Elaine Stritch, salty star of
Broadway, dies at 89
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[July 18, 2014]
By Bill Trott and Eric Kelsey
(Reuters) - Elaine Stritch, a
husky-voiced actress whose performances over six decades lit up New
York's Broadway and London's West End and brought a touch of the
profane to the stage with her brassy personality, died on Thursday
at age 89.
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Stritch, who also had Emmy-winning roles on the television
shows "30 Rock" and "Law & Order," died at home in Birmingham,
Michigan, a suburb of her native Detroit, from natural causes,
her spokesman said. She had suffered from diabetes for several
years and had been in declining health.
Stritch worked with some of the stage's greatest composers -
from Noel Coward, who called her Stritchie, to Stephen Sondheim,
who wrote what became her signature song, the show-stopping "The
Ladies Who Lunch," from the 1970 musical "Company."
Her performances were not the only things that made Stritch a
Broadway legend. She could be loud, blunt, demanding and
profane. In a May 2013 interview with actor Alec Baldwin,
Stritch agreed with his assessment that she was a "legendary
pain in the ass." She played the mother of Baldwin's "30 Rock"
character, TV network boss Jack Donaghy.
"I want to be talked about," Stritch told the Hollywood Reporter
that same year. "I want to be written about. I want everything
about me! And I don't make any bones about that. I like it being
all about me."
Stritch was so closely identified with New York that the city's
Landmarks Conservancy declared her a living landmark in 2003. In
2013, Stritch said she no longer had the energy required to live
in New York and returned to Michigan.
Life in the Detroit suburbs proved to be a tough transition
after years of residing in the tony Carlyle Hotel on Manhattan's
Upper East Side. Two months after moving, she told Vanity Fair
magazine, "I don't have a damn thing to do except take walks in
Birmingham, Michigan, and I've done that."
Stritch first went to New York in 1944 at age 17 to attend
finishing school. She became caught up in the stage world and
studied at Stella Adler's acting school, where Marlon Brando and
Walter Matthau were classmates.
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Notable Broadway performances included "Pal Joey" and "Bus Stop,"
which earned her the first of five Tony nominations, and "Sail
Away."
Stritch's voice did not have great range but she brought emotion and
impeccable timing to anything she sang.
After "Company" finished its Broadway run, Stritch took the Sondheim
musical to London, where she ended up living for 13 years and
married American actor John Bay. He died in 1982 after 10 years of
marriage.
Her 2002 one-woman show "Elaine Stritch: At Liberty" won her a Tony,
as well as an Emmy for the version that aired on cable's HBO.
Onstage, her costume - a man's white oxford shirt worn over black
tights - showed off her dancer's legs.
She was blunt about her struggles with alcohol, talking about how
she drank before taking the stage.
"I drank because I was scared - of my own ability and my talent,"
she told the New York Times in 2002. "I knew I had it and I did not
know how to get it out. Booze helped me."
The Broadway League said it will dim the lights on Broadway on
Friday night to honor Stritch.
(Editing by Mary Milliken and Jan Paschal)
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