October 6, 2008

Home
Playbill Club
Discounts
Benefits
Join Club
Member Services
News
U.S./Canada
International
Tony Awards
Obituaries
Awards Roundup
All
Listings/Tickets
Broadway
Off-Broadway
Regional/Tours
London
Features
Week in Review
Broadway Grosses
On the Record
The DVD Shelf
Stage to Screens
On Opening Night
Playbill Archives
Ask Playbill.com
Special Features
All

Buy Broadway show merchandise
Shop for Broadway Merchandise
Casting & Jobs
Job Listings
Post a Job
Celebrity Buzz
Diva Talk
Brief Encounter
The Leading Men
Cue and A
Onstage & Backstage
Who's Who
Insider Info
Playbill Digital
Multimedia
Video
Interactive
Polls
Quizzes
Contests
Theatre Central
Sites
Connections
Reference
Awards Database
Seating Charts
Restaurants
Hotels
FAQs

RSS News Feed


News: Obituaries
Related Information
Email this Article Email this Article
Printer-friendly Printer-friendly
Alice Ghostley, Tony-Winning Stage Actress, Dies

By Robert Simonson
24 Sep 2007

Alice Ghostley

Alice Ghostley, the stage and television actress whose sweetly befuddled face was familiar to millions, died Sept. 21 at her home in Studio City, CA. Her age was variously given as 81 and 83.

Diminutive with small eyes and a pixieish haircut, Ms. Ghostley was an expert at playing dim or eccentric characters who throw straight arrows off balance with a mix of retiring sweetness, wacky logic and bold opinion. She was Esmeralda, the inept witch on the 1960s sitcom "Bewitched," and oddball neighbor Bernice on the 1980s comedy "Designing Women." She made appearances on dozens of other television shows, including "Evening Shade" and "Love, American Style," employing her trademark quavering voice, which lent added comic spin to her punchlines.

Alice Ghostley made her Broadway debut in Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1952, alongside Eartha Kitt and Paul Lynde. In it, she sang "Boston Beguine," written by a neophyte songwriter named Sheldon Harnick. In 1954 she appeared in the short-lived musical Sandhog and the next year in the Leonard Bernstein-composed "Trouble in Tahiti" section of All in One. Another ill-fated musical, Shangri-La, followed in 1956.

Ms. Ghostley played a wide variety of characters in A Thurber Carnival, a revue based on the work of humorist and cartoonist James Thurber that ran for nine months in 1960. In 1962 she starred in the S.J. Perelman comedy The Beauty Part.

Ironically, given the comic bent of her work, she won her Tony Award for a dramatic role in Lorraine Hansberry's second and last work The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window.

Ms. Ghostley is survived by her sister, Gladys. Her husband, the actor Felice Orlandi, died in 2003.




Keyword:

Features/Location:

Writer:

 


advanced search

Free Membership
Exclusive Ticket Discounts
Join

NEWEST DISCOUNTS
American Ballet
   Theatre
Silver Rain
Back Back Back
Forbidden Broadway
The Affair in 22B
La Guardia
A Body of Water
Spamalot
Monday Night Magic
Ballerina Who Loves
   B-Boy
Aliens with...
   Skills

ALSO SAVE ON BROADWAY'S BEST
13
Avenue Q
Boeing-Boeing
Gypsy
Hairspray
The Little Mermaid
Speed-the-Plow
Spring Awakening
Title of Show
Xanadu

and more!

Latest Podcast:
Composer Michael John LaChiusa

Newest features from PlaybillArts.com:

Donor Buys $500,000 Worth of Prime Doctor Atomic Tickets to Be Redistributed for $30

New York Philharmonic: A Great Spanish

Click here for more classical music, opera, and dance features.


· Schedule of Upcoming Broadway Shows
· Schedule of Upcoming Off-Broadway Shows
· Broadway Rush and Standing Room Only Policies
· Long Runs on Broadway
· Weekly Schedule of Current Broadway Shows
· Upcoming Cast Recordings
· Hit Show Ticket Tips


Both 13 and Billy Elliot star child actors who share the lead role. For these shows, how important is it that you see a particular actor play the lead?
Very
Somewhat
Not important
Don't know

View Results
(without voting)

Email this page to a friend!