Kathleen Freeman
Birthday:
17 February 1919, Chicago, Illinois, USA
Height:
173 cm
Kathleen Freeman's introduction to show business came very early in life. Her parents were vaudevillians, and she made her debut at age 2 in their act. Later she attended UCLA with intentions of becoming a pianist, but was bitten by the acting bug and never looked back. She gained experience on stage in various stock and repertory companies, a...
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Kathleen Freeman's introduction to show business came very early in life. Her parents were vaudevillians, and she made her debut at age 2 in their act. Later she attended UCLA with intentions of becoming a pianist, but was bitten by the acting bug and never looked back. She gained experience on stage in various stock and repertory companies, and made her film debut in 1948. One of the most memorable character actresses in recent memory, her stocky build, incredibly expressive face and hearty laugh have kept audiences convulsed for decades, playing a variety of neighborhood gossips, busybodies and eccentrics. Memorable as Sister Mary Stigmata ("The Penguin"), Dan Aykroyd's and John Belushi's nemesis, in The Blues Brothers (1980). She was used as a comic foil by Jerry Lewis in many of his films, always to great advantage. She did much television work, playing in everything from The Dick Van Dyke Show (1961) to Gomer Pyle: USMC (1964) to Hogan's Heroes (1965) to Married with Children (1987), where she was the voice of Peg's monstrous but never-seen mother, Al Bundy's nemesis. She was working on Broadway in a production of "The Full Monty" when she died of lung cancer in 2001. Show less «
[about how she got started in comedy while a music student playing a bit part in a play at UCLA] A terrible thing happened; I got a laugh.
[about how she got started in comedy while a music student playing a bit part in a play at UCLA] A terrible thing happened; I got a laugh.
I think comedy is more powerful than drama in the long run. Comedy is more difficult. It's very easy to make people cry.
I think comedy is more powerful than drama in the long run. Comedy is more difficult. It's very easy to make people cry.
Millie Lemmon
Jane King
Heavyset Woman
Muriel
Mother Mary Stigmata
Dance Teacher
Dream Lady
Peg's Mom
Nurse Ratched
Mrs. Crackshell