Gilda Radner
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Gilda Radner | |||||||||||
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Born | Gilda Susan Radner June 28, 1946 Detroit, Michigan, United States |
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Died | May 20, 1989 (aged 42) Los Angeles, California, United States |
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Years active | 1973 – 1986 | ||||||||||
Spouse(s) | G.E. Smith (1980-1982) (divorced) Gene Wilder (1984-1989) (her death) |
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Gilda Susan Radner (June 28, 1946 – May 20, 1989) was an Emmy Award-winning American comedienne and actress, best known for her five years as part of the original cast of the NBC comedy series Saturday Night Live. Radner's death at 42 of ovarian cancer helped increase public awareness of the disease and the need for earlier detection and treatment.
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[edit] Biography
[edit] Early life
Gilda Radner was born to Jewish-American parents, Herman Radner and Henrietta Dworkin, in Detroit, Michigan. She grew up in Detroit with a nanny, Elizabeth Clementine Gillies, whom she called "Dibby" (and on whom she based her famous character Emily Litella), and an older brother named Michael.
Radner was close to her father, who operated Detroit's Seville Hotel, where many nightclub performers and actors stayed while performing in the city.[1] Her father, who died when she was fourteen, took her on trips to New York so that they could see Broadway shows.[2]
[edit] College
Radner enrolled at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, where she made a lifelong platonic friend of her fellow student, David Saltman, who wrote a biography of her after her death. Radner joined Saltman and his girlfriend on a trip to Paris in the summer of 1966. Saltman wrote that he was so affectionate with his girlfriend that they left Radner to fend for herself during much of their sightseeing.[1] Later, when details of Radner's eating disorder surfaced, Saltman wrote that he realized she had been in a quandary over the French food, but had no one with whom she could discuss her situation.[1]
[edit] Career
In Ann Arbor, Radner began her broadcasting career as the weather girl for college radio station WCBN, but dropped out in her senior year[3] to follow her then-boyfriend, a Canadian sculptor named Jeff Rubinoff, to Toronto, Canada. In Toronto, she made her professional acting debut in the 1972 production of Godspell with future stars Eugene Levy, Andrea Martin, Victor Garber, and Martin Short. Afterward, Radner joined the Toronto Second City comedy troupe.
[edit] 1970s
Radner was a featured player on the National Lampoon Radio Hour, a comedy program syndicated to some 600 U.S. radio stations from 1973 to 1975. Fellow cast members included John Belushi, Richard Belzer, Chevy Chase, Bill Murray and Brian Doyle-Murray.
[edit] Saturday Night Live
Radner gained name recognition as one of the original "Not Ready For Prime Time Players", a member of the freshman group on the first season of Saturday Night Live. She was the first actor cast for the show.[2] Between 1975 and 1980, she created such characters as Roseanne Roseannadanna, an obnoxious woman with wild black hair who would tell stories about the gross habits of celebrities on the show's "Weekend Update" news segment, inspired in name and appearance by Rose Ann Scamardella, a news anchor at WABC-TV in New York City. Other SNL characters included "Baba Wawa," a spoof of Barbara Walters, and Emily Litella, an elderly woman who gave angry and misinformed editorial replies on "Weekend Update" on topics such as "violins on television," the "Eagle Rights Amendment," "presidential erections," and "protecting endangered feces."[2] Once corrected on her misunderstanding, Litella would end her segment with a polite "Never mind." Later on, she would answer Jane Curtin's frustration with a simple "Bitch!" Radner also parodied such celebrities as Lucille Ball, Patti Smith, and Olga Korbut during SNL sketches.
Radner won an Emmy Award in 1978 for her work on SNL.
Radner battled bulimia during her time on the show. She once told a reporter that she had thrown up in every toilet in Rockefeller Center.[4] She had a relationship with SNL castmate Bill Murray that ended badly, although few details were made public at the time.
In 1979, incoming NBC President Fred Silverman offered Radner her own prime time variety show, which she ultimately turned down.[3] That year, she was one of the hosts of the Music for UNICEF Concert at the United Nations General Assembly.
Alan Zweibel, who co-created the Roseanne Roseannadanna character and co-wrote all of Roseanne's dialogue, recalled that Radner, one of three original SNL cast members who stayed away from cocaine, chastised him for using it.[5]
Radner had mixed emotions about the fans and strangers who recognized her in public. She sometimes became "angry when she was approached, but upset when she wasn't."[4]
[edit] Broadway
In 1979, Radner appeared on Broadway in a successful one-woman show entitled Gilda Radner - Live From New York.[6] The show featured racier material, such as the song Let's Talk Dirty to the Animals. In 1981, the show was filmed as Gilda Live!, co-starring Paul Shaffer and Don Novello, and was released as a film and an album recording. During the production, she met her first husband, G. E. Smith, a musician who also worked on the show. They were married in a civil ceremony in 1980.
In 1980, Radner starred opposite Sam Waterston in the Jean Kerr show, Lunch Hour, as a pair whose spouses are having an affair, and in response invent one of their own, consisting of trysts on their lunch hour.[7] The show ran for over seven months.
[edit] Next phase
[edit] Gene Wilder
Radner met actor Gene Wilder on the set of the Sidney Poitier film Hanky Panky, when the two appeared together. She described their first meeting as "love at first sight."[3] Unable to resist her attraction to Wilder as her marriage with Smith deteriorated, the couple divorced in 1982. Radner went on to make a second film, The Woman in Red, in 1984 with Wilder and their relationship grew. The two were married on September 18, 1984 in the south of France.[3] The pair made a third film together, Haunted Honeymoon, in 1986.[3]
[edit] Illness
After experiencing severe fatigue and suffering from pain in her upper legs on the set of Haunted Honeymoon, Radner sought medical treatment. After several false diagnoses, she learned that she had ovarian cancer in October 1986.[3] Even with Wilder's support, she suffered extreme physical and emotional pain during chemotherapy and radiotherapy treatment.[3]
[edit] Remission
After Radner was told she had gone into remission, she wrote a memoir about her life and struggle with the illness, called It's Always Something (a catchphrase of her character Roseanne Roseannadanna).[3] Life magazine did a March 1988 cover story on her battle, entitled Gilda Radner's Answer to Cancer: Healing the Body with Mind and Heart.[8]
In 1988, Gilda Radner guest-starred on It's Garry Shandling's Show on Showtime to great critical acclaim. When Shandling asked her why she had not been seen for a while, she replied "Oh, I had cancer. What did you have?" Shandling's reply: "A very bad series of career moves." When Shandling said he had been under the impression that she was dead, she cited Mark Twain's famous quote "Reports of my death are greatly exaggerated." She planned to host an episode of SNL that year, but a writers' strike caused the cancellation of the rest of the season.
[edit] Death
In May of 1989, Radner discovered the cancer had returned and metastasized. She was admitted to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, California on May 17, 1989 for a CAT scan. Anxious with fear that she would never wake up, she was given a sedative and passed into a coma. She did not regain consciousness and died three days later at 6:20 am on May 20, 1989; Wilder was at her side.[2]
Gene Wilder had this to say about her death:
She went in for the scan – but the people there could not keep her on the gurney. She was raving like a crazed woman – she knew they would give her morphine and was afraid she’d never regain consciousness. She kept getting off the cart as they were wheeling her out. Finally three people were holding her gently and saying, "Come on Gilda. We’re just going to go down and come back up." She kept saying, "Get me out, get me out!" She’d look at me and beg me, "Help me out of here. I’ve got to get out of here." And I’d tell her, "You’re okay honey. I know. I know." They sedated her, and when she came back, she remained unconscious for three days. I stayed at her side late into the night, sometimes sleeping over. Finally a doctor told me to go home and get some sleep. At 4 am on Saturday, I heard a pounding on my door. It was an old friend, a surgeon, who told me, "Come on. It’s time to go." When I got there, a night nurse, whom I still want to thank, had washed Gilda and taken out all the tubes. She put a pretty yellow barrette in her hair. She looked like an angel. So peaceful. She was still alive, and as she lay there, I kissed her. But then her breathing became irregular, and there were long gaps and little gasps. Two hours after I arrived, Gilda was gone. While she was conscious, I never said goodbye.
Her funeral was held in Connecticut on May 24, 1989. In lieu of flowers, her family requested that donations be sent to The Wellness Community. Her gravestone reads: Gilda Radner Wilder - Comedienne - Ballerina 1946...1989.[9]
By coincidence, the news of her death broke on early Saturday afternoon (Eastern Standard Time), while Steve Martin was rehearsing as the guest host for that night's season finale of Saturday Night Live. Saturday Night Live personnel, including Lorne Michaels, Mike Myers and Phil Hartman, had not known she was so close to death. They scrapped one of their planned skits and instead, Martin introduced a video clip of a 1978 skit in which he and Gilda made fun of an old Hollywood romantic couple's dance. He cried during his introduction.
[edit] Legacy
Wilder established the Gilda Radner Ovarian Detection Center at Cedars-Sinai to screen high-risk candidates (such as women of Ashkenazi Jewish descent) and run basic diagnostic tests. He testified before a Congressional committee that her condition had been misdiagnosed and that if doctors had inquired more deeply into her family background they would have learned that her grandmother, aunt and cousin had all died of ovarian cancer and might have attacked the disease earlier.[citation needed]
Radner's death from ovarian cancer did help to raise awareness of early detection and the connection to familial epidemiology.[10] The media attention in the two years after Radner's death led to registry of 450 families with familial ovarian cancer at the Familial Ovarian Cancer Registry, a research database registry at the Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo, New York. The registry was later renamed the Gilda Radner Familial Ovarian Cancer Registry (GRFOCR).[11] In 1996, Gene Wilder and Registry founder Steven Piver, one of Radner's medical consultants, published Gilda's Disease: Sharing Personal Experiences and a Medical Perspective on Ovarian Cancer. Through Wilder's efforts and those of others, awareness of ovarian cancer and its symptoms has continued to grow.
In 1991, Gilda's Club, a network of affiliate clubhouses where people living with cancer, their friends and families, can meet to learn how to live with cancer, was founded. (The center was named for a quip from Radner, who said, "Having cancer gave me membership in an elite club I'd rather not belong to.") Many Gilda's Clubs have opened nationwide and in Canada.
In 2002, the ABC television network aired a television movie about her life: Gilda Radner: It's Always Something, starring Jami Gertz as Radner.
[edit] Awards and honors
Radner won an Emmy Award for "Outstanding Continuing or Single Performance by a Supporting Actress in Variety or Music" for her performance on Saturday Night Live in 1977. She posthumously won a Grammy for "Best Spoken Word Or Non-Musical Recording" in 1990.
In 1992, Radner was inducted into the Michigan Women's Hall of Fame for her achievements in arts and entertainment. On June 27, 2003, she received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6801 Hollywood Blvd.
[edit] Filmography
[edit] Television
Year | Film | Role | Other notes |
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1974 | Jack: A Flash Fantasy | Jill of Hearts | |
The Gift of Winter | Nicely, Malicious, Narrator | voice | |
1974-1975 | Dr. Zonk and the Zunkins | voice | |
1975-1980 | Saturday Night Live | cast member | Emmy Award |
1978 | The Rutles: All You Need Is Cash | Mrs. Emily Pules | |
Witch's Night Out | Witch | voice | |
1979 | Bob & Ray, Jane, Laraine & Gilda | Herself | |
1980 | Animalympics | Barbara Warbler, Brenda Springer, Coralee Perrier, Tatiana Tushenko, Doree Turnell |
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[edit] Filmography
Year | Film | Role | Other notes |
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1973 | The Last Detail | Nichiren Shoshu Member | |
1979 | Mr. Mike's Mondo Video | Herself | |
1980 | Gilda Live | Herself, various characters | |
First Family | Gloria Link | ||
1982 | Hanky Panky | Kate Hellman | |
It Came from Hollywood | Herself | documentary | |
1984 | The Woman in Red | Ms. Millner | |
1985 | Movers & Shakers | Livia Machado | |
1986 | Haunted Honeymoon | Vickie Pearle |
[edit] References
- ^ a b c Saltman, David. Gilda: An Intimate Portrait. Chicago: Contemporary Books, 1992.
- ^ a b c d Hevesi, Dennis. Gilda Radner, 42, Comic Original Of 'Saturday Night Live' Zaniness. New York Times May 21, 1989.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Radner, Gilda. It's Always Something. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1989.
- ^ a b Hill, Doug and Jeff Weingrad. Saturday Night: A Backstage History of Saturday Night Live. New York: Beech Tree Books, a division of William Morrow, Inc. 1986.
- ^ Zweibel, Alan. Bunny Bunny: Gilda Radner. New York: Villard, 1994.
- ^ Gilda Radner at the Internet Broadway Database
- ^ Hischak, Thomas S. American Theatre: A Chronicle of Comedy and Drama, 1969-2000. Oxford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0195123476.
- ^ Life Magazine cover. FindaDeath.com.
- ^ Gilda Radner at Find A Grave
- ^ Squires, Sally. "Fighting Ovarian Cancer: Doctors Don't Know Who Is At Risk and Why." Washington Post. 30 May 1989.
- ^ Gilda Radner Familial Ovarian Cancer Registry.
[edit] External links
- Gilda Radner at the Internet Movie Database
- Gilda Radner at the Internet Broadway Database
- Gilda's Club
- Gilda Radner Cancer Detection Program
- Gilda Radner Familial Ovarian Cancer Registry
- Find A Death - Gilda Radner
- Gilda Radner at Find A Grave
- Jewish Women in Comedy - Gilda Radner
- Gilda Radner page at Godspell.ca
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