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Elizabeth Ashley(I)

  • Actress
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Elizabeth Ashley
Russian Doll: Season 2
Play trailer1:37
Russian Doll (2019–2022)
15 Videos
47 Photos
Award-winning actress Elizabeth Ashley can always be counted on to give her all. Grand in style, exotic in looks, divinely outgoing in personality and an engaging interpreter of Tennessee Williams' florid Southern-belles on stage, she was born Elizabeth Ann Cole on August 30, 1939, in Ocala, Florida. The daughter of Arthur Kingman and Lucille (Ayer) Cole, the family moved to Louisiana where Elizabeth graduated from Louisiana State University Laboratory School (University High) in Baton Rouge in 1957.

The liberal-minded Elizabeth immediately embarked upon an acting career following her education and relocated to New York. Briefly using her real name, her big breakthrough year occurred in 1959 when she made her off-Broadway debut with "Dirty Hands", played "Esmeralda" in the Neighborhood Playhouse production of "Camino Real" and took on Broadway with Dore Schary's "The Highest Tree". Now using the marquee name of Elizabeth Ashley, the 1960s proved to be even better, taking her to trophy-winning heights. After understudying the lead roles in Broadway's "Roman Candle" and "Mary, Mary", she won the role of Mollie in the delightful comedy "Take Her, She's Mine" and won both the "supporting actress" Tony and Theatre World Awards for it. Neil Simon was quite taken by the new star and created especially for her the role of Corie Bratter in 1963's "Barefoot in the Park" opposite Robert Redford. She received another Tony nomination, this time for Best Actress. In addition to these theatrical pinnacles, Elizabeth also found happiness in her private life when she met and married (in 1962) actor James Farentino, who was also on his way up. This happiness, however, was short-lived...the marriage lasted only three years. The attention she earned from Broadway led directly to film offers and she made a highly emotive debut in Harold Robbins glossy soaper The Carpetbaggers (1964), headlining handsome George Peppard. The critics trashed the movie but Elizabeth sailed ahead...temporarily.

Following intense roles in the superb all-star film epic Ship of Fools (1965) and the psychological crime drama The Third Day (1965), which again starred Peppard, the still-married Elizabeth divorced her husband and wed Peppard in 1966, taking a hiatus to focus on domestic life. The couple went on to have son Christian Peppard (born 1968), who would later become a writer.

The Peppard-Ashley marriage was a volatile one, however, and the twosome ultimately divorced in 1972. Wasting no time, Elizabeth returned to the stage and also went out for TV roles. Abandoning a film career that had just gotten out of the starting gate proved detrimental and she never did recapture the momentum she once had. Broadway, however, was a different story. The dusky-toned actress pulled out all the stops as Maggie the Cat in Tennessee Williams's "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" (1974) co-starring Keir Dullea and as Sabina in Thornton Wilder's "The Skin of Our Teeth" the following year, and she was back on top. Other heralded work on the live stage would include "Caesar and Cleopatra" opposite Rex Harrison, "Vanities" and, notably, "Agnes of God", for which she received the Albert Einstein Award for "excellence in the performing arts".

Following "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" for which she won a third Tony nomination, Elizabeth struck up a close friendship with author Williams. Over time, she would play and come to define three of his (and the theater's) finest female roles: Mrs. Venable in "Suddenly, Last Summer" (1995), Alexandra Del Lago in "Sweet Bird of Youth" (1998), and Amanda Wingfield in "The Glass Menagerie" (2001). In addition, she also appeared in Williams' "Eight by Tenn" (a series of his one-act plays), "Out Cry", "The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore" and "The Red Devil Battery Sign". In 2005, 31 years after playing Maggie, she was again a success in "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof", this time as Big Mama.

Elizabeth went on to sink her teeth into a number of other famous plays as well, all peppered with her inimitable trademark flourish: Martha in "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf", Isadora Duncan in "When She Danced", Maria Callas in "Master Class" and the scheming Regina in "The Little Foxes", to name a few. On '90s TV, she found daytime soaps to her liking with eye-catching parts on Another World (1964) and All My Children (1970). She also appeared in the ensemble cast of Burt Reynolds' series Evening Shade (1990). Occasional serious film supports in Rancho Deluxe (1975) and Coma (1978) were often intertwined with campier, over-the-top ones such as her psychotic lesbian in Windows (1980).

Overcoming a series of tragic, personal setbacks - a third divorce, a boating accident, a NY apartment fire, and a rape incident - the still-lovely Elizabeth continues to demonstrate her mettle and maintain a busy acting schedule on stage ("Enchanted April", "Ann & Debbie"); film (Happiness (1998), Labor Pains (2000), The Cake Eaters (2007), Ocean's Eight (2018)); and TV ("Caroline in the City," "Law & Order," "Treme," "Russian Doll").

Elsewhere, her memoir "Actress: Postcards from the Road" (1978) became a best seller. She was also a founding member of the Board of Directors of the American Film Institute while serving on the first National Council of the Arts during the administrations of Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, and has also served on the President's Committee for the Kennedy Center Lifetime Achievement Awards.
BornAugust 30, 1939
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BornAugust 30, 1939
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
  • View contact info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 2 wins & 10 nominations total

    Photos47

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    Known for

    Talia Shire and Elizabeth Ashley in Windows (1980)
    Windows
    4.8
    • Andrea Glassen
    • 1980
    Philip Seymour Hoffman, Camryn Manheim, Jane Adams, and Dylan Baker in Happiness (1998)
    Happiness
    7.7
    • Diane Freed
    • 1998
    Geneviève Bujold in Coma (1978)
    Coma
    6.9
    • Mrs. Emerson
    • 1978
    Kris Kristofferson, Willie Nelson, Johnny Cash, and Waylon Jennings in Stagecoach (1986)
    Stagecoach
    5.8
    TV Movie
    • Dallas
    • 1986

    Credits

    Edit
    IMDbPro

    Actress



    • Natasha Lyonne in Russian Doll (2019)
      Russian Doll
      7.7
      TV Series
      • Ruth Brenner
      • 2019–2022
    • The Pack Podcast (2020)
      The Pack Podcast
      5.4
      Podcast Series
      • Katrina (voice)
      • 2021
    • Pamela Adlon in Better Things (2016)
      Better Things
      7.9
      TV Series
      • Miss Louise
      • 2020
    • Aisha Dee, Meghann Fahy, and Katie Stevens in The Bold Type (2017)
      The Bold Type
      7.8
      TV Series
      • Pam Sheard
      • 2020
    • Sandra Bullock, Helena Bonham Carter, Cate Blanchett, Anne Hathaway, Sarah Paulson, Mindy Kaling, Rihanna, and Awkwafina in Ocean's Eight (2018)
      Ocean's Eight
      6.3
      • Ethel
      • 2018
    • Severance (2018)
      Severance
      7.0
      Short
      • Francesca
      • 2018
    • Morgan Freeman, Tommy Lee Jones, and Rene Russo in Just Getting Started (2017)
      Just Getting Started
      4.6
      • Lily
      • 2017
    • Fry Day (2017)
      Fry Day
      6.8
      Short
      • Deirdre (Grannie)
      • 2017
    • Understudies (2014)
      Understudies
      7.4
      TV Series
      • Dotty Buggett
      • 2015
    • Understudies
      TV Movie
      • Dotty Buggett
      • 2015
    • Justice League of America Vs the Lunar Invaders
      Video
      • Wonder Woman (voice)
      • 2014
    • Treme (2010)
      Treme
      8.3
      TV Series
      • Aunt Mimi
      • 2010–2013
    • Aaron Stanford and Kristen Stewart in The Cake Eaters (2007)
      The Cake Eaters
      6.3
      • Marg Kaminski
      • 2007
    • Paul Sorvino, Craig Bartlett, Sam Gifaldi, Spencer Klein, Anndi McAfee, Justin Shenkarow, Francesca Marie Smith, and Jamil Walker Smith in Hey Arnold! The Movie (2002)
      Hey Arnold! The Movie
      6.0
      • Mrs. Vitello (voice)
      • 2002
    • Labor Pains (2000)
      Labor Pains
      4.6
      • Janice
      • 2000

    Videos15

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    Personal details

    Edit
    • Height
      • 5′ 5″ (1.65 m)
    • Born
      • August 30, 1939
      • Ocala, Florida, USA
    • Spouses
        James McCarthyMay 11, 1975 - February 27, 1981 (divorced)
    • Children
      • Christian Peppard
    • Parents
        Arthur Kingman Cole
    • Other works
      "Sweet Bird of Youth" playing "Alexandra Del Lago (Princess Cosmonopolous)" at Shakespeare Theatre, Washington, DC
    • Publicity listings
      • 1 Article
      • 2 Pictorials
      • 1 Magazine Cover Photo

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Mother of writer Christian Peppard, her son by with George Peppard.
    • Quotes
      If they don't have Clint Eastwood movies in heaven, I'd rather go to hell.
    • Trademark
        Husky voice

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