Carol Burnett and Jean Stapleton on "The Carol Burnett Show" in 1975. |
(CNN) -- Actress Jean Stapleton, best known for her role as Archie Bunker's wife in the groundbreaking 1970s sitcom "All in the Family," has died, her son said Saturday.
She was 90 years old.
Her son John Putch told CNN about
her passing and, along with his sister Pamela Putch, wrote an obituary saying
that she "passed away peacefully of natural causes" on Friday at her New York
City home "surrounded by friends and her immediate family."
"No one gave more profound 'how
to be a human being' lessons than Jean Stapleton," said Norman Lear, who
produced and directed "All in the Family." "Goodbye Edith, darling."
The daughter of an opera singer
and businessman, Stapleton grew up on Long Island and in New York City. It was
there during the early 1940s, while working as a typist for the British War
Ministry Office, that she began her career in theater.
Stapleton made it to Broadway in
the production "In the Summer House" in 1953, the same year of her television
debut on the daytime drama "Woman With a Past." Other big stage roles followed,
including in "Bells Are Ringing" and "Damn Yankees."
She also did more and more
television, including appearances on shows such as "Philco TV
Playhouse" and "Dr. Kildare."
Her breakout role was as Edith
Bunker, the conscience of "All in the Family" as the kindhearted foil to husband
Archie, played by the late Carroll O'Connor.
"All in the Family" was one of
television's most popular shows as it broke ground while tackling a host of
social issues such as racism, sexuality, life and death. Edith Bunker, played by
Stapleton, for instance revealed that she had breast cancer on the show, a rare
occurrence at the time.
"I just loved doing it from the
very beginning," Stapleton told CNN in 2001, shortly after O'Connor's death.
She won three Emmy awards -- in
1971, 1972 and 1978, in addition to five other nominations in which he she fell
short -- for her performance in that Lear-helmed show.
"Jean was a brilliant comedienne
with exquisite timing," said Rob Reiner, who played the Bunkers' son-in-law
referred to as "Meathead" on the show. "Working with her was one of the greatest
experiences of my life."
Stapleton kept busy after the
show went off in the air in 1979 and kept on racking up more accomplishments.
Those include Emmy nominations in 1982 for playing Eleanor Roosevelt in the CBS
miniseries "Eleanor, First Lady of the World" and in 1995 as Aunt Vivian in a
guest spot on the ABC comedy "Grace Under Fire."
"RIP Jean Stapleton," tweeted
fellow TV comedy veteran Roseanne Barr, "a great actor whose range was
unbelievable, deep and majestic."
In 2002 she was chosen for the
Television Academy Hall of Fame, joining the likes of Tim Conway and Bob Mackie
in that organization's 15th induction class.
Her most recent on-screen
credits, according to the IMDB website, are from 2001 when she appeared in the
film "Pursuit of Happiness" and the TV movie "Like Mother Like Son: The Strange
Story of Sante and Kenny Klimes" along with Mary Tyler Moore.
And after "All in the Family,"
she continued working in theater, including a nationwide tour as Roosevelt in
her one-woman show "Eleanor: Her Secret Journey," the Broadway revival of
"Arsenic and Lace" and Obie Award performances in Harold Pinter's "Mountain
Language" and "The Birthday Party." Her final stage appearance was in "The
Carpetbagger's Children" a few blocks from her home in New York, to which she
returned permanently in 2002.
Calling her "our collective
Mother, with a capital M," John and Pamela Putch -- Stapleton's two children
with her husband William Putch, whom she married in 1957 and who died in 1983 --
said "her devotion to her craft and her family taught us all great lessons."
"In her own words, she was an
'actress,' not a celebrity," they wrote in her obituary. "The play always came
first."
3 comments:
Adored her! K.
is Maria a sister?? lots of disappointments this week sadly
come and play with me on FB
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