BookRags.com Literature Guides Literature Guides Criticism/Essays Criticism/Essays Biographies Biographies My Bibliography Periodic Table U.S. Presidents Shakespeare Sonnet Shake-Up
Research Anything:        
History | Encyclopedias | Films | News | Create a Bibliography | More... Login | Register | Help
Not What You Meant?  There are 154 definitions for Carroll.

Pat Carroll (actress)

Print-Friendly
About 5 pages (1,617 words)

Bookmark and Share
Pat Carroll
Birth name Patricia Ann Carroll
Born May 5 1927 (1927-05-05) (age 80)
Flag of the United States Shreveport, Louisiana

Patricia Ann "Pat" Carroll (born May 5 1927) is an Emmy Award-winning American actress. She has performed in numerous stage productions, but is best known for her role as "Bunny Halper" on The Danny Thomas Show and as Shirley Feeney's mother on Laverne and Shirley. For her performance in GERTRUDE STEIN, GERTRUDE STEIN, GERTRUDE STEIN ,she received the Drama Desk Award in the 1980-81 season for Best Actress. She also won a Grammy Award for the Spoken Word version. She was seen in the independent film, THE SONGCATCHER and received outstanding reviews. She is also well-known for participating on TV panel shows (game shows)and as the voice of the villainess, Ursula, in The Little Mermaid. her most recent appearances were on three episdes of ER in which she played a bag lady. Her co-star was Louise Fletcher

Contents

Biography

Early life

Carroll was born in Shreveport, Louisiana to Kathryn Angela Meagher and Maurice Clifton Carroll. [1] Her family moved to Los Angeles when Pat was five years old. She graduated from Immaculate Heart High School, an all-girls Catholic school, in Hollywood. For college she attended Immaculate Heart College in Los Angeles (the college closed in 1981) and Catholic University of America.

Career

In 1956, Carroll won an Emmy Award for her work on Caesar's Hour and was a regular on the sitcom Make Room for Daddy. She appeared on many variety shows of the 1950s and 1960s, such as The Red Buttons Show, The Danny Kaye Show, The Red Skelton Show, and The Carol Burnett Show. In 1965, she co-starred as "Prunella", one of the wicked stepsisters in a TV production of Rodgers and Hammerstein's musical version of Cinderella, which starred Lesley Ann Warren in the title role. Carroll scored a personal and artistic success in the late 1970s with her one woman show on Gertrude Stein, Gertrude Stein, Gertrude Stein, Gertrude Stein (by playwright Marty Martin), winning several major theater awards, and even a Grammy in 1981 for her recorded version of the performance. Her frequent television roles in the 1980s included newspaper owner Hope Stinson on the syndicated Ted Knight Show (the former Too Close for Comfort) during its final season in 1986; and that of Gussie Holt, the mother of Suzanne Somers' lead character in the syndicated sitcom She's the Sheriff (1987-1989). Since the late 1980s she has done a great deal of voice-over work on animated programs such as A Pup Named Scooby Doo, Galaxy High, and A Goofy Movie. On TV's Pound Puppies she voiced Katrina Stoneheart. On two Garfield television specials (A Garfield Christmas and Garfield's Thanksgiving), she voiced Jon's feisty Grandma. She portrayed the sea witch Ursula in many forms of media, such as the Kingdom Hearts series of video games, the Fantasmic! show at two Disney theme parks, the spin-off TV series as well as for the puppet version of Ursula in Disneyland's Parade of Dreams and in the HalloWishes Halloween-themed fireworks spectacular at Walt Disney World's "Mickey's Not-So-Scary Halloween" event in the Magic Kingdom. Carroll has also appeared on a variety of game shows, including Celebrity Sweepstakes, You Don't Say, To Tell the Truth, Password, I've Got a Secret, and Hollywood Connection. Taking a break from various villains she's played, her most recent voice over role was the kind and compassionate character of Granny in the re-release of Hayao Miyazaki's warm hearted story My Neighbor Totoro. She has also had a successful career in the theater, particularly in numerous off-Broadway productions. In 1990 she stunned the theater world with an acclaimed performance in The Merry Wives of Windsor at the Shakespeare Theater at the Folger playing a male role, Sir John Falstaff, a balding knight with whiskers. Drama critic Frank Rich of The New York Times wrote: "Her performance is a triumph from start to finish, and, I think, a particularly brave and moving one, with implications that go beyond this one production. Ms. Carroll and Mr. Kahn help revivify the argument that the right actresses can perform some of the great classic roles traditionally denied to women and make them their own. It's not a new argument, to be sure; female Hamlets stretch back into history. But what separates Ms. Carroll's Falstaff from some other similar casting experiments of late is that her performance exists to investigate a character rather than merely as ideological window dressing for a gimmicky production." As a member of The Actors Studio Carroll is currently working in stage productions. Her past work includes not only off-Broadway productions but the Kennedy Center and national tours. In 2005, she played a homeless woman in three episodes of the television series ER. In 2007, she became a first lady headmaster of Intercontinental Television in Houston, Texas.

Personal life

As a devout Roman Catholic, her religious views inform her choice of what roles to accept, and in which productions to appear. According to a Current Biography article, she is a supporter of the Republican Party. She is the mother of two daughters, Kerry and Tara Karsian, and one son, Sean Karsian, as well as grandmother to Evan Patricia Karsian.

Filmography

Movies

Television

Video games

References

External links

Further reading

  • Young, Jordan R. (1989). Acting Solo: The Art of One-Person Shows. Beverly Hills: Past Times Publishing Co.

View More Summaries on Pat Carroll (actress)
 
Copyrights
Pat Carroll (actress) from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

Article Navigation
Join BookRagslearn moreJoin BookRags


About BookRags | Customer Service | Report an Error | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy