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Actors - Gilda Radner


Gilda Radner (28 June, 1946 – 20 May, 1989) was an American comedian and actress, best known for her five years as part of the original cast of the NBC comedy series Saturday Night Live
. Radner, who died at 42 of ovarian cancer, became an icon for public awareness of both detection and treatment of the disease.

Born to well-to-do Jewish-American parents, Herman Radner and Henrietta Dworkin, in Detroit, Michigan, Radner graduated from the prestigious University-Liggett School in Grosse Pointe in 1964, and then studied drama at the University of Michigan, where she began her broadcasting career as the weather girl for college radio station WCBN. She moved to Toronto, Canada and had her first professional stage experience in a production of Godspell
,
after which she joined the Toronto Second City comedy troupe.

Radner was a featured player on the National Lampoon Radio Hour, a half-hour comedy program syndicated to some 600 U.S. radio stations from 1973 to 1975. Fellow cast members included John Belushi
, Richard Belzer
, Chevy Chase
and Bill Murray
.

She first rose to widespread fame as one of the original "Not Ready For Prime Time Players" on Saturday Night Live
. (She was the first actor cast for the show.) Between 1975 and 1980 she created such characters as Roseanne Roseannadanna (a coarse woman with long black hair that always seemed to end up in places it didn't belong), Baba Wawa (a spoof of journalist Barbara Walters, exaggerating the latter's lisp), and Emily Litella, an elderly woman who gave angry and misinformed editorial replies on the show's Weekend Update news segment. Once corrected on her misunderstanding, Litella would end her segment with a polite "Never mind" - or later on, she would answer Jane Curtin
's frustration with her with a simple "Bitch!"

Radner projected an innocence into her lines that wouldn't have worked with other performers. "I guess in France, you don't order French fries," she said in one routine. "You just order fries. They'll know." Radner had a knack for combining extreme physical comedy with soft, caring characters that were easy to love. (There is a legend that Radner broke several ribs during one comedy sketch that required her to slam herself against a door repeatedly, but the next day she went on as scheduled.) Radner also battled bulimia during her time on the show (she once told a reporter that she had thrown up in every toilet in New York City), and had a relationship with co-star Bill Murray
which ended badly. In 1979, incoming NBC President Fred Silverman offered Radner her own prime time variety show, which she ultimately turned down. That year, she was one of the hosts of the Music for UNICEF Concert at the United Nations General Assembly.

In her final season of Saturday Night Live, Radner appeared on Broadway in a successful one-woman show that featured racier material, such as the humorous song "Let's Talk Dirty to the Animals". This show was captured on film in 1981 as Gilda Live! and co-starred Paul Shaffer
and Don Novello
. The play was also released as an album recording -- the play was a qualified success, the film and album were failures.

She spent most of the next decade keeping a surprisingly low profile, aside from appearances in such films as Hanky Panky, The Lady in Red, and Haunted Honeymoon. In the late 1980s, she was diagnosed with ovarian cancer. Even with the support of her second husband, actor Gene Wilder
, whom she had met while co-starring with him in Hanky Panky (she had previously been married to Saturday Night Live band leader G.E. Smith), she suffered extreme physical and emotional pain as a chemotherapy patient. Eventually, she was told she had gone into remission, and she wrote a memoir about her life and struggle with the illness, called It's Always Something. The book was written by Radner in tribute to cancer sufferers everywhere, and she used humor to overcome tragedy and pain. The book's title came from a common catch-phrase from her Saturday Night Live character Roseanne Roseannadanna, who would often quote an elderly relative by saying "It just goes to show ya...it's always something! If it's not one thing, it's another!"

[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Gilda Radner ]



Some related entries: Michael Craze | Karl Maka | Paul Reiser | Rudolph Walker | Emilie de Ravin | Steve Howey | Michael Crawford | David Waters | Joyce Grenfell | Oliver Reed | Gary Conway

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Gilda Radner; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

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