Louis-Dreyfus gained fame as Elaine - the
perpetually single neurotic in Jerry Seinfeld's ensemble sitcom
- but her role as a blundering politician on the HBO show Veep
has brought more acclaim.
On Sunday evening, Louis-Dreyfus was awarded the Mark Twain
Prize for American Humor at the Kennedy Center, the national
showcase for arts. Dreyfus, 57, was praised as an actor who
could nail a farcical role and then deliver a satire with
smarts.
Sunday night's ceremony will be broadcast on PBS on Nov. 19.
Louis-Dreyfus has earned six consecutive Emmy awards portraying
Vice President Selina Meyer - a haul that surpassed that of past
female comedy icons like Mary Tyler Moore or Lucille Ball.
A send-up of Washington power-brokers, Veep has aired on HBO
since 2012 but the show took a hiatus when Louis-Dreyfus was
diagnosed with breast cancer last year. Last week, Louis-Dreyfus
said she is cancer free and is wrapping up the last season of
Veep.
Louis-Dreyfus has earned the most professional renown with Veep
but the actress became a national celebrity two decades earlier
as Elaine on Seinfeld - a show that was a cultural touchstone
during a nine-year run that ended in 1998.
For Jerry Seinfeld, it took less than a minute of an audition
reading two pages of script for him to cast Louis-Dreyfus as the
main female lead in his eponymous show.
"It was literally thirty seconds. We were building the show but
she was magic," he told reporters at the ceremony on Sunday
night. "I really don't think the show would have been successful
without her.
Louis-Dreyfus was called to the small screen after a Saturday
Night Live producer spotted her at a Chicago improvisational
revue in 1982. As Louis-Dreyfus moved through television roles,
she did more behind-the-scenes work and is a producer on Veep.
All together, Louis-Dreyfus has received 11 Emmy awards, eight
for acting and three for producing - a record for any single
performer.
Louis-Dreyfus has used her celebrity to draw attention to
environmental causes as an activist with the Natural Resource
Defense Council (NRDC) and other conservation causes.
(Reporting by Patrick Rucker; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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