Anne Meara, the Emmy- and Tony-nominated comedian long paired personally and professionally with Jerry Stiller and the mother of actor-director Ben Stiller, died Saturday, her husband and son told the Associated Press. She was 85.
No further details have been revealed. A statement released to the AP said Jerry Miller was Meara's "husband and partner in life."
"The two were married for 61 years and worked together almost as long," the statement said.
Stiller
and Meara were a top comedy act in the 1960s, appearing on "The Ed
Sullivan Show" some 36 times. Meara and Stiller were members of the
improv group the Compass Players, which later became Second City.
Although
Meara had in fact converted to Judaism when the couple got married,
Stiller & Meara's material centered on the differences in their
ethnic backgrounds, epitomized by their signature "Hershey Horowitz/Mary
Elizabeth Doyle" routines.
In 2010 the couple had their own Yahoo comedy series, "Stiller & Meara," produced in part by son Ben.
But
Meara was also a serious dramatic actress who received a 1993 Tony
nomination for best featured actress in a play for her work in a
production of Eugene O'Neill's harrowing "Anna Christie" that starred Liam Neeson and Natasha Richardson -- and she also penned a couple of plays that made it to Off Broadway.
She was also well known for recurring on daytime soap "All My Children" from 1993-98 as Peggy Moody;
for her work on "Archie Bunker's Place," for which she received two of
her four Emmy nominations; and for her bravura performance as the
indefatigable suburban mother in Greg Mottola's 1997 indie film "The
Daytrippers," in which Hope Davis plays a woman who can't get her husband, who's in Manhattan,
on the phone, whereupon her mother, played by Meara, puts the suburban
family in the station wagon to begin an antic search for him in the
city.
Roger Ebert said: Meara is "almost by
definition, superb at her assignment here, which is to create an
insufferable mother. The film's problem is that she does it so well."
Also
in 1997 Meara gave a memorable performance on the smallscreen, on a
two-part episode of "Homicide: Life on the Street," in which she played a
schoolteacher in a very tense hostage situation, drawing her fourth
Emmy nomination.
In 1984 Meara shared a Writers Guild Award for penning the telepic "The Other Woman," in which Hal Linden
played a widower who toys with the notion of romance with his
daughter's sexy roommate but ultimately finds love with a woman played
by Meara.
Meara recurred as Mary Finnegan (the mother of Doug's nerdy friend Spence, played by Patton Oswalt) on "The King of Queens," where Stiller was a series regular from 1998-2007 as the much-married Arthur Spooner, the father of Leah Remini's Carrie Heffernan; in the final season of the series, the two characters married.
The actress recurred on "Sex and the City" as the mother of bartender Steve Brady and guested on "Will & Grace" in 2001.
"Law
& Order: Special Victims Unit" afforded Meara the opportunity to
give two powerful guest performances. In 2004 she played the mother of a
serial killer who, with anguish, helps the police apprehend her son
before he can kill again; in a 2012 episode she played the mother of a
prostitute (played by Patricia Arquette) who's involved with an armed and dangerous man and then goes missing.
On HBO's "Oz" Meara played the religious aunt of the imprisoned O'Reily brothers in episodes in 1999 and 2002.
Meara also had a long career in movies, both with her family and without.
Stiller
and Meara starred in Joan Micklin Silver's 1999 feature "A Fish in the
Bathtub," about a couple who have been bickering for decades, finally
prompting the wife to move in with their son, played by Mark Ruffalo.
She appeared in 1990's "Awakenings," starring Robin Williams, as one of the patients.
The hit 2001 comedy "Zoolander," directed by and starring Ben Stiller as the air-headed model of the title, was a true family affair, with father Jerry playing Zoolander's manager, Maury Ballstein. Ben's wife Christine Taylor played a Time magazine reporter; while Anne Meara and Ben's sister Amy appeared in cameos.
In
Ben's first feature directorial effort, 1994's "Reality Bites," Meara
and sister Amy both had roles, but Jerry was unaccountably absent except
in the credits, where he was thanked.
The Stiller family frequently appeared in the same movies even when Ben wasn't directing.
Meara had a small role in the Shawn Levy-directed hit "Night at the Museum," starring Ben.
Jerry was the star of 2000 mockumentary "The Independent," in which he played Morty Fineman, a director of comically bizarre exploitation films with a message such as 1969's "Groovy Hippie Slumber Party,"
"Kent State Nurses" and -- taking credit for the use of Roman numerals
in film titles -- war epic "World War III II." Even in this low-profile,
low-budget film, Ben Stiller, Amy Stiller and Meara supported the effort with cameos.
Similarly, in the much-earlier horror film "Highway to Hell" (1991), Jerry Stiller, Meara, as well as Ben and Amy, all had roles.
In 1998's "Southie," starring Donnie Wahlberg
in the story of hoods in Boston's famous working-class Irish
neighborhood, Meara played the Wahlberg character's ailing mother "with
warm grit," according to the Boston Phoenix.
Meara was born in Brooklyn to parents of Irish descent. She studied drama at HB Studio in Greenwich Village; decades later she would teach a course there herself.
The young actress won an Obie for the 1955 Off Broadway production "Mädchen in Uniform."
She made her Broadway debut in 1956 in a Michael Redgrave-directed
revival of Turgenev's "A Month in the Country." The same year she
appeared in a revival of Brecht's "The Good Woman of Setzuan" that also
featured Jerry Stiller in a small role. In 1957 she appeared in the original drama "Miss Lonelyhearts." After an absence of 31 years, she returned to Broadway in 1988 in Richard Greenberg's "Eastern Standard" before taking on "Anna Christie" in 1993.
Meara wrote and starred in the hit Off Broadway play "Afterplay" (1995), which also starred, at various times, Jerry Stiller, Rita Moreno, Rue McClanahan and Barbara Barrie. Meara also wrote "Down the Garden Paths," which played Off Broadway in 2000 and starred Jerry Stiller, daughter Amy Stiller and Eli Wallach.
In
2011 Meara and Conchata Farrell were brought in as replacements in an
Off Broadway staging of "Love, Loss, and What I Wore," the Nora and
Delia Ephron play based on Ilene Beckerman's book.
The actress made her screen debut in 1954 on NBC series "The Greatest Gift." She also appeared on an Arthur Penn-directed
"The Philco-Goodyear Television Playhouse" adaptation of Robert Alan
Arthur's "Man on the Mountaintop" and, in 1959, in an ABC adaptation of "Ninotchka" that starred Maria Schell.
In the brief 1964 animated series "Linus! The Lion Hearted," Stiller & Meara were credited for three episodes.
She appeared in a 1971 TV adaptation of the musical "Dames at Sea," starring Ann-Margret.
Meara also starred in her own, brief NBC
series, "Kate McShane," in which she played an attorney who solves
mysteries, in 1975 -- drawing her first Emmy nomination, for lead
actress in a drama.
She was a series regular on "Archie Bunker's Place," from 1979-82, as Veronica Rooney,
the bar's wisecracking, alcoholic chef -- picking up her second and
third Emmy nominations, for supporting actress in a comedy, in 1981 and
1982.
She recurred on the brief ABC series "The Corner Bar" in 1972-73 as well as on "Rhoda" as one of the title character's friends, Sally Gallagher or "Big Sally," a divorced flight attendant. (Jerry Stiller appeared on one episode as her ex.) Later, in 1987-89, she recurred on NBC's "ALF" as the mother of series star Anne Schedeen's character.
Meara
was also busy in the 1970s guesting on the likes of "The Courtship of
Eddie's Father," "The Paul Lynde Show," "Love, American Style" and
Medical Center."
The couple shot (and penned) a pilot, "The Stiller & Meara Show," in 1986, but it was not picked up to series.
Meara's early feature work included roles in Arthur Hiller's adaptation of Neil Simon's "The Out of Towners" and Joseph Bologna
and Renee Taylor's adaptation of their own play "Lovers and Other
Strangers," both in 1970; in 1977's Nasty Habits," a satire of Watergate
applied to the politics of a convent, both Meara and Stiller appeared,
with the New York Times
applauding Meara's efforts as the "Gerald Ford of Crewe Abbey." She had a
small role in 1978 thriller "The Boys From Brazil," starring Laurence Olivier and Gregory Peck,
and in 1980's "Fame," the actress played Mrs. Sherwood, the teacher
concerned with the students' traditional academic progress.
Meara appeared in the Paul Bartel-directed, Tim Conway-scripted 1986 comedy "The Longshot."
In 1999 Comedy Central aired a Friars' Club Roast of Jerry Stiller, with Roasters drawn from several generations including Meara and son Ben.
Stiller and Meara shared a star on the Hollywood Walk in Fame, awarded in 2007.
In addition to son Ben and his wife, actress Christine Taylor, as well as daughter Amy, survivors include Jerry, whom Meara married in 1954, and grandchildren.
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