Tammy Lee Grimes (January 30, 1934 – October 30, 2016) was a vetran American actress and singer with a long list of credits in theatre, film, and television. For purposes of musical and recording work, her primary efforts were appearances on a series of cast albums, notably The Unsinkable Molly Brown, which preserves her Tony Award-winning performance, and many children's and audio book recordings.
Often thought to be British, Grimes was in fact an
American who owed her accent to her birth into a prominent New England family,
though the unique husky timbre of her voice was her own. Her father managed a
country club, and she was a debutante who came out into Boston society at age
17. She wanted to become an actress, however, and studied drama at Stephens
College in Missouri, then went to New York, where she continued her training at
the Neighbourhood Playhouse School of the Theatre.
She first stepped on a Broadway stage as a replacement
for Kim Stanley in the starring role in the drama Bus Stop in 1955. An early
television appearance came in "The Bride Cried," an episode of The
United States Steel Hour, on August 17, 1955. She got her first chance to
display her musical abilities in the off-Broadway show The Littlest Revue (1956),
which ran 32 performances and had a cast album released by Epic Records.
The
Littlest Revue was still running when she appeared in the television musical
Holiday on NBC on June 9, 1956. That August, she married Canadian actor
Christopher Plummer.
Their daughter, Amanda Plummer, was born March 23, 1957. Like both of her parents, she went on to become a Tony Award-winning performer. Grimes divorced Christopher Plummer in April 1960. She was later married to actor Jeremy Slade and to musician Richard Bell.
Their daughter, Amanda Plummer, was born March 23, 1957. Like both of her parents, she went on to become a Tony Award-winning performer. Grimes divorced Christopher Plummer in April 1960. She was later married to actor Jeremy Slade and to musician Richard Bell.
Grimes was part of The Amazing Adele, a Broadway-bound
musical that closed out of town in December 1956. She returned to television in
other original musicals. Noël Coward personally cast her in his play Look After
Lulu (1959), which marked her Broadway debut in a role she originated. It ran
only five weeks, but she won a Theatre World award for her performance.
She
continued to appear on television up to the end of the decade, but her greatest
success came with her casting in the title role of Meredith Willson's follow-up
to his Broadway hit The Music Man, The Unsinkable Molly Brown (1960).
The show ran 532 performances, and Grimes won the Tony Award for supporting or featured actress in a musical. The Unsinkable Molly Brown was recorded by Capitol Records for a cast album that reached the Top Ten and remained in the charts almost a year.
The show ran 532 performances, and Grimes won the Tony Award for supporting or featured actress in a musical. The Unsinkable Molly Brown was recorded by Capitol Records for a cast album that reached the Top Ten and remained in the charts almost a year.
The recognition Grimes achieved with The Unsinkable Molly
Brown translated into more Broadway stage work and guest appearances on TV
series throughout the early to mid 1960’s. While on the West Coast she appeared
in her first motion picture, Three Bites of the Apple, which opened in May
1967, and in a 1967 Los Angeles stage production of the revue The Decline and
Fall of the Entire World as Seen Through the Eyes of Cole Porter.
Then she returned
to New York and to Broadway in the play The Only Game in Town (1968). The
following year, she appeared in a revival of Noël Coward's play Private Lives
that won her a second Tony Award for actress in a drama, making her one of the
few performers to win Tonys in both musical and dramatic categories.
By 1970, Grimes, in her mid-thirties, was established as
a versatile actress, perhaps most at home on-stage, but also a popular choice
for character parts on television and in films. During the '70s, she returned
to Broadway for revues and plays.Her notable feature films included Play It as
It Lays (1972), Somebody Killed Her Husband (1978), and The Runner Stumbles
(1979).
During the 80’s Grimes had her third major triumph on the
Broadway musical stage with an adaptation of the 1933 film 42nd Street. Her
other New York theatrical appearances included the off-Broadway musical Sunset in
1983; the 1985 play Waltz of the Toreadors; the off-Broadway musical
Mademoiselle Colombe (1987); and a one-woman show, Tammy Grimes: A Concert in
Words and Music (1988). She also appeared regularly in feature films during the
decade -- Can't Stop the Music (1980), No Big Deal (1983), America (1986), Mr.
North (1988), and Slaves of New York (1989).
She worked less frequently in the '90s, though she still
appeared in several feature films but her distinctive voice had meanwhile
brought her a whole new career recording audio books in the late '80s and '90s,
especially those for children and young adults.
Tammy Grimes died on October 30, 2016, in Englewood, New
Jersey, aged 82 from undisclosed causes. (Mainly edited from AllMusic)
Tammy Grimes appears on "The Hollywood Palace" in 1966, performing "Feeling Good" from the Broadway musical "The Roar of the Greasepaint---The Smell of the Crowd" by Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley.
Tammy Grimes appears on "The Hollywood Palace" in 1966, performing "Feeling Good" from the Broadway musical "The Roar of the Greasepaint---The Smell of the Crowd" by Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley.
2 comments:
For “Tammy Grimes (1962)” go here:
http://www.mediafire.com/file/gddorne2gz53pc4/TG.zip/file
1. I'm Just Wild about Harry (from SHUFFLE ALONG)
2. Rose of Washington Square (from Ziegfeld's MIDNIGHT FROLICS OF 1919)
3. I'll Be Seeing You (from RIGHT THIS WAY)
4. Doodle Dee Doo
5. You Came a Long Way from St. Louis
6. On the Sunny Side of the Street (from Lew Leslie's INTERNATIONAL REVUE)
7. Anything Goes (from ANYTHING GOES)
8. How Long Has This Been Going On? (from ROSALIE)
9. I'm Always Chasing Rainbows (from OH, LOOK)
10. If I Had You
11. Tom Dooley
12. Please Don't Talk about Me When I'm Gone
Password: thecheerful
A big thank you to The Cheerful Earful for active link.
Lovely tribute to a singular star!
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