Sally Kellerman

Sally Kellerman

Actor, Producer

Urodzony(-a) 2 czerwca 1937 w Long Beach, California, USA

Sally Kellerman arrived quite young on the late 1950s film and television scene with a fresh and distinctively weird, misfit presence. It is this same uniqueness that continued to make her such an attractively offbeat performer. The willowy, swan-necked, flaxen-haired actress shot to film comedy fame after toiling nearly a decade and a half in the business, and is still most brazenly remembered for her career-maker in the irreverent hit Korean War dramedy M*A*S*H (1970), for which she received supporting Oscar and Golden Globe nominations. From there, she went on to enjoy several other hallmark moments as both an actress and a vocalist. California native Sally Clare Kellerman was born in Long Beach on June 2, 1937, to Edith (née Vaughn), a piano teacher, and John Helm Kellerman, a Shell Oil Company executive. Raised along with her sister in the San Fernando Valley area, Sally was attracted to the performing arts after seeing Marlon Brando star in the film Viva Zapata! (1952). Attending the renowned Hollywood High School as a teenager, she sang in musical productions while there, including a version of "Meet Me in St. Louis." Following graduation, she enrolled at Los Angeles City College but left after a year when enticed by acting guru Jeff Corey's classes. Initially inhibited by her height (5'10"), noticeably gawky and slinky frame and wide slash of a mouth, Kellerman proved difficult to cast at first but finally found herself up for the lead role in Otto Preminger's "A"-level film Saint Joan (1957). She lost out in the end, however, when Preminger finally decided to give the role of Joan of Arc to fellow newcomer Jean Seberg. Hardly compensation, 20-year-old Sally made her film debut that same year as a girls' reformatory inmate who threatens the titular leading lady in the cult "C" juvenile delinquent drama Reform School Girl (1957) starring "good girl" Gloria Castillo and "bad guy" Edd Byrnes of "777 Sunset Strip" teen idol fame, an actor she met and was dating after attending Corey's workshops. Directed by infamous low-budget horror film Samuel Z. Arkoff, her secondary part in the film did little in the way of advancing her career. During the same period of time, Sally pursued a singing career and earned a recording contract with Verve Records. The 1960s was an uneventful but growing period for Kellerman, finding spurts of quirky TV roles in both comedies ("Bachelor Father," "My Three Sons," "Dobie Gillis" and "Ozzie and Harriet") and dramas ("Lock Up," "Surfside 6," "Cheyenne," "The Outer Limits," "The Rogues," "Slattery's People" and the second pilot of "Star Trek"). Sally's sophomore film was just as campy as the first, but her part was even smaller. As an ill-fated victim of the Hands of a Stranger (1962), the oft-told horror story of a concert pianist whose transplanted hands become deadly, the film came and went without much fanfare. Studying later at Los Angeles' Actors' Studio (West), Sally's roles increased toward the end of the 1960s with featured parts in more quality filming, including The Third Day (1965), The Boston Strangler (1968) (as a target for serial killer Tony Curtis) and The April Fools (1969). Sally's monumental break came, of course, via director Robert Altman when he hired her for, and she created a dusky-voiced sensation out of, the aggressively irritating character Major Margaret "'Hot Lips" Houlihan. Her highlighting naked-shower scene in the groundbreaking cinematic comedy M*A*S*H (1970) had audiences ultimately laughing and gasping at the same time. Both she and the film were a spectacular success with Sally the sole actor to earn an Oscar nomination for her marvelous work here. She lost that year to the overly spunky veteran Helen Hayes in Airport (1970). Becoming extremely good friends with Altman during the movie shoot, Sally went on to film a couple more of the famed director's more winning and prestigious films of the 1970s, beginning with her wildly crazed "angelic" role in Brewster McCloud (1970), and finishing up brilliantly as a man-hungry real estate agent in his Welcome to L.A. (1976), directed by Alan Rudolph. Sally later regretted not taking the Karen Black singing showcase role in one of Altman's best-embraced films, Nashville (1975), when originally offered. Still pursuing her singing interests, she put out her first album, "Roll with the Feelin'" for Decca Records in 1972. Films continued to be a priority and Sally was deemed a quirky comedy treasure in both co-star and top supporting roles of the 1970s. She was well cast neurotically opposite Alan Arkin in the Neil Simon comedy Last of the Red Hot Lovers (1972) and again alongside ex-con James Caan as a sexy but loony delight in Slither (1973), a precursor to the Coen Bros.' darkly comic films. She also co-starred and contributed a song ("Reflections") to the Burt Bacharach/Hal David soundtrack of the Utopian film Lost Horizon (1973), a musical picture that proved lifeless at the box office. More impressive work came with the movies A Little Romance (1979) as young Diane Lane's quirky mom; Foxes (1980) as Jodie Foster's confronting mother; Serial (1980), a California comedy satire starring Martin Mull; That's Life! (1986), a social comedy with Jack Lemmon and Julie Andrews; and Back to School (1986), comic Rodney Dangerfield's raucous vehicle hit. Sally's films from the 1980s on were a mixed bag. While some, such as the low-grade Moving Violations (1985), Meatballs III: Summer Job (1986), Doppelganger (1993), American Virgin (1999) and Women of the Night (2001) were beneath her considerable talents, her presence in others were, at the very least, catchy such as her Natasha Fatale opposite Dave Thomas' Boris Badenov in Boris and Natasha (1991); director Percy Adlon's inventive Younger and Younger (1993), which reunited her with MASH co-star Donald Sutherland, and in Robert Altman's rather disjointed, ill-received all-star effort Ready to Wear (1994) in which she played a fashion magazine editor. When her film output waned in later years, Sally lent a fine focus back to her singing career and made a musical dent as a deep-voiced blues and jazz artist. She started hitting the Los Angeles and New York club circuits with solo acts. In 2009, Kellerman released her first album since "Roll with The Feelin'" simply titled "Sally," a jazz and blues-fused album. Along those same lines, Sally played a nightclub singer in the comedy Limit Up (1989) Kellerman's seductively throaty voice has also put her in good standing as a voice-over artist of commercials, feature films, and television. Among her offbeat output in millennium films were prime/featured roles in the soft-core thriller Women of the Night (2001), written and director by Zalman King, in which she played a lady deejay (she also gets to sing); the real estate musical Open House (2004) in which she played an agent (who gets to sing again); the Florida senior citizens' romantic comedy Boynton Beach Club (2005); the comedy Night Club (2011) where friends and residents start a club in a retirement home; the social dramas A Place for Heroes (2014) and A Timeless Love (2016); and the family dramedy The Remake (2016). Divorced from Rick Edelstein, Kellerman married Jonathan D. Krane in 1980 and the couple adopted twins, Jack and Hanna. Sally was also the adoptive mother of her niece, Claire Graham. Her husband died unexpectedly in August 2016; less than three months later, daughter Hanna died from heroin and methamphetamine use. Sally died on February 24, 2022 in Los Angeles.

Najpopularniejsze tytuły

  • Payback
  • Mash
  • Powrót do szkoly
  • Animal Odd Couples
  • Ken Burns: American Lives
  • The Tonight Show starring Johnny Carson - Show Date: 09/26/74
  • The Alfred Hitchcock Hour
  • Star Trek Original (Remastered) Season 1
  • Days Of Wine & Roses - Cliff Robertson & Piper Laurie, "Playhouse 90" Original TV Version
  • Decker Season 1
  • The Outer Limits Season 1
  • Workaholics Season 1
  • Not for Ourselves Alone: The Story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Susan B. Anthony, Season 1
  • Michael Bublé - Caught In The Act
  • Cheyenne - Season 1
  • Maron Season 1
  • The Many Loves Of Dobie Gillis: Season One
  • Comedy Bang! Bang! Season 1
  • The Player
  • Dinosaurs Season 1

Filmografia

  • 2016
    The Remake
  • 2015
    Difficult People, Season 1
  • 2014
    Decker Season 1
  • Reach Me
  • When Bette Met Mae
  • 2013
    Maron Season 1
  • High School USA! Season 1
  • 2012
    Unsupervised Season 1
  • Annoying Orange
  • Comedy Bang! Bang! Season 1
  • 2011
    Workaholics Season 1
  • 2010
    Law & Order: Los Angeles Season 1
  • 2009
    Wishing Well
  • 2008
    90210, Season 1
  • 2007
    Masters of Science Fiction Season 1
  • The Prince And The Pauper
  • I Could Never Be Your Woman
  • 2005
    Boynton Beach Club
  • 2000
    Kill Shot
  • 1999
    Payback
  • Not for Ourselves Alone: The Story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Susan B. Anthony, Season 1
  • 1997
    Ken Burns: American Lives
  • Gun
  • 1994
    Mirror Mirror 2: Raven Dance
  • Touched By An Angel Season 1
  • 1993
    Doppelganger
  • Younger & Younger
  • 1992
    The Player
  • 1991
    Boris And Natasha: The Movie
  • Dinosaurs Season 1
  • 1989
    Secret Of The Ice Cave
  • 1988
    You Can't Hurry Love
  • 1987
    Someone to Love
  • 1986
    Powrót do szkoly
  • 1985
    Sesame Street Presents: Follow That Bird
  • The Ray Bradbury Theater
  • 1984
    Murder, She Wrote - Season 1
  • 1982
    Animal Odd Couples
  • 1980
    Serial
  • 1979
    A Little Romance
  • 1976
    The Big Bus
  • Welcome to L.A.
  • 1975
    Rafferty & The Gold Dust Twins
  • 1973
    The Young and the Restless - Season 51
  • Slither (1973)
  • 1972
    Last of the Red Hot Lovers
  • 1971
    Michael Bublé - Caught In The Act
  • 1970
    Brewster McCloud
  • Mash
  • 1969
    The April Fools
  • 1968
    Hawaii Five-O (Classic) Season 1
  • The Boston Strangler
  • 1966
    Star Trek Original (Remastered) Season 1
  • That Girl
  • 1965
    I Spy Season 1
  • Third Day
  • 1963
    The Outer Limits Season 1
  • 1962
    Hands of a Stranger
  • The Tonight Show starring Johnny Carson - Show Date: 09/26/74
  • The Alfred Hitchcock Hour
  • 1959
    The Many Loves Of Dobie Gillis: Season One
  • Lorne Greene's Holiday Special - A Bonanza Of Christmas Cheer
  • Lock Up
  • 1957
    Reform School Girl
  • 1956
    Days Of Wine & Roses - Cliff Robertson & Piper Laurie, "Playhouse 90" Original TV Version
  • 1955
    Cheyenne - Season 1
  • 1952
    A Classic TV Christmas with Bing Crosby and Betty White

Połączenia

  • Craig Anton

    Craig Anton

  • Lynne Alana Delaney

    Lynne Alana Delaney

Gatunki

  • Thriller
  • Action & Adventure
  • Comedy
  • Horror
  • Music Videos & Concerts
  • Documentary
  • Western
  • Military & War
  • Fantasy
  • Drama