Cloris Leachman

American actress
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Quick Facts
Born:
April 30, 1926, Des Moines, Iowa, U.S.
Died:
January 26, 2021, Encinitas, California (aged 94)
Awards And Honors:
Emmy Award (2006)
Emmy Award (2002)
Emmy Award (1998)
Emmy Award (1984)
Golden Globe Award (1976)
Emmy Award (1975)
Emmy Award (1974)
Emmy Award (1973)
BAFTA (1973)
Academy Award (1972)
Academy Award (1972): Actress in a Supporting Role
Emmy Award (2006): Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series
Emmy Award (2002): Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series
Emmy Award (1998): Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series
Emmy Award (1984): Outstanding Individual Performance in a Variety or Music Program
Emmy Award (1975): Outstanding Single Performance by a Supporting Actress in a Comedy or Drama Series
Emmy Award (1975): Outstanding Continuing or Single Performance by a Supporting Actress in Variety or Music
Emmy Award (1974): Best Supporting Actress in Comedy
Emmy Award (1973): Outstanding Continued Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role (Drama/Comedy - Limited Episodes)
Golden Globe Award (1976): Best Actress in a Television Series - Musical or Comedy
Television Academy Hall of Fame (inducted 2011)
Married To:
George Englund (1953–1978)
Movies/Tv Shows (Acted In):
"The Croods: A New Age" (2020)
"Elena of Avalor" (2018–2020)
"Mad About You" (2019)
"When We Last Spoke" (2019)
"Teachers" (2019)
"American Gods" (2017–2019)
"Lez Bomb" (2018)
"I Can Only Imagine" (2018)
"Justice League Action" (2017–2018)
"The Gliksmans" (2017)
"Justice League Action Shorts" (2017)
"Clarence" (2016)
"The Comedian" (2016)
"Creative Galaxy" (2014–2016)
"Royal Pains" (2016)
"The Bronx Bull" (2016)
"So B. It" (2016)
"The Eleventh" (2016)
"Bob's Burgers" (2016)
"Is That a Gun in Your Pocket?" (2016)
"Baby, Baby, Baby" (2015)
"Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse" (2015)
"Girl Meets World" (2014–2015)
"This Is Happening" (2015)
"Hawaii Five-0" (2015)
"The Millers" (2015)
"The Wedding Ringer" (2015)
"Franklin & Bash" (2014)
"Phineas and Ferb" (2009–2014)
"Raising Hope" (2010–2014)
"Kirstie" (2013)
"Adult World" (2013)
"Hot in Cleveland" (2013)
"The Croods" (2013)
"Adventure Time" (2012)
"Gambit" (2012)
"The Oogieloves in the Big Balloon Adventure" (2012)
"Foodfight!" (2012)
"The Fields" (2011)
"Blue Mountain State" (2010)
"A Very Mary Christmas" (2010)
"American Cowslip" (2009)
"Hawthorne" (2009)
"New York, I Love You" (2008)
"The Women" (2008)
"Ponyo" (2008)
"The Wedding Bells" (2007)
"The Great Malones" (2006)
"Beerfest" (2006)
"Malcolm in the Middle" (2001–2006)
"Scary Movie 4" (2006)
"Two and a Half Men" (2005)
"The Californians" (2005)
"Beach Girls" (2005)
"Sky High" (2005)
"The Longest Yard" (2005)
"Spanglish" (2004)
"Joan of Arcadia" (2004)
"Happy Family" (2003)
"Alex & Emma" (2003)
"Touched by an Angel" (1997–2003)
"The Twilight Zone" (2003)
"The Ellen Show" (2001–2002)
"Manna from Heaven" (2002)
"Diagnosis Murder" (2001)
"Love & Money" (2000)
"Twice in a Lifetime" (2000)
"The Amati Girls" (2000)
"Hanging Up" (2000)
"The Norm Show" (2000)
"Music of the Heart" (1999)
"Thanks" (1999)
"The Iron Giant" (1999)
"Promised Land" (1996–1997)
"Beavis and Butt-Head Do America" (1996)
"Never Too Late" (1996)
"Maybe This Time" (1995)
"Now and Then" (1995)
"A Troll in Central Park" (1994)
"The Nanny" (1994)
"The Beverly Hillbillies" (1993)
"My Boyfriend's Back" (1993)
"The Powers That Be" (1992–1993)
"Walter & Emily" (1991–1992)
"Sunday Dinner" (1991)
"The Simpsons" (1991)
"The Giant of Thunder Mountain" (1991)
"Ferris Bueller" (1990)
"Texasville" (1990)
"Love Hurts" (1990)
"The Nutt House" (1989)
"Prancer" (1989)
"Going to the Chapel" (1988)
"The Facts of Life" (1986–1988)
"Our House" (1987)
"Hansel and Gretel" (1987)
"Walk Like a Man" (1987)
"Castle in the Sky" (1986)
"My Little Pony: The Movie" (1986)
"Shadow Play" (1986)
"The Love Boat" (1984–1985)
"American Playhouse" (1985)
"ABC Afterschool Specials" (1983)
"History of the World: Part I" (1981)
"Yesterday" (1981)
"Foolin' Around" (1980)
"Herbie Goes Bananas" (1980)
"Scavenger Hunt" (1979)
"The Associates" (1979)
"The Muppet Movie" (1979)
"The North Avenue Irregulars" (1979)
"Backstairs at the White House" (1979)
"High Anxiety" (1977)
"The Mouse and His Child" (1977)
"The Mary Tyler Moore Show" (1970–1977)
"Phyllis" (1975–1977)
"Wonder Woman" (1975)
"Crazy Mama" (1975)
"Young Frankenstein" (1974)
"Rhoda" (1974)
"Daisy Miller" (1974)
"Happy Mother's Day, Love George" (1973)
"Dillinger" (1973)
"Charley and the Angel" (1973)
"Young Dr. Kildare" (1972)
"The Sixth Sense" (1972)
"Night Gallery" (1972)
"The Last Picture Show" (1971)
"The Steagle" (1971)
"Storefront Lawyers" (1971)
"That Girl" (1970)
"Marcus Welby, M.D." (1970)
"The People Next Door" (1970)
"WUSA" (1970)
"Lovers and Other Strangers" (1970)
"Lancer" (1969)
"Ironside" (1969)
"Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" (1969)
"The Virginian" (1967–1969)
"Judd for the Defense" (1968)
"Mannix" (1968)
"The Name of the Game" (1968)
"Adam-12" (1968)
"The Guns of Will Sonnett" (1967)
"The Road West" (1967)
"The Big Valley" (1967)
"Run for Your Life" (1967)
"Perry Mason" (1966)
"Dr. Kildare" (1965)
"The Trials of O'Brien" (1965)
"A Man Called Shenandoah" (1965)
"Mr. Novak" (1965)
"The Defenders" (1964)
"77 Sunset Strip" (1961–1963)
"Saints and Sinners" (1962)
"Stoney Burke" (1962)
"The New Loretta Young Show" (1962)
"Going My Way" (1962)
"The Chapman Report" (1962)
"Kraft Mystery Theater" (1962)
"Alfred Hitchcock Presents" (1955–1962)
"The New Breed" (1962)
"Wagon Train" (1962)
"General Electric Theater" (1955–1962)
"Laramie" (1962)
"Route 66" (1962)
"The Untouchables" (1961–1962)
"Target: The Corruptors" (1962)
"Alcoa Premiere" (1962)
"Cain's Hundred" (1961)
"The Twilight Zone" (1961)
"Frontier Circus" (1961)
"The Donna Reed Show" (1961)
"Gunsmoke" (1956–1961)
"Letter to Loretta" (1960–1961)
"Hawaiian Eye" (1961)
"Shirley Temple's Storybook" (1960)
"Checkmate" (1960)
"Outlaws" (1960)
"Wanted: Dead or Alive" (1960)
"Thriller" (1960)
"Rawhide" (1960)
"Johnny Staccato" (1960)
"One Step Beyond" (1959)
"Lassie" (1957–1958)
"The Frank Sinatra Show" (1958)
"Climax!" (1955–1958)
"Telephone Time" (1957)
"The Rack" (1956)
"Matinee Theatre" (1956)
"Zane Grey Theater" (1956)
"The Kaiser Aluminum Hour" (1956)
"Lux Video Theatre" (1956)
"Screen Directors Playhouse" (1955)
"Star Stage" (1955)
"Kiss Me Deadly" (1955)
"Ponds Theater" (1953–1954)
"The Philco Television Playhouse" (1950–1954)
"The Mask" (1954)
"The Web" (1954)
"The Philip Morris Playhouse" (1953)
"Danger" (1952–1953)
"Suspense" (1951–1952)
"Charlie Wild, Private Detective" (1950–1952)
"Hallmark Hall of Fame" (1952)
"Kraft Television Theatre" (1949–1952)
"The Bob & Ray Show" (1951)
"Tales of Tomorrow" (1951)
"Armstrong Circle Theatre" (1951)
"Studio One" (1951)
"Big Town" (1951)
"Somerset Maugham TV Theatre" (1951)
"Pulitzer Prize Playhouse" (1951)
"The Billy Rose Show" (1950)
"The Clock" (1950)
"Nash Airflyte Theatre" (1950)
"Actor's Studio" (1948–1949)
"NBC Presents" (1949)
"The Ford Theatre Hour" (1948)

Cloris Leachman (born April 30, 1926, Des Moines, Iowa, U.S.—died January 26, 2021, Encinitas, California) was an American actress who was most widely known for her comic roles, perhaps most notably Phyllis Lindstrom on the TV show The Mary Tyler Moore Show (1970–77).

Leachman took piano lessons as a small child and participated in community theatre as she was growing up. She briefly studied drama at Northwestern University. In 1946 she participated in the Miss America Pageant as Miss Chicago, and she was named one of the 16 semifinalists. The award led to her film debut as an unnamed extra in the movie Carnegie Hall (1947), shot in New York City. Also in 1947–48 Leachman served as an understudy for the female lead in the Broadway comedy John Loves Mary. She made her Broadway debut in 1948 in Sundown Beach, which closed after a week, and she later played the part of Celia in a successful revival of As You Like It (1950). She appeared in a number of short-lived Broadway shows over the next several years, the most notable of which were Arthur Miller’s The Crucible (1953) and King of Hearts (1954). In addition, from 1948 she acted in numerous live television dramas. She made her feature film debut as the young woman whose death is the catalyst for the plot in Kiss Me Deadly (1955), based on a novel by Mickey Spillane. Leachman played the mother in the 1957–58 season of the long-running TV series Lassie (1954–74). Outside of a small part in the movie The Chapman Report (1962), she spent most of the 1960s playing guest roles on TV shows.

Leachman won notice when she played the prostitute Agnes in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969), and she appeared in another movie with Paul Newman, the political drama WUSA (1970). Her role as the homely, lonely wife of a high school football coach in Peter Bogdanovich’s The Last Picture Show (1971) brought her critical acclaim and an Academy Award for best supporting actress. Thereafter she appeared in a number of TV movies, notably Of Thee I Sing (1972) and The Migrants (1974). She was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for her performance in the film comedy Charley and the Angel (1973).

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It was her recurring role as Phyllis Lindstrom, the landlady of Mary Richards, in the immensely popular sitcom The Mary Tyler Moore Show (1970–77), that brought her lasting fame. She won Emmy Awards in 1974 and 1975 for her performance as Phyllis, and she later starred in the spin-off sitcom Phyllis (1975–77). During that time Leachman also won an Emmy for the TV movie A Brand New Life (1973) and another Emmy for her performance in a 1975 episode of the variety show Cher. In addition, she turned in an indelible performance as Frau Blücher in Mel Brooks’s film Young Frankenstein (1974).

Leachman remained primarily a television actress thereafter. She was a cast member (1986–88) on the sitcom The Facts of Life and starred in the short-lived series The Nutt House (1989). She earned her fifth Emmy Award for her performance in Screen Actors Guild 50th Anniversary Celebration (1984) and her sixth Emmy for a 1997 guest role on the series Promised Land (1996–99). Leachman was a cast member on The Ellen Show (2001–02; starring Ellen DeGeneres) and had a recurring role on Touched by an Angel (1997–2003). From 2001 to 2006 she portrayed Grandma Ida on Malcolm in the Middle, earning Emmy Awards in 2002 and 2006. She later played Maw Maw on the series Raising Hope (2010–14) and was cast as a Slavic goddess in American Gods, which premiered in 2017. During this time she voiced characters on the animated series Creative Galaxy and Justice League Action.

Leachman occasionally appeared in films, and her movie credits from the early 21st century included The Comedian (2016), I Can Only Imagine (2018), and Jump, Darling (2020). She also provided the voice of a cavewoman in the animated family comedy The Croods (2013) and its sequel (2020).

Patricia Bauer The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica