studied with both Sanford Meisner and Robert X. Modica.[3]

Louise Lasser
Lasser as Mary Hartman in 1976
Born
Louise Marie Lasser

(1939-04-11) April 11, 1939 (age 83)
New York City, New York, U.S.
Alma materBrandeis University
Occupations
  • Actress
  • television writer
  • teacher
  • director
Spouse
(m. 1966; div. 1970)

Early life and career beginnings

Born in New York City, Lasser is the only child of Paula Lasser (née Cohen) and Sol Jay Lasser.[4] Her father wrote and published the Everyone's Income Tax Guide series in the 1970s and 1980s. Louise did not fully embrace her Jewish heritage until later in life.[5]

Her mother's emotional instability led to a 1961 suicide attempt that was thwarted by Louise herself. Her mother vowed to never forgive Lasser for her actions, and after divorcing her husband, finally took her own life in 1964.[5] Sol Jay Lasser later also committed suicide.[2]

Lasser studied political science at Brandeis University for three years.[6] She sang in Greenwich Village coffee shops and bars and performed in improvisational revues before understudying Barbra Streisand as "Miss Marmelstein" in the Broadway musical I Can Get It for You Wholesale.[4] She also acted on the soap opera The Doctors and in television commercials.

Lasser married Woody Allen in 1966. Although the couple divorced in 1970, she appeared in his films Take the Money and Run (1969), Bananas (1971), and Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex* (*But Were Afraid to Ask) (1972). She also served as a voice actor for Allen's 1966 spoof dubbing of the Japanese spy movie, What's Up Tiger Lily? Lasser cites Allen as "a tremendous influence -- but it's the influence to make me be me....I remember the day he said, 'I do jokes...your comedy is attitude.'"[6]

Her other 1970s comedic turns in cinema include Such Good Friends (1971) and Slither (1973). On television, she earned credits on Love, American Style (1971), The Bob Newhart Show (1972), and The Mary Tyler Moore Show (1973). She also appeared in the 1973 TV-movie version of Ingmar Bergman's The Lie and was featured as Elaine in an episode of the NBC romantic anthology series Love Story.

Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman

 
Lasser with costar Greg Mullavey in a 1976 press photo for Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman

Production

Lasser's breakthrough role came as the unhappy, neurotic titular character in the soap opera satire Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman, which aired five nights a week for two seasons from January 1976 until July 1977. Some markets aired it at different times of the day and night and also in a block format which showcased all the week's episodes in a row. During the program's run, Lasser became a household name and appeared on the covers of Newsweek, People,[7] and Rolling Stone. In his biography, producer Norman Lear said that the casting of Lasser took less than a minute after Charles H. Joffe told him that there was only one actress to play the part of Mary Hartman. Lasser initially refused the role but later acquiesced. Lear says that "when she read a bit of the script for me, I all but cried for joy...Louise brought with her the persona that fit Mary Hartman like a corset."[8]

Of her brief yet memorable time on the series, Lasser surmises: "I could go into anyone's kitchen in America and have dinner. It was the best and worst of times."[7]

Exhausted from the grueling schedule demands, Lasser left the series after two seasons and 325 episodes. The serial was rebranded Forever Fernwood, which centered on the lives of the other Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman characters and lasted for 26 more weeks. In an interview for the bonus features of the Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman DVD box set from Shout! Factory, Lasser reveals that the idea for Mary's nervous breakdown at the end of the first season came after she wrote a 12-page letter suggesting the idea to Norman Lear.[9]

The dollhouse incident

In the spring of 1976 in Los Angeles, Lasser was arrested at a charity boutique, and police found $6 worth (or 88 milligrams) of cocaine in her purse. Authorities were called after Lasser's American Express card was denied and Lasser refused to leave without possession of a $150 dollhouse. Lasser was initially apprehended for two unpaid traffic tickets (one for jaywalking), but the officers then found the drug in her handbag. Lasser claimed the coke had been given to her several months earlier by a fan. Ultimately, Lasser was ordered to do six months in counseling, which was easily satisfied as she was already seeing an analyst.[10] A fictionalized version of the dollhouse incident was also incorporated into Mary Hartman's first season.

Legacy

Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman offers "Kitchen Sink Theater of the Absurd"[10] featuring a Candide-esque TV-watching housewife who, in one signature episode, brings a sick neighbor a bowl of chicken soup, only to have him fall asleep and drown in it. "I have actually taken a human life with my chicken soup," Mary laments. While some called the production ahead of its time, Lasser has pointed out that this post-Watergate, existential satirical comedy-drama also reflects its time period perfectly.[11]

As author Claire Barliant writes: "For some, the 1970s...was a descent into chaos, a dissolution of self, but also a kind of awakening....The Seventies' nervous breakdown coincides with women's lib and a strengthening gay rights movement....[Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman] is relevant today because it entertains but still shocks, because the social commentary and satire and bravery of the show are as fresh as ever."[12] Moreover, Lasser as the series' figurehead aptly embodies both the insanity and enlightenment of the epoch.

In 2000, Lasser appeared on a panel with her former Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman cast and crew members at the Paley Center for Media in Beverly Hills. The seminar, entitled Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman: Reunion, Reunion, was moderated by Steven A. Bell and taped for the museum archives.[13]

In 2004 and 2007, Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman was ranked No. 21 and No. 26 on TV Guide's Top Cult Shows Ever.[14]

SNL appearance and controversy

On 24 July 1976, Lasser hosted the penultimate episode of Saturday Night Live's first season. Her performance is best known for her opening monologue in which she re-creates a Mary Hartman-esque nervous breakdown and locks herself in her dressing room. She is then coaxed out by Chevy Chase/Land Shark and the promise of appearing on the cover of Time.

Some reports claim that Lasser's erratic behavior on the show led to her being the first person banned from SNL.[15] Chase accused her of "solipsism", and SNL writer Michael O'Donoghue called her "clinically berserk" and allegedly walked off that week's installment in disgust. O'Donoghue did concede that Lasser "was a nice woman going through a few problems, but I wanted to force her to eat her goddamn pigtails at gunpoint".[16]

Lasser denies that she was ever forbidden from coming back.[5] According to Lasser, she was initially told she would be able to write her own material but that promise was later reneged on, and she also refused to do sketches she deemed "salacious": one in particular featured Lasser and Gilda Radner as teenagers talking about male genitalia. Ultimately, Jane Curtin appeared in the skit with Radner instead.[17]

Lasser also asserts that her SNL antics, which include stream-of-consciousness rambling (typical of her Mary Hartman character), were "on purpose" and that Lorne Michaels pulled repeats of the broadcast only at her manager's request because her manager was not fond of the whole affair, including the final segment in which the actress sat onstage to discuss her rise to fame and the dollhouse incident.[5] Lasser mostly performs by herself on the program but also appears in a vignette with a dog at a table.

Lasser called Chase "like-a-bully mean" but Radner "a doll".[5] But aside from the intro segment in which Radner and Dan Aykroyd knock on her changing room door, Chase was the only regular player with whom Lasser had any scenes. Lasser and Chase appear as lovers in an Ingmar Bergman parody; plus, the pair filmed a sequence at the Madison Square Garden Democratic National Convention (although the footage was never aired). Instead, there is a video short in a diner in which she and her partner, played by Alan Zweibel, try to break up but forget their lines; in the end, Lasser moves to the bar and sits next to Michael Sarrazin. Lorne Michaels also briefly shows up in the clip, which ends with "a film by Louise Lasser" credit.[18]

According to Lasser, "For me to threaten to walk off the show, I would never do that for spite. Banned—that's a horrible thing to have said."[5]

Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman producer Norman Lear and co-star Mary Kay Place also hosted SNL during the run of Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman.

Other roles and appearances

Following her departure from Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman, Lasser wrote a made-for-TV movie titled Just Me and You (1978) and starred in it with Charles Grodin.

Her post-Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman stage credits include A Coupla White Chicks Sitting Around Talking and Marie and Bruce (1980).[3]

She had a recurring role as Alex's ex-wife on the hit series Taxi and starred in the 1981–82 season of It's a Living, in which she played waitress Maggie McBurney.[19]

Lasser had a recurring role on St. Elsewhere in the mid-1980s as Victor Ehrlich's Aunt Charise, a neurotic comic character. Her 1980s film appearances included Stardust Memories (1980), In God We Tru$t (1980), Crimewave (1985), Blood Rage (1987), Surrender (1987), Rude Awakening (1989) and as the mother of the main character in Sing (1989).[3]

Her 1990s films included Frankenhooker (1990), The Night We Never Met (1993), Sudden Manhattan (1996), Layin' Low (1996) and as the mother of the three main female characters in Todd Solondz's film Happiness (1998). She appeared in Mystery Men (1999) as the mother of Hank Azaria's character. She also had roles in Darren Aronofsky's film Requiem for a Dream (2000), the romantic comedy Fast Food Fast Women (2000) and co-starred with Renée Taylor in National Lampoon's Gold Diggers (2003). Lasser acted in two episodes of HBO's Girls as a Manhattan artist for the series' third season (2014).[11]

In 2021, she was reunited with her Mary Hartman co-star Greg Mullavey in a 16-minute film short called Bliss.[20][21]

In 2022, she appeared in Funny Pages, her first role in a theatrical feature film in almost 20 years.

Awards and recognition

In 1967, Lasser became the first woman to win a Clio Award for Best Actress in a Commercial. She was nominated for an Emmy Award for her performance in Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman and won the National Board of Review Award for Best Acting by an Ensemble for her participation in the film Happiness.[3]

Directing career

She has been a faculty member of HB Studio, where she taught acting technique.[22]

In 2014, she directed the Off-Off-Broadway production of Ira Lewis' Chinese Coffee.[23]

Currently, she lives in Manhattan and runs the Louise Lasser Acting Studio on the Upper East Side.[3]

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1962 The Laughmakers TV film
1965 The Doctors Jackie Ricardo Episode: #1.546 - May 3, 1965
1966 What's Up, Tiger Lily? Suki Yaki Partial writing credit, Voice
1969 Take the Money and Run Kay Lewis
1971 Bananas Nancy
Such Good Friends Marcy
1972 Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex* (*But Were Afraid to Ask) Gina
The Bob Newhart Show Mrs. Radford Episode: P-I-L-O-T
Class of '55 Christine TV film
1973 The Mary Tyler Moore Show Anne Adams Episode: Mary Richards and the Incredible Plant Lady
Slither Mary Fenaka
Coffee, Tea or Me? Susan Edmonds TV film
Isn't It Shocking? Blanche TV film
Love Story Elaine Kaplan Episode: The Roller Coaster Stops Here
1974 McCloud Sgt. Maggie Philbin Episode: A Cowboy in Paradise
Moe and Joe Mo Lambert TV film
1975 Medical Center Esther Kornblum Episode: The Price of a Child
1976–1977 Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman Mary Shumway Hartman 315 out of 325 episodes
1976 Saturday Night Live Guest host Season 1, Episode 23: Louise Lasser, Preservation Hall Jazz Band - July 24, 1976
1978 Just Me and You Jane Alofsin Also writer, TV film
1980 Simon Doris Uncredited, Voice
Stardust Memories Sandy's Secretary Uncredited
In God We Trust (Or Gimme That Prime Time Religion) Mary
1980–1982 Taxi Phyllis Bornstein Consuelos / Phyllis Reiger 3 Episodes
1981 For Ladies Only Beth Doyle TV film
1981–1982 It's a Living Maggie McBurney 14 Episodes
1984 Bedrooms Betty / Loretta TV film
1985 Crimewave Helene Trend
1987 Blood Rage (aka Nightmare at Shadow Woods) Maddy
Surrender Joyce
1989 Sing Rosie
Rude Awakening Ronnie Summers
1996 Layin' Low Mrs. Muckler
Sudden Manhattan Dominga
1998 Happiness Mona Jordan
2000 Requiem for a Dream Ada
Fast Food Fast Women Emily
2001 Queenie in Love Martha
2002 Wolves of Wall Street Landlady
2003 National Lampoon's Gold Diggers Doris Mundt
2008 Broadway Bound Dorthy Palmer Short film
2010 Horses Eat Each Other Irma Short film
2012 Driving Me Crazy: Proof of Concept Shelly Petterson
2018 Did You Know My Husband? TV film
2021 Bliss Short film with Greg Mullavey
2022 Funny Pages Linda (Pharmacy Lady)

References

  1. ^ Famous Birthdays Today, United States. Retrieved January 22, 2022.
  2. ^ a b "Louise Lasser". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 2021-12-09.
  3. ^ a b c d e "Louise Lasser Acting Studio". lasseractingstudio. Retrieved 2021-02-16.
  4. ^ a b Madden, Joanne. "Whatever happened to Louise Lasser?". Retrieved 2021-02-16.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Barliant, Claire (2013-12-20). "An Interview With Louise Lasser: TV, Depression, and SNL". The Toast. Retrieved 2019-02-20.
  6. ^ a b Wilson, John M. (1976-02-22). "Louise Lasser! Louise Lasser!". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-02-20.
  7. ^ a b "Louise Lasser". People. Vol. 42, no. 22. 28 November 1994.
  8. ^ Lear, Norman (14 October 2014). Even This I Get to Experience. Penguin. p. 293. ISBN 978-1101635384.
  9. ^ "Review: Shout! Factory releases 'Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman' on DVD (Includes first-hand account)". digitaljournal.com. 2013-11-23. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  10. ^ a b "No Laughing Matter". People. Retrieved 2021-02-16.
  11. ^ a b "The Real Housewife: Louise Lasser". Interview Magazine. 2013-12-06. Retrieved 2021-02-16.
  12. ^ "From a Waxy Yellow Buildup to a Nervous Breakdown: The Fleeting Existence of Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman". East of Borneo. Retrieved 2021-02-16.
  13. ^ "Museum of Television & Radio Seminar Series: Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman: Reunion, Reunion (Long Version)". paleycenter.org. Retrieved 2021-02-16.
  14. ^ . 2009-01-04. Archived from the original on 4 January 2009. Retrieved 2021-02-16.
  15. ^ "Maybe they win because of the 'tux'". Los Angeles Times. 2007-03-25. Retrieved 2021-02-16.
  16. ^ Hill, Doug; Weingrad, Jeff (2011-12-15). Saturday Night: A Backstage History of Saturday Night Live. Untreed Reads. ISBN 978-1-61187-218-7.
  17. ^ Lifton, Dave (24 July 2019). "How Louise Lasser Got Banned From 'Saturday Night Live'". Ultimate Classic Rock. Retrieved 2021-02-16.
  18. ^ "Saturday Night Live (Classic): "Louise Lasser/Kris Kristofferson"". TV Club. 27 October 2013. Retrieved 2021-02-16.
  19. ^ Dizon, Bettina (2019-11-01). "Lives of 'It's a Living' Cast Members Three Decades after the Show Ended". news.amomama.com. Retrieved 2021-02-16.
  20. ^ "Bliss short film". Vampingo Productions. Retrieved 2022-10-04.
  21. ^ "NEWPORT BEACH FILM FEST". nbff2021.eventive.org. Retrieved 2022-10-04.
  22. ^ "Local-Express | Queens Gazette". qgazette.com. 10 September 2014. Retrieved 2021-02-16.
  23. ^ "Stage and Cinema Review: CHINESE COFFEE (with Austin Pendleton, directed by Louise Lasser, at the Roy Arias Stage II Theater, Off-Broadway in New York)". stageandcinema.com. 28 September 2014. Retrieved 2021-02-16.

External links

louise, lasser, louise, marie, lasser, born, april, 1939, american, actress, television, writer, performing, arts, teacher, director, known, portrayal, title, character, soap, opera, satire, mary, hartman, mary, hartman, married, woody, allen, appeared, severa. Louise Marie Lasser born April 11 1939 1 is an American actress television writer and performing arts teacher and director She is known for her portrayal of the title character on the soap opera satire Mary Hartman Mary Hartman She was married to Woody Allen and appeared in several of his early films 2 She is also a life member of The Actors Studio and studied with both Sanford Meisner and Robert X Modica 3 Louise LasserLasser as Mary Hartman in 1976BornLouise Marie Lasser 1939 04 11 April 11 1939 age 83 New York City New York U S Alma materBrandeis UniversityOccupationsActresstelevision writerteacherdirectorSpouseWoody Allen m 1966 div 1970 wbr Contents 1 Early life and career beginnings 2 Mary Hartman Mary Hartman 2 1 Production 2 2 The dollhouse incident 2 3 Legacy 3 SNL appearance and controversy 4 Other roles and appearances 5 Awards and recognition 6 Directing career 7 Filmography 8 References 9 External linksEarly life and career beginnings EditBorn in New York City Lasser is the only child of Paula Lasser nee Cohen and Sol Jay Lasser 4 Her father wrote and published the Everyone s Income Tax Guide series in the 1970s and 1980s Louise did not fully embrace her Jewish heritage until later in life 5 Her mother s emotional instability led to a 1961 suicide attempt that was thwarted by Louise herself Her mother vowed to never forgive Lasser for her actions and after divorcing her husband finally took her own life in 1964 5 Sol Jay Lasser later also committed suicide 2 Lasser studied political science at Brandeis University for three years 6 She sang in Greenwich Village coffee shops and bars and performed in improvisational revues before understudying Barbra Streisand as Miss Marmelstein in the Broadway musical I Can Get It for You Wholesale 4 She also acted on the soap opera The Doctors and in television commercials Lasser married Woody Allen in 1966 Although the couple divorced in 1970 she appeared in his films Take the Money and Run 1969 Bananas 1971 and Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex But Were Afraid to Ask 1972 She also served as a voice actor for Allen s 1966 spoof dubbing of the Japanese spy movie What s Up Tiger Lily Lasser cites Allen as a tremendous influence but it s the influence to make me be me I remember the day he said I do jokes your comedy is attitude 6 Her other 1970s comedic turns in cinema include Such Good Friends 1971 and Slither 1973 On television she earned credits on Love American Style 1971 The Bob Newhart Show 1972 and The Mary Tyler Moore Show 1973 She also appeared in the 1973 TV movie version of Ingmar Bergman s The Lie and was featured as Elaine in an episode of the NBC romantic anthology series Love Story Mary Hartman Mary Hartman Edit Lasser with costar Greg Mullavey in a 1976 press photo for Mary Hartman Mary Hartman Production Edit Lasser s breakthrough role came as the unhappy neurotic titular character in the soap opera satire Mary Hartman Mary Hartman which aired five nights a week for two seasons from January 1976 until July 1977 Some markets aired it at different times of the day and night and also in a block format which showcased all the week s episodes in a row During the program s run Lasser became a household name and appeared on the covers of Newsweek People 7 and Rolling Stone In his biography producer Norman Lear said that the casting of Lasser took less than a minute after Charles H Joffe told him that there was only one actress to play the part of Mary Hartman Lasser initially refused the role but later acquiesced Lear says that when she read a bit of the script for me I all but cried for joy Louise brought with her the persona that fit Mary Hartman like a corset 8 Of her brief yet memorable time on the series Lasser surmises I could go into anyone s kitchen in America and have dinner It was the best and worst of times 7 Exhausted from the grueling schedule demands Lasser left the series after two seasons and 325 episodes The serial was rebranded Forever Fernwood which centered on the lives of the other Mary Hartman Mary Hartman characters and lasted for 26 more weeks In an interview for the bonus features of the Mary Hartman Mary Hartman DVD box set from Shout Factory Lasser reveals that the idea for Mary s nervous breakdown at the end of the first season came after she wrote a 12 page letter suggesting the idea to Norman Lear 9 The dollhouse incident Edit In the spring of 1976 in Los Angeles Lasser was arrested at a charity boutique and police found 6 worth or 88 milligrams of cocaine in her purse Authorities were called after Lasser s American Express card was denied and Lasser refused to leave without possession of a 150 dollhouse Lasser was initially apprehended for two unpaid traffic tickets one for jaywalking but the officers then found the drug in her handbag Lasser claimed the coke had been given to her several months earlier by a fan Ultimately Lasser was ordered to do six months in counseling which was easily satisfied as she was already seeing an analyst 10 A fictionalized version of the dollhouse incident was also incorporated into Mary Hartman s first season Legacy Edit Mary Hartman Mary Hartman offers Kitchen Sink Theater of the Absurd 10 featuring a Candide esque TV watching housewife who in one signature episode brings a sick neighbor a bowl of chicken soup only to have him fall asleep and drown in it I have actually taken a human life with my chicken soup Mary laments While some called the production ahead of its time Lasser has pointed out that this post Watergate existential satirical comedy drama also reflects its time period perfectly 11 As author Claire Barliant writes For some the 1970s was a descent into chaos a dissolution of self but also a kind of awakening The Seventies nervous breakdown coincides with women s lib and a strengthening gay rights movement Mary Hartman Mary Hartman is relevant today because it entertains but still shocks because the social commentary and satire and bravery of the show are as fresh as ever 12 Moreover Lasser as the series figurehead aptly embodies both the insanity and enlightenment of the epoch In 2000 Lasser appeared on a panel with her former Mary Hartman Mary Hartman cast and crew members at the Paley Center for Media in Beverly Hills The seminar entitled Mary Hartman Mary Hartman Reunion Reunion was moderated by Steven A Bell and taped for the museum archives 13 In 2004 and 2007 Mary Hartman Mary Hartman was ranked No 21 and No 26 on TV Guide s Top Cult Shows Ever 14 SNL appearance and controversy EditOn 24 July 1976 Lasser hosted the penultimate episode of Saturday Night Live s first season Her performance is best known for her opening monologue in which she re creates a Mary Hartman esque nervous breakdown and locks herself in her dressing room She is then coaxed out by Chevy Chase Land Shark and the promise of appearing on the cover of Time Some reports claim that Lasser s erratic behavior on the show led to her being the first person banned from SNL 15 Chase accused her of solipsism and SNL writer Michael O Donoghue called her clinically berserk and allegedly walked off that week s installment in disgust O Donoghue did concede that Lasser was a nice woman going through a few problems but I wanted to force her to eat her goddamn pigtails at gunpoint 16 Lasser denies that she was ever forbidden from coming back 5 According to Lasser she was initially told she would be able to write her own material but that promise was later reneged on and she also refused to do sketches she deemed salacious one in particular featured Lasser and Gilda Radner as teenagers talking about male genitalia Ultimately Jane Curtin appeared in the skit with Radner instead 17 Lasser also asserts that her SNL antics which include stream of consciousness rambling typical of her Mary Hartman character were on purpose and that Lorne Michaels pulled repeats of the broadcast only at her manager s request because her manager was not fond of the whole affair including the final segment in which the actress sat onstage to discuss her rise to fame and the dollhouse incident 5 Lasser mostly performs by herself on the program but also appears in a vignette with a dog at a table Lasser called Chase like a bully mean but Radner a doll 5 But aside from the intro segment in which Radner and Dan Aykroyd knock on her changing room door Chase was the only regular player with whom Lasser had any scenes Lasser and Chase appear as lovers in an Ingmar Bergman parody plus the pair filmed a sequence at the Madison Square Garden Democratic National Convention although the footage was never aired Instead there is a video short in a diner in which she and her partner played by Alan Zweibel try to break up but forget their lines in the end Lasser moves to the bar and sits next to Michael Sarrazin Lorne Michaels also briefly shows up in the clip which ends with a film by Louise Lasser credit 18 According to Lasser For me to threaten to walk off the show I would never do that for spite Banned that s a horrible thing to have said 5 Mary Hartman Mary Hartman producer Norman Lear and co star Mary Kay Place also hosted SNL during the run of Mary Hartman Mary Hartman Other roles and appearances EditFollowing her departure from Mary Hartman Mary Hartman Lasser wrote a made for TV movie titled Just Me and You 1978 and starred in it with Charles Grodin Her post Mary Hartman Mary Hartman stage credits include A Coupla White Chicks Sitting Around Talking and Marie and Bruce 1980 3 She had a recurring role as Alex s ex wife on the hit series Taxi and starred in the 1981 82 season of It s a Living in which she played waitress Maggie McBurney 19 Lasser had a recurring role on St Elsewhere in the mid 1980s as Victor Ehrlich s Aunt Charise a neurotic comic character Her 1980s film appearances included Stardust Memories 1980 In God We Tru t 1980 Crimewave 1985 Blood Rage 1987 Surrender 1987 Rude Awakening 1989 and as the mother of the main character in Sing 1989 3 Her 1990s films included Frankenhooker 1990 The Night We Never Met 1993 Sudden Manhattan 1996 Layin Low 1996 and as the mother of the three main female characters in Todd Solondz s film Happiness 1998 She appeared in Mystery Men 1999 as the mother of Hank Azaria s character She also had roles in Darren Aronofsky s film Requiem for a Dream 2000 the romantic comedy Fast Food Fast Women 2000 and co starred with Renee Taylor in National Lampoon s Gold Diggers 2003 Lasser acted in two episodes of HBO s Girls as a Manhattan artist for the series third season 2014 11 In 2021 she was reunited with her Mary Hartman co star Greg Mullavey in a 16 minute film short called Bliss 20 21 In 2022 she appeared in Funny Pages her first role in a theatrical feature film in almost 20 years Awards and recognition EditIn 1967 Lasser became the first woman to win a Clio Award for Best Actress in a Commercial She was nominated for an Emmy Award for her performance in Mary Hartman Mary Hartman and won the National Board of Review Award for Best Acting by an Ensemble for her participation in the film Happiness 3 Directing career EditShe has been a faculty member of HB Studio where she taught acting technique 22 In 2014 she directed the Off Off Broadway production of Ira Lewis Chinese Coffee 23 Currently she lives in Manhattan and runs the Louise Lasser Acting Studio on the Upper East Side 3 Filmography EditYear Title Role Notes1962 The Laughmakers TV film1965 The Doctors Jackie Ricardo Episode 1 546 May 3 19651966 What s Up Tiger Lily Suki Yaki Partial writing credit Voice1969 Take the Money and Run Kay Lewis1971 Bananas NancySuch Good Friends Marcy1972 Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex But Were Afraid to Ask GinaThe Bob Newhart Show Mrs Radford Episode P I L O TClass of 55 Christine TV film1973 The Mary Tyler Moore Show Anne Adams Episode Mary Richards and the Incredible Plant LadySlither Mary FenakaCoffee Tea or Me Susan Edmonds TV filmIsn t It Shocking Blanche TV filmLove Story Elaine Kaplan Episode The Roller Coaster Stops Here1974 McCloud Sgt Maggie Philbin Episode A Cowboy in ParadiseMoe and Joe Mo Lambert TV film1975 Medical Center Esther Kornblum Episode The Price of a Child1976 1977 Mary Hartman Mary Hartman Mary Shumway Hartman 315 out of 325 episodes1976 Saturday Night Live Guest host Season 1 Episode 23 Louise Lasser Preservation Hall Jazz Band July 24 19761978 Just Me and You Jane Alofsin Also writer TV film1980 Simon Doris Uncredited VoiceStardust Memories Sandy s Secretary UncreditedIn God We Trust Or Gimme That Prime Time Religion Mary1980 1982 Taxi Phyllis Bornstein Consuelos Phyllis Reiger 3 Episodes1981 For Ladies Only Beth Doyle TV film1981 1982 It s a Living Maggie McBurney 14 Episodes1984 Bedrooms Betty Loretta TV film1985 Crimewave Helene Trend1987 Blood Rage aka Nightmare at Shadow Woods MaddySurrender Joyce1989 Sing RosieRude Awakening Ronnie Summers1996 Layin Low Mrs MucklerSudden Manhattan Dominga1998 Happiness Mona Jordan2000 Requiem for a Dream AdaFast Food Fast Women Emily2001 Queenie in Love Martha2002 Wolves of Wall Street Landlady2003 National Lampoon s Gold Diggers Doris Mundt2008 Broadway Bound Dorthy Palmer Short film2010 Horses Eat Each Other Irma Short film2012 Driving Me Crazy Proof of Concept Shelly Petterson2018 Did You Know My Husband TV film2021 Bliss Short film with Greg Mullavey2022 Funny Pages Linda Pharmacy Lady References Edit Famous Birthdays Today United States Retrieved January 22 2022 a b Louise Lasser Turner Classic Movies Retrieved 2021 12 09 a b c d e Louise Lasser Acting Studio lasseractingstudio Retrieved 2021 02 16 a b Madden Joanne Whatever happened to Louise Lasser Retrieved 2021 02 16 a b c d e f Barliant Claire 2013 12 20 An Interview With Louise Lasser TV Depression and SNL The Toast Retrieved 2019 02 20 a b Wilson John M 1976 02 22 Louise Lasser Louise Lasser The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2019 02 20 a b Louise Lasser People Vol 42 no 22 28 November 1994 Lear Norman 14 October 2014 Even This I Get to Experience Penguin p 293 ISBN 978 1101635384 Review Shout Factory releases Mary Hartman Mary Hartman on DVD Includes first hand account digitaljournal com 2013 11 23 Retrieved 2020 10 12 a b No Laughing Matter People Retrieved 2021 02 16 a b The Real Housewife Louise Lasser Interview Magazine 2013 12 06 Retrieved 2021 02 16 From a Waxy Yellow Buildup to a Nervous Breakdown The Fleeting Existence of Mary Hartman Mary Hartman East of Borneo Retrieved 2021 02 16 Museum of Television amp Radio Seminar Series Mary Hartman Mary Hartman Reunion Reunion Long Version paleycenter org Retrieved 2021 02 16 TV Guide s 25 Top Cult Shows TannerWorld Junction 2009 01 04 Archived from the original on 4 January 2009 Retrieved 2021 02 16 Maybe they win because of the tux Los Angeles Times 2007 03 25 Retrieved 2021 02 16 Hill Doug Weingrad Jeff 2011 12 15 Saturday Night A Backstage History of Saturday Night Live Untreed Reads ISBN 978 1 61187 218 7 Lifton Dave 24 July 2019 How Louise Lasser Got Banned From Saturday Night Live Ultimate Classic Rock Retrieved 2021 02 16 Saturday Night Live Classic Louise Lasser Kris Kristofferson TV Club 27 October 2013 Retrieved 2021 02 16 Dizon Bettina 2019 11 01 Lives of It s a Living Cast Members Three Decades after the Show Ended news amomama com Retrieved 2021 02 16 Bliss short film Vampingo Productions Retrieved 2022 10 04 NEWPORT BEACH FILM FEST nbff2021 eventive org Retrieved 2022 10 04 Local Express Queens Gazette qgazette com 10 September 2014 Retrieved 2021 02 16 Stage and Cinema Review CHINESE COFFEE with Austin Pendleton directed by Louise Lasser at the Roy Arias Stage II Theater Off Broadway in New York stageandcinema com 28 September 2014 Retrieved 2021 02 16 External links EditLouise Lasser at IMDb Louise Lasser at the Internet Broadway Database Louise Lasser at the Internet Off Broadway Database Louise Lasser at The Interviews An Oral History of Television Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louise Lasser amp oldid 1140230038, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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