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ESTELLE PARSONS

Estelle Parsons

Estelle Parsons stars as 'Dottie' in Manhattan Theatre Club's Broadway production of David Lindsay-Abaire's Good People, directed by Daniel Sullivan, which played at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre from 8 Feb - 29 May 2011.

Birthday
November 20, 1927.

Place of birth?
Lynn Hospital, Lynn, Massachusetts.

You now live in?
New York City.

Did you go to training school, if so which one?
No. I worked in community theatre from the age of 6

As an actor, do you have a preference for stage, tv or film?
Stage.

Your first stage performance was?
As a frog in a children's play with the Tavern Players in Lynn, Massachusetts.

Career highlight to date?
Miss Margarida's Way.

What roles would you most like to play?
Complicated ones that make the audience laugh. I love that, like Dottie in Good People.

What is the best advice you have ever received?
Never received any.

What has been your most embarrassing moment on stage?
Don't recall any.

What is the most annoying part about your job?
How could it be annoying to work on the stage and have audiences appreciate you?

Briefly tell us how you become involved with Good People?
David Lindsay-Abaire's babysitter told me about it.

Briefly tell us about the character you play in The Importance of Being Earnest?
A mature lady who has seen it all and worries she’ll die because she doesn't go to the doctor.

If you had not become a performer, what might you have done instead?
Killed myself?

Who are your favorite actors/actresses?
Marlon Brando and Kim Stanle.

What was the last book you read, and name some of your favorite authors?
The Longest War by Peter L. Bergen, Lytton Strachey, Tony Judt, Kurban Said, Robert Dessaix.

What was the last film you saw, and name some of your favorite movies?
Don't go to the movies much

Favorite TV programs?
Don't watch TV

Favorite holiday destinations?
Wilderness.

What are your future plans?
Good People.


Questions by Alan Bird

Estelle Parsons Credits
Estelle Parsons enjoys a lengthy and successful career, having appeared on television, film, and the stage since the early 1950’s.

Her first foray into the business began when she was hired by The Today Show, first as a production assistant, then staff writer, which eventually led her to become the first female television network political news reporter.

Towards the late 1950’s Parsons began acting and appeared in her first stage performance in 1956 for the production of Happy Hunting. Since then, she has gone on to either star in or direct over 25 productions.

Most notably, she has been nominated for the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play for her performances in The Seven Descents of Myrtle (1968), And Miss Reardon Drinks a Little (1971), and Miss Margarida’s Way (1978). Furthermore, she was nominated for the Tony Award for Featured Actress for her work in Mornings at Seven (2002).

Her first film role came in Ladybug, Ladybug in 1963 and continued with 15 more roles over the next 30 years. In particular, her role in Bonnie & Clyde garnered an Academy Award (1967), and she was nominated again the following year for her work in Rachel, Rachel (1968).

Other film performances include Don’t Drink the Water (1969), I Walk the Line (1970), I Never Sang for My Father (1970), Watermelon Man (1970), For Pete’s Sake (1974), Dick Tracy (1990), Boys on the Side (1995) and Looking for Richard (1996).

On television, Parsons appeared in All in the Family, but is best remembered as the mother of Roseanne on the eponymous hit sitcom, logging over 50 episodes during the show’s 9 year run. Most recently, she has appeared in the television mini-series on HBO Empire Falls (2005).

She returned to Broadway in 2008 as the star of August: Osage County, and subsequently toured Canada and the States. She won the Garland Award in Los Angeles for Best Actress. She also recently starred in Deathtrap in the West End with Simon Russell Beale.

In addition to teaching acting at Columbia and Yale, Estelle Parsons served as the Artistic Director of the Actors’ Studio between 1996 and 2001.


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