Edwin C. Owens Memorial Held Oct. 16 in Manhattan | Playbill

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News Edwin C. Owens Memorial Held Oct. 16 in Manhattan A memorial for the late Edwin C. Owens, the veteran actor whose career spanned almost 50 years, is being held Oct. 16 at the 78th Street Theatre Lab.

Mr. Owens died of heart failure Sept. 16 in Fort Worth, TX, while on the road in the national tour of On Golden Pond. The actor, whose qualities allowed him to play leading men and character parts, regionally and in New York City — was 64, and understudied the Tom Bosley role of retired professor Norman Thayer in On Golden Pond.

The two-hour memorial, scheduled to begin at 3:30 PM, will celebrate Owens' life as an actor, innovator, humanitarian and activist. Those who can recall stories about Owens are invited to speak at the service. Those with stories who cannot attend may e-mail their memories to [email protected].

The 78th Street Theatre Lab is located in Manhattan at 236 West 78th Street on the third floor. For more information call (212) 229-8310.

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Mr. Owens' agent Paul Hilepo called him a passionate actor who worked constantly, and wasn't afraid to travel outside New York for good roles. Mr. Owens was also a spiritual man — a practicing Buddhist.

Recently on Broadway, Mr. Owens played Dr. Baugh and went on as Big Daddy in the 2003 revival of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof; was the head servant Trembinsky in Fortune's Fool (2002) — a Russian-set play in which servants are vital to the world (he was also the cover for Tony-winners Alan Bates and Frank Langella); and was in the company of Death of a Salesman (1999), understudying the role of Charley. He succeeded John Lithgow in The Changing Room in 1973, and appeared in Broadway's An Inspector Calls (and on tour), That Championship Season and Caesar and Cleopatra (1977) and Conduct Unbecoming (1970).

Off-Broadway, he appeared in Charles Grodin's play The Right Kind of People at Primary Stages (and its predecessor, The Co-Op Chronicles) and Irish Repertory Theatre's Philadelphia, Here I Come!

Over the years, Mr. Owens worked with Arthur Penn, Anthony Page, Mark Lamos, Stephen Daldry, Robert Falls and other major directors.

Regionally, Mr. Owens' credits included work at the McCarter Theatre, Pittsburgh Public Theatre, Guthrie Theatre, Shakespeare Theatre, Actors Theatre of Louisville and Huntington Theatre. He also appeared in TV and film roles.

He is survived by friends, colleagues and extended family.

 
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