Carol Lawrence | |
---|---|
Born | Carolina Maria Laraia September 5, 1932 Melrose Park, Illinois, U.S. |
Occupation(s) | Actress, singer |
Years active | 1952–2018 |
Spouses | Cosmo Allegretti (m. 1956;div. 1959)John Gregory Guydus (m. 1982;div. 1983) |
Children | 2 |
Carol Lawrence (born Carolina Maria Laraia; September 5, 1932) is an American actress, appearing in musical theatre and on television. She is known for creating the role of Maria on Broadway in the musical West Side Story (1957), receiving a nomination for the Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical. She appeared at The Muny, St. Louis, in several musicals, including Funny Girl . She also appeared in many television dramas, including Rawhide , The Six Million Dollar Man and Murder, She Wrote . She was married to fellow performer Robert Goulet.
Lawrence was born Carolina Maria Laraia on September 5, 1932, [1] in Melrose Park, Illinois. Her parents were of Italian ancestry, [2] her father being born in Trivigno, in the province of Potenza, and her maternal family coming from the same town. [3] Laraia graduated from Proviso Township High School, in Maywood, Illinois. She spent one year at Northwestern University and then left to pursue her career. [1]
Lawrence made her Broadway debut as a Ted Adair Dancer in the 1951 revue Borscht Capades, alongside Joel Grey. [4] [5] [6] [7] She achieved success in the role of Maria in the original Broadway production of West Side Story in 1957, [8] for which she received a Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical nomination (even though the part was the lead), losing to Barbara Cook ( The Music Man ). [8] She played the role for two years, and after an appearance in the short-lived show Saratoga in 1959 [8] she returned to West Side Story for its 1960 season. Other Broadway successes were Subways Are for Sleeping , I Do! I Do! (replacement "She/Agnes", 1967), and Kiss of the Spider Woman (1992–93, replacement Spider Woman/Aurora). [1] [8] Her most recent Broadway credit is serving as standby for Lauren Bacall in the 1999 production of Noël Coward's Waiting in the Wings . [9]
She made a few record albums of standards and showtunes including Tonight at 8:30 (1960), where she sang studio versions of the songs "Tonight", and "Something's Coming", both from West Side Story.
She played several roles at The Muny in St. Louis, Missouri, the largest outdoor theater in the U.S., including Fanny Brice in Funny Girl (1975), [10] Charity in Sweet Charity (1977), and Lucille Early in No, No, Nanette (1990). Among her other musical theatre parts are the title role in Mame (2000 at the Helen Hayes Center for Performing Arts in Nyack, New York), [11] Guenevere in Camelot (opposite husband Robert Goulet), [1] Do I Hear a Waltz? at the Pasadena Playhouse (2001), [12] and Follies at the Wadsworth Theatre in Los Angeles in 2002. [13]
Her television performances include a guest role in Breaking Point (as Evelyn Denner in the 1963 episode titled "There Are the Hip, and There Are the Square"). In October 1976, she appeared as the special guest on the popular weekly variety program The Bobby Vinton Show , which aired across the United States and Canada. She performed "Friend of the Father". Other appearances include Rawhide ; Combat! ; Wagon Train ; The Fugitive ; The Big Valley ; Hawaii 5-0 ; Marcus Welby, M.D. ; Medical Center ; Kung Fu ; Mannix ; Murder, She Wrote ; Saved by the Bell ; and Sex and the City . [14]
From 1991 to 1993, she played the role of matriarch Angela Eckart on General Hospital . [14] She hosted five shows of Chef du Jour for the Food Network, cooking from I Remember Pasta, her own cookbook, and setting a record for cookbook sales on the Home Shopping Network. [14]
In 1999, she appeared in the television movie remake of Jason Miller's That Championship Season in a cameo role as Claire's mother (the mother-in-law of Vincent D'Onofrio's character), a role written into the film specifically for her. [15] In 2013, she appeared Off-Broadway at the Westside Theatre Downstairs in Jason Odell Williams's play Handle with Care. [16]
Lawrence has written her autobiography, with Phyllis Hobe, titled Carol Lawrence: The Backstage Story, published in 1990. [2]
Lawrence married three times:
Lawrence and Goulet married while both were Broadway stars; their romance was treated in the press like a fairy-tale. In her 1990 book Carol Lawrence: The Backstage Story, she accused Goulet of having alcoholism and being an abusive husband and father. [21]
Lawrence, a registered Democrat, accompanied Democratic National Committee (DNC) Chairman John Bailey, DNC Vice-chairwoman Margaret B. Price, DNC Secretary Dorothy Vredenburgh Bush, Lena Horne, Richard Adler, and Sidney Salomon on a visit with President John F. Kennedy at The White House on November 20, 1963, two days before his assassination. [22]
Lawrence is Presbyterian and a member of the Bel Air Presbyterian Church. [23]
Kiss Me, Kate is a musical with music and lyrics by Cole Porter and a book by Bella and Samuel Spewack. The story involves the production of a musical version of William Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew and the conflict on and off-stage between Fred Graham, the show's director, producer, and star, and his leading lady, his ex-wife Lilli Vanessi. A secondary romance concerns Lois Lane, the actress playing Bianca, and her gambler boyfriend, Bill, who runs afoul of some gangsters. The original production starred Alfred Drake, Patricia Morison, Lisa Kirk and Harold Lang.
Hello, Dolly! is a 1964 musical with lyrics and music by Jerry Herman and a book by Michael Stewart, based on Thornton Wilder's 1938 farce The Merchant of Yonkers, which Wilder revised and retitled The Matchmaker in 1954. The musical follows the story of Dolly Gallagher Levi, a strong-willed matchmaker, as she travels to Yonkers, New York, to find a match for the miserly "well-known unmarried half-a-millionaire" Horace Vandergelder.
Mame is a musical with a book by Jerome Lawrence and Robert Edwin Lee and music and lyrics by Jerry Herman. Originally titled My Best Girl, it is based on the 1955 novel Auntie Mame by Patrick Dennis and the 1956 Broadway play by Lawrence and Lee. A period piece set in New York City and spanning the Great Depression and World War II, it focuses on eccentric bohemian Mame Dennis, whose famous motto is "Life is a banquet and most poor sons of bitches are starving to death." Her fabulous life with her wealthy friends is interrupted when the young son of her late brother arrives to live with her. They cope with the Depression in a series of adventures.
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