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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Entertainment > Appreciation: For 50 years, Linda Lavin was TV’s go-to contact of sophistication
Appreciation: For 50 years, Linda Lavin was TV’s go-to contact of sophistication
Entertainment

Appreciation: For 50 years, Linda Lavin was TV’s go-to contact of sophistication

Last updated: December 31, 2024 1:08 am
Editorial Board Published December 31, 2024
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When Linda Lavin appeared on the doorstep of Lisa Kudrow and Ray Romano as a nosy neighbor in Netflix’s new real-estate comedy “No Good Deed,” my first thought was, “Linda Lavin looks great,” which rapidly segued into the sensation that it was simply good to see her once more. (You by no means needed to wait too lengthy to see her once more; she labored lots.) It was a small however very important half, by which she appeared very important and something however small.

It was “Alice,” the 1976 CBS sitcom adaptation of Martin Scorsese’s “Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore” — the one state of affairs comedy that may ever be produced from a Scorsese movie — that made Lavin a star. However she was already a cherished determine on the New York stage when she moved to Hollywood in 1973 with first husband, the actor Ron Leibman, with a Tony nomination for Neil Simon’s “Last of the Red Hot Lovers.” She’d appeared in performs by Carl Reiner, Jules Feiffer and John Guare and in Paul Sills’ “Story Theater.” (Within the late ‘50s, she was a member of Sills’ improvisational Compass Gamers, which might give beginning to Second Metropolis.) In “The Mad Show,” she launched “The Boy From…,” a “Girl From Ipanema” parody co-written by Stephen Sondheim. New York Instances critic Stanley Kauffmann known as her efficiency within the 1966 “It’s a Bird… It’s a Plane… It’s Superman” “pure imp”: “I wish she were in every musical and revue.”

In “Alice,” Lavin performs the title character, a widowed single mom relocating from New Jersey to Los Angeles to relaunch a singing profession, who winds up a waitress close to Phoenix after her automobile breaks down on the way in which. The star occupied a comparatively straight function amid a forged of oddballs: the outrageous Flo (Polly Holliday), whose catch phrase “Kiss my grits” was a meme in its day; the mousy Vera (Beth Howland); and Vic Tayback, repeating his function from the movie, as loud however lovable Mel, in whose diner Alice settles in for a nine-season, 202-episode run.

One in all Linda Lavin’s final roles was that of nosy neighbor Phyllis Adelman in “No Good Deed” on Netflix.

(Netflix)

It was a comedy about working ladies, within the decade of the ladies’s motion — Norman Lear’s “One Day at a Time,” a few single mom and her daughters getting by, premiered the yr earlier than. As Alice, Lavin initiatives a sure solidity not distinct from a sure sexiness; she’s Rosie the Riveter with a line of plates balanced on her arm. No pushover.

Her voice had a penetrating edge — one thinks of New York, although she was not by beginning a New Yorker — she may modulate when the half required, however regardless of the character Lavin spoke with a stage actor’s precision. She might be candy, evil, overbearing, put-upon, considerate, impulsive, girlish, susceptible or manipulative and superimpose chosen qualities for additional complexity, all the time with a compressed power, apparent or veiled. Lavin was the grandchild of Russian immigrants, and in later years she typically performed variations on the Jewish mom — decrease class, center class, higher class. Standing in for Simon’s personal in “Broadway Bound” lastly earned her a Tony Award in 1987.

Lavin belonged to the stage and display, and to their attendant communities, in equal measures, in a approach uncommon for American actors; there have been instances she focused on one to the exclusion of the opposite, and instances when she alternated between them, however by no means with lessening status. She may need labored much less or extra at instances and moved between starring, recurring and visitor roles, however there was no downhill slope to her profession. (She stayed busy within the pandemic with a really humorous Internet sequence, “Yvette Slosch, Agent,” by which she misguidedly guides the profession of jazz violinist Aaron Weinstein.) She was an excellent girl of the theater, in a right down to earth approach; on tv, her mere presence lent a manufacturing class, nevertheless a lot class her character may lack.

The sequence by which she starred after “Alice” have been, like most, short-lived; all have been multicamera community reveals, tailored for a theater particular person, the equal of placing a play on its ft week after week. “Room for Two” (ABC, 1992) paired her with display daughter Patricia Heaton, whose New York TV morning present she joins as a unusual commentator. In “Conrad Bloom” (NBC, 1998) and once more in “9JKL” (CBS, 2017), she was forged because the mom to characters performed by Mark Feuerstein. Within the former, she is glamorous and will get to sing a verse of “Steam Heat” and dance slightly. (Lavin, who sang the “Alice” theme, additionally had a cabaret act.) Within the latter, Feuerstein lives in an house between his dad and mom — Elliott Gould performed Lavin’s husband — and his brother’s household, failing to determine boundaries. All through her profession, Lavin didn’t a lot enter a scene as sweep into it.

She was mother once more, to Sean Hayes, in “Sean Saves the World” (NBC, 2013-14). There have been roles in Chuck Lorre’s kidney donor sitcom “B Positive” as a sparky resident of an assistant residing facility, and “Santa Clarita Diet” (Netflix, 2017) as a senior introduced again to life, in an undead, zombified approach. You possibly can discover her there, blood smeared round her mouth, sharing a lunch of human with Drew Barrymore. None have been dangerous, however that’s virtually irrelevant. She was nice in all of them.

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