Product Code Database
Example Keywords: slacks -blackberry $100
barcode-scavenger
   » » Wiki: Susan Strasberg
Tag Wiki 'Susan Strasberg'.
Tag

Susan Elizabeth Strasberg (May 22, 1938 – January 21, 1999) was an American stage, film, and television actress. Thought to be the next -type ingenue, she was nominated for a at age 18, playing the title role in The Diary of Anne Frank. She appeared on the covers of LIFE and in 1955. A close friend of , she wrote two best-selling tell-all books. Her later career primarily consisted of and , followed by TV roles, by the 1980s.


Biography

Early life
Strasberg was born in New York City to and drama coach of the and former actress . Her brother, , is an acting coach. Her father was born in what is now Ukraine, and her mother in New York City. They were both from Jewish families who emigrated from Europe.

Strasberg attended the Professional Children's School, and then spent time at both The High School of Music & Art and the High School of Performing Arts. She also did some modelling.Vallance, Tom. "Culture: Obituary: Susan Strasberg," The Independent (24 January 1999).


Early roles
At age 14, Strasberg appeared off-Broadway in Maya in 1953, which ran seven performances. Her TV debut was in "Catch a Falling Star", an episode of Goodyear Playhouse directed by the same year.

She was in Romeo and Juliet for (1954), playing Juliet, and episodes of General Electric Theater and Omnibus.

She had a regular role in a short-lived sitcom, The Marriage, playing the daughter of and . It was the first network show broadcast in color.

Strasberg made her film debut in The Cobweb (1955). She followed it with a widely praised performance as a teenager in Picnic (1955), playing the younger sister of . Kim Stanley played the role on Broadway but was too old for film. Joshua Logan, the director, wrote Strasberg's "incipient beauty and spirit seemed just right for me."

(1978). 9780440062585, Bantam Doubleday Dell. .


The Diary of Anne Frank
Strasberg originated the title role in the Broadway production of The Diary of Anne Frank, directed by , which ran for 717 performances from 1955 to 1957. wrote that she was "a slender, enchanting young lady with a heart-shaped face, a pair of burning eyes, and the soul of an actress."

Strasberg was nominated for a at the age of 18 and became the youngest actress to star on Broadway with her name above the marquee title. In 1955 she appeared twice on the cover of Life (July 11, 1955 issue; November 11, 1955 issue) and soon after on the cover of (December 19, 1955 issue).

During her run on the show she did The Cradle Song with on TV.

The success of the play led to numerous film offers. She decided on the lead in Stage Struck (1958), directed by . It was a remake of Morning Glory (1933) with Katharine Hepburn. According to one obituary, "It had seemed as if the beautiful, dark-haired actress might have an impact equal to that made by and Audrey Hepburn as ingenues."

Strasberg was not cast in the film version of Anne Frank. Several reasons have been suggested for this: that Stevens did not want to deal with the influence of Strasberg's mother, Paula, and that Stevens saw Strasberg at the end of the play's run when her performance had become tired. Strasberg did not test for the role.

Strasberg's next appearance on Broadway was in Time Remembered (1957–58) by with Richard Burton and . It was another success and ran for 248 performances.

Strasberg continued to guest star on TV shows like Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse, Play of the Week (a production of The Cherry Orchard with Hayes), and Our American Heritage.

She was in the cast of the New York City Center production of 's The Time of Your Life that played at the Brussels World Fair in 1958. It was filmed for .

Strasberg appeared in Sean O'Casey's The Shadow of a Gunman (1958–59) for alongside members of the Actors Studio; it ran for 52 performances. said she had "willowy freshness".

In 1959 she toured with in Caesar and Cleopatra.


Italy
She went to Europe to star in the Italian–Yugoslav Holocaust film Kapò (1960), which was nominated for an Academy Award as its year's Best Foreign Language Film.

Strasberg based herself in Italy for the next few years. "I wanted to see what it was like when I was alone", she said.

In Rome, the has dedicated a hall in her memory.

She traveled to England to make Scream of Fear (1961) for , and in Italy did Disorder (1962) with and the Hollywood film Hemingway's Adventures of a Young Man (1962).


Return to US
Strasberg returned to the US to appear on Broadway in The Lady of the Camellias (1963), directed by Franco Zeffirelli. The director said Strasberg had the qualities of being "romantic, cynical, classical, contemporary." The show only ran for 13 performances.

Strasberg began to concentrate on television, guest-starring on Dr Kildare, Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre, Breaking Point, Burke's Law, and The Rogues.

She made The High Bright Sun (1965) in England then went back to TV: Run for Your Life, The Legend of Jesse James (starring Christopher Jones, who became her husband), The Big Valley and .

She made Chubasco (1967) with Jones, and did some counterculture movies: The Trip (1967) for , as the wife of , and (1968) with . She also did The Name of the Game Is Kill! (1968), The Brotherhood (1968) and The Sisters (1969).


Late 1960s and 1970s
In the late 1960s & 1970s Strasberg did mostly TV: The Big Valley; The Virginian; ; Lancer; The Name of the Game; Premiere; The F.B.I.; ; Marcus Welby, M.D.; The Streets of San Francisco; ; The Young Lawyers; McCloud; Alias Smith & Jones; The Sixth Sense; Assignment Vienna; The Wide World of Mystery; The Evil Touch; Owen Marshall, Counselor at Law; The Rockford Files (twice); and . "I did mediocre things because that way I didn't have to test myself", she said later. "I had a tremendous need not to shame my father."

She did occasional TV movies like Hauser's Memory (1970), Mr. and Mrs. Bo Jo Jones (1971) and ...And Millions Die! (1973) and the occasional feature like Ternos Caçadores (1970), The Legend of Hillbilly John (1972), and ' The Other Side of the Wind (ultimately released in 2018).

Strasberg had a regular role on the series Toma (1974). She guested on Police Surgeon, McMillan & Wife, , Ellery Queen, , , Bronk, and .

Strasberg had the lead in So Evil, My Sister (1974) and was in Mystery at Malibu (1976), (1976), (1977), Rollercoaster (1977), (1977), Tre soldi e la donna di classe (1977), In Praise of Older Women (1978), (1978), and Beggarman, Thief (1979).

In 1976 she appeared in a short film directed by called The Stronger, based on a play by August Strindberg, which she said reignited her passion for acting.

In 1980 she published a memoir, Bittersweet, because she said her career was "stalled. . . . It seemed totally untenable to me, acting for 25 years—I had played Juliet, Cleopatra, and Anne Frank—and there I was, sitting in Hollywood just waiting for somebody to want me."


1980s
In the 1980s Strasberg's credits included (1981); The Love Boat; Mazes and Monsters (1982); Sweet Sixteen (1983); (1983); The New Mike Hammer; Tales of the Unexpected; Tales from the Darkside; The Delta Force (1986); ; Hot Shots; Murder, She Wrote; Cagney & Lacey; and The Runnin' Kind (1989).

"I love acting", she said in 1983. "I mean, I can't quite conceive of not doing it. But it's less important to me since I started writing, because I really like writing. And I really enjoy, I love lecturing and speaking and having that kind of contact with people too."

Her last performances included the biopic Schweitzer (1990), the action movie Prime Suspect (1990) with and Il giardino dei ciliegi (1992).

In 1993 she was a jury member for the 43rd Berlin International Film Festival.


Writing
Strasberg wrote two best-selling books. Bittersweet was an autobiography in which she wrote about her tumultuous relationships with her parents and with actors and Christopher Jones, as well as with her own daughter's struggles with a heart defect. She received a $100,000 advance for it and sold paperback rights for $300,000.

Marilyn and Me: Sisters, Rivals, Friends (1992) was about Strasberg's friendship with , whom she called a "surrogate sister" and a "member" of the Strasberg family for many years.

Strasberg was working on a third book about her personal spiritual journey at the time of her death entitled Confessions of a New Age Heretic.


Personal life
Before her marriage, Strasberg had relationships with , , , and .

On September 25, 1965, in , Strasberg married actor Christopher Jones, with whom she had appeared in an episode of The Legend of Jesse James. Their daughter, Jennifer Robin, was born six months later. The couple divorced in 1968 due to her husband's mental instability. Jennifer was born with a congenital birth defect, which Strasberg blamed on her and Jones's drug-taking.


Death
In the mid-1990s Strasberg was diagnosed with . Although believed to be in remission, she died of the disease at her home in New York City on January 21, 1999, at age 60.


Filmography and television
  • The Cobweb (1955) as Sue Brett
  • Picnic (1955) as Millie Owens
  • 1955 Motion Picture Theatre Celebration (1955) (short subject)
  • Stage Struck (1958) as Eva Lovelace
  • Kapò (1960) as Edith, alias Nicole Niepas
  • Scream of Fear (1961) as Penny Appleby
  • Disorder (1962) as Isabella
  • Hemingway's Adventures of a Young Man (1962) as Rosanna
  • The Shortest Day (1962) (uncredited)
  • The High Bright Sun (1965) as Juno Kozani
  • , "Quantity Unknown" (Season 1: Episode 8, 1967) as Diane Oberly
  • The Big Valley (1967, Episode: "Night in a Small Town") as Sally
  • The F.B.I. (1967, Episode: "The Executioners") as Chris Roland
  • Chubasco (1968) as Bunny
  • The Trip (1967) as Sally Groves
  • (1968) as Jenny Davis
  • The Name of the Game Is Kill! (1968) as Mickey Terry
  • (1968, Episode: "A Severe Case Of Matrimony") as Rosalita
  • The Brotherhood (1968) as Emma Ginetta
  • The Sisters (1969) as Martha
  • Sweet Hunters (1969) as Lis
  • The Virginian (1970, Episode: "Crooked Corner") as Clara Hansch
  • McCloud (1970) as Lorraine / Annette Bardege
  • (1971–1973, 2 episodes) as Sheila Trent / Ruth Asquith (segment "Midnight Never Ends")
  • The Sixth Sense (TV series) (1972: Once Upon a Chilling")
  • The Legend of Hillbilly John (1972) as Polly Wiltse
  • Frankenstein (1973) as Elizabeth Lavenza
  • Toma (1973) as Patty Toma (series regular; 23 episodes)
  • And Millions Will Die (1973) as Heather Kessler
  • The Rockford Files (1974, Episode: "The Countess") as Deborah Ryder
  • So Evil, My Sister (1974) as Brenda
  • McMillan and Wife (1974) as Virginia Ryan
  • Sammy Somebody (1976)
  • The Rockford Files (1976, Episode: "A Bad Deal In The Valley") as Karen Stiles
  • The Stronger (1976, Short)
  • Rollercoaster (1977) as Fran
  • Tre soldi e la donna di classe (1977)
  • (1978) as Karen Tandy
  • In Praise of Older Women (1978) as Bobbie
  • (1978) as Sarah Levy
  • $weepstake$ (1979, Episode: "Roscoe, Elizabeth, and the M.C.") as Beverly
  • Beggarman, Thief (1979) as Ida Cohen
  • Acting: Lee Strasberg and the Actors Studio (1981, Documentary)
  • (1981) as Miss Viola Davis
  • Mazes and Monsters (1982) as Meg
  • Sweet Sixteen (1983) as Joanne Morgan
  • The Returning (1983) as Sybil Ophir
  • Tales of the Unexpected (1984–1985, TV Series) as Roberta Elton / Madame Myra
  • Tales from the Darkside (1985) as artist Kate in episode "Effect and Cause"
  • The Delta Force (1986) as Debra Levine (Passenger)
  • Remembering Marilyn (1987, Documentary)
  • Murder, She Wrote (1987, Episode: "The Days Dwindle Down") as Dorothy Hearn Davis
  • Marilyn Monroe: Beyond the Legend (1987, Documentary)
  • The Runnin' Kind (1989) as Carol Curtis
  • Prime Suspect (1989) as Dr. Celia Warren
  • (1990) as Helene Schweitzer
  • The Cherry Orchard (1992) as Livia
  • Love, Marilyn (2012, Documentary)
  • The Other Side of the Wind (2018; shot between 1970 and 1976) as Juliette Riche


Awards and nominations
1956Best Actress in a PlayThe Diary of Anne Frank
1956Theatre World Award The Diary of Anne Frank
1957BAFTA Film AwardMost Promising Newcomer to FilmPicnic
1961Mar de Plata Film FestivalBest ActressKapò
1963Best Actress – DramaHemingway's Adventures of a Young Man


External links

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
1s Time