Cloris Leachman, Oscar Winner And Hollywood Icon, Dies At 94

Cloris Leachman, whose quick wit and effervescence were the hallmarks of her fruitful career in film, television and theatre, has died at the age of 94.

The Oscar-winning star died of natural causes on Tuesday, according to TMZ. A representative for Cloris confirmed her death. 

“There was no one like Cloris. With a single look she had the ability to break your heart or make you laugh ’till the tears ran down your face,” her longtime manager Juliet Green told HuffPost.

“You never knew what Cloris was going to say or do and that unpredictable quality was part of her unparalleled magic.”

Cloris Leachman

Known for her zany comedic prowess both on and off-screen, Cloris won eight Emmy Awards, the most of any performer besides Julia Louis-Dreyfus, with whom she was tied.

Throughout her career, she appeared in shows like The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Phyllis, Malcolm in the Middle, Raising Hope, as well as films including Young Frankenstein, Prancer, The Beverly Hillbillies, Now And Then and Spanglish.

Although she was best known for her comedic roles, she was awarded an Academy Award for her moving turn as a lonely housewife having an affair in The Last Picture Show. 

 

Born in Des Moines, Iowa, in 1926, Cloris was the eldest of three daughters whose father worked in the family lumber business.

She left Northwestern University to compete in the Miss America pageant and then used her $1,000 earnings to move to New York City, where she studied acting and singing under famed A Streetcar Named Desire director Elia Kazan.

“It was like opening the door to worlds of riches,” she later said of his tutelage. 

The same day she relocated to New York, Cloris landed a job as an extra in the 1947 film Carnegie Hall, and quickly ignited her career with a series of Broadway breakouts.

She has said Katharine Hepburn asked her to read for the part of Celia in a 1950 revival of Shakespeare’s As You Like It. She then succeeded Mary Martin and Martha Wright as the lead in Rodgers and Hammerstein’s World War II musical South Pacific.

Cloris Leachman and Katharine Hepburn star in a scene from

Throughout the 1950s and ’60s, Cloris continued steady work in film and television, but it was the 1970s that brought her real fame and acclaim, primarily as the meddling neighbor Phyllis Lindstrom on The Mary Tyler Moore Show, a role that earned her two Emmys and the spinoff Phyllis, which spanned two seasons.

The 1971 film The Last Picture Show, based on the Larry McMurtry novel, jump-started Cloris’ career, earning her only Oscar nomination at the age of 42 — and winning.

“I’m having an amazing life, and it isn’t over yet,” she said upon accepting the award

Timothy Bottoms and Cloris star in a scene from

Throughout her rising career, Cloris became something of a tabloid fixture. She befriended Marlon Brando, saved Judy Garland’s life after finding her passed out in a pool, enjoyed an “epic” fling with Gene Hackman and spent 26 years married to Hollywood director and editor George Englund.

Before divorcing in 1979, she and Englund had five children. Their eldest son died in 1986

Amid an era when meant TV stars were considered inferior to their big-screen counterparts, Cloris achieved rare success in both mediums.

She nabbed a few more dramatic parts as the 1970s continued, but with Mary Tyler Moore running through 1975 and Phyllis lasting until 1977, it was Leachman’s comedy work that found the strongest footprint.

Her other signature project of the decade was Mel Brooks’ parody Young Frankenstein, in which she played the glowering housekeeper Frau Blucher, whose mere name prompted horses’ neighing fears.

Cloris again teamed up with Mel Brooks and Frankenstein co-star Madeline Kahn for the Hitchcock satire High Anxiety and the costume-epic farce History Of The World, Part I.

Clors holds an Emmy for her role in

Cloris’ reputation as a resident kooky grandma arose in the early 2000s, thanks to Malcolm In The Middle” (which earned her two Emmys), Bad Santa, Spanglish (which netted her a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination), The Longest Yard and Beerfest.

In 2008, at age 82, the star postponed a national tour of her one-woman show to join Dancing with the Stars.

Cloris’ son, who was her manager, pitched the actor to ABC three times before the network agreed to cast her. Then the oldest woman to appear on the show, she eventually placed seventh, outlasting Kim Kardashian and Toni Braxton on the same season.

Leachman appears on

Dancing With The Stars brought about something of a resurgence for Cloris, who published an autobiography in 2009, proceeded with her one-woman show in 2010, and took a recurring role on the Fox sitcom Raising Hope from 2010 to 2014. The latter earned her another Emmy nomination. 

Cloris continued working well into her 90s. She was a guest player on Starz’s American Gods, portraying an eccentric disciple of Slavic mythology. She was a surprise standout on the show, just as she was throughout her career.

She also appeared on a reboot of Mad About You and has two movies yet to be released, including one co-starring Tom Arnold and Jennifer Tilly.

If there’s any word that aptly describes Cloris Leachman, it’s “scene-stealer”. If we can afford another description, it would be “hard worker.”

“I’m just a simple person with a silly bone,” she once said.

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