Eileen Brennan

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Birth Date:
03.09.1932
Death date:
28.07.2013
Length of life:
80
Days since birth:
33444
Years since birth:
91
Days since death:
3897
Years since death:
10
Extra names:
Eileen Brennan, Айлин Бреннан, Verla Eileen Regina Brennen
Categories:
Actor
Nationality:
 american
Cemetery:
Set cemetery

Eileen Brennan (September 3, 1932 – July 28, 2013) was an American actress of film, television, and theater. Brennan is best known for her role as Doreen Lewis in Private Benjamin, for which she received an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actress. She reprised the role for the TV adaptation, winning both a Golden Globe and Emmy for her performance. She received Emmy nominations for her guest starring roles on Newhart, Thirtysomething, Taxi, and Will & Grace.

Early life

Brennan was born Verla Eileen Regina Brennen on September 3, 1932 in Los Angeles, California, daughter of Regina "Jeanne" Menehan, a silent film actress, and John Gerald Brennen, a doctor. Of Irish descent, she was raised Roman Catholic.

Career

Eileen Brennan appeared in plays with the Mask and Bauble Society at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., where she was employed. She starred there in Arsenic and Old Lace. Her exceptional comic skills and romantic soprano voice propelled her from unknown to star in the title role of Rick Besoyan's off-Broadway tongue-in-cheek musical/operetta Little Mary Sunshine (1959), earning Brennan an Obie Award, and its un-official sequel The Student Gypsy (1963). She went on to create the role of Irene Malloy in the original Broadway production of Hello, Dolly! (1964). Her feature film debut was in Divorce American Style (1967). She soon became one of the most recognizable (if unidentifiable) supporting actresses in film and television. Her roles were usually sympathetic characters, though she has played a variety of other character types, including earthy, vulgar and sassy, but occasionally "with a heart of gold." A year after her feature film debut she became a semi-regular on the comedy-variety show Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, but stayed for only two months.

Brennan received excellent reviews as brothel madam "Billie" in George Roy Hill's Oscar-winning 1973 film The Sting as the confidante of con man Henry Gondorf (Paul Newman). Although her name was not often recognized by the general public, she became a favorite of many directors, in particular Peter Bogdanovich. She appeared in Bogdanovich's 1971 classic The Last Picture Show (for which she received a BAFTA nomination for best supporting actress) and his 1974 adaptation of the Henry James novella Daisy Miller. Bogdanovich was the only director who made use of her musical talents (before, she sang in performances off Broadway) when he cast her as Cybill Shepherd's crude, fun-loving maid in his 1975 musical flop At Long Last Love (which also starred Madeline Kahn; both Brennan and Kahn would work together in two more films: The Cheap Detective and Clue; where she once more displayed her world-weary acting style to great effect).

Brennan also worked with director Robert Moore and writer Neil Simon, appearing in Murder by Death as Tess Skeffington (1976); and The Cheap Detective (1978). Both of these movies also starred James Coco, James Cromwell and Peter Falk. She had a starring role, playing 'Mutha' in the 1978 movie, FM, about rock radio.

In 1980, Brennan received a best supporting actress Oscar nomination for her role as Goldie Hawn's nasty commanding officer in Private Benjamin. She reprised the role in the television adaptation (1981–1983), for which she won an Emmy (supporting actress) as well as a Golden Globe (lead actress). She has one additional Golden Globe nomination and six Emmy nominations.

After having dinner together one night in 1982, Brennan and Hawn left a restaurant. Brennan was hit by a passing car and was critically injured. She took three years off work to recover, and had to overcome a subsequent addiction to painkillers.

It was during this time that her performance as Mrs. Peacock in Clue (1985) reached theaters. In the 1990s, she appeared in Stella with Bette Midler, Bogdanovich's Texasville, the sequel to The Last Picture Show, and Reckless. She had a recurring role on the sitcom Blossom as the neighbor/confidant of the title character. In 2001, she made a brief appearance in the horror movie Jeepers Creepers as The Cat Lady.

In 2002, she starred in the dark comedy film Comic Book Villains, with DJ Qualls. In recent years, Brennan had guest-starred in television, including recurring roles as the nosy Mrs. Bink in 7th Heaven and as gruff acting coach Zandra on Will & Grace. In 2003 director Shawn Levy cast her in a cameo role of a babysitter to Steve Martin and Bonnie Hunt's children in an updated remake of Cheaper by the Dozen. Levy was inspired to cast Brennan after his personal viewing of Private Benjamin on television. Brennan's cameo was deleted from the actual cut of the movie however. Nonetheless she did receive credit for her role on the Deleted Scenes special feature of the film's DVD. In 2004, she appeared in The Hollow as "Joan Van Etten".

Television

Brennan received an Emmy nomination for her guest starring role in Taxi episode "Thy Boss's Wife" (1981). Brennan guest starred on two Murder, She Wrote episodes, "Old Habits Die Hard" (1987) and "Dear Deadly" (1994), and in 1987 she also appeared in the Magnum, P.I. episode, "The Love That Lies".

Personal life

From 1968 to 1974, Brennan was married to David John Lampson, with whom she has two sons: Patrick (formerly a basketball player, now an actor, e.g., in NBC's The Black Donnellys) and Sam (a singer). Brennan was a breast cancer survivor.Brennan died at her home in Burbank, California on July 28, 2013, of bladder cancer.

Filmography

       
  • 1967
Divorce American Style    
  • 1967
NET Playhouse    
  • 1968
Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In    
  • 1970
The Ghost and Mrs. Muir    
  • 1970
The Most Deadly Game    
  • 1971
The Last Picture Show    
  • 1972
All in the Family    
  • 1972
McMillan & Wife    
  • 1973
Jigsaw    
  • 1973
Scarecrow    
  • 1973
The Blue Knight    
  • 1973
The Sting    
  • 1974
Daisy Miller    
  • 1975
Insight    
  • 1975
At Long Last Love    
  • 1975
Barnaby Jones    
  • 1975
Kojak    
  • 1975
Hustle    
  • 1976
Murder by Death    
  • 1977
The Death of Richie    
  • 1977
The Great Smokey Roadblock    
  • 1978
FM    
  • 1978
The Cheap Detective    
  • 1979
13 Queens Boulevard    
  • 1979
When She Was Bad    
  • 1979
My Old Man    
  • 1979-1980
A New Kind of Family    
  • 1980
Private Benjamin    
  • 1981
When the Circus Came to Town    
  • 1981
Taxi    
  • 1981-1983
Private Benjamin    
  • 1982
American Playhouse    
  • 1982
Pandemonium    
  • 1983
The Funny Farm    
  • 1984
The Love Boat    
  • 1984-1985
Off the Rack    
  • 1985
Clue    
  • 1987
Magnum P.I.    
  • 1987
Murder, She Wrote    
  • 1988
The New Adventures of Pippy Longstocking    
  • 1988
Sticky Fingers    
  • 1988
Rented Lips    
  • 1988
CBS Summer Playhouse    
  • 1988-1989
Newhart    
  • 1990
Stella    
  • 1990
The Ray Bradbury Theater    
  • 1990
Texasville    
  • 1990
White Palace    
  • 1991
Blossom    
  • 1991
thirtysomething    
  • 1992
Home Improvement    
  • 1993
Tribeca    
  • 1993
Jack's Place    
  • 1993
Bonkers    
  • 1993
Tales from the Crypt    
  • 1993
All-New Dennis the Menace    
  • 1994
Murder, She Wrote    
  • 1995
Walker, Texas Ranger    
  • 1995
Thunder Alley    
  • 1995
Reckless    
  • 1996
ER    
  • 1996-2006
7th Heaven    
  • 1997
Veronica's Closet    
  • 1998
Nash Bridges    
  • 1998
Mad About You    
  • 1998
Pants on Fire    
  • 1999
Touched by an Angel    
  • 2000
The Fearing Mind    
  • 2001
Jeepers Creepers    
  • 2001-2006
Will & Grace    
  • 2003
Lizzie McGuire    
  • 2003
Strong Medicine    
  • 2003
Cheaper by the Dozen    
  • 2005
Miss Congeniality 2: Armed and Fabulous    
  • 2009
The Kings of Appletown  

 

Source: wikipedia.org

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