Newsgroups: alt.obituaries
Subject: Jill Clayburgh Dies at 66

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/06/arts/06clayburgh.html

Jill Clayburgh, an Oscar-nominated actress known for portraying
strong, independent women, died on Friday at her home in Lakeville,
Conn. She was 66.

The cause was chronic leukemia, with which she had lived for 21 years,
her husband, the playwright David Rabe, said.

Ms. Clayburgh, who began her career in films and on Broadway in the
late 1960s, was among the first generation of young actresses =97
including Ellen Burstyn, Carrie Snodgress and Marsha Mason =97 who
regularly portrayed characters sprung from the new feminist ethos:
smart, capable and gritty, sometimes neurotic, but no less glamorous
for all that.

=93I guess people look at me and they think I=92m a ladylike character,=94
Ms. Clayburgh told The New York Times in 1982. =93But it=92s not what I do
best. I do best with characters who are coming apart at the seams.=94

She was known in particular for her starring role in =93An Unmarried
Woman=94 (1978), directed by Paul Mazursky. For her performance as
Erica, a New Yorker who must right herself after her husband leaves
her for another woman, Ms. Clayburgh was nominated for an Academy
Award. (The best-actress Oscar that year went to Jane Fonda in =93Coming
Home.=94)

Reviewing =93An Unmarried Woman=94 in The Times, Vincent Canby wrote:
=93Miss Clayburgh is nothing less than extraordinary in what is the
performance of the year to date. In her we see intelligence battling
feeling =97 reason backed against the wall by pushy needs.=94

Ms. Clayburgh also received an Oscar nomination for =93Starting
Over=94 (1979), directed by Alan J. Pakula. She played Marilyn Holmberg,
a teacher who embarks on a relationship with Phil, a newly divorced
man played by Burt Reynolds.

Reviewing that film in The Times, Janet Maslin wrote, =93Miss Clayburgh
delivers a particularly sharp characterization that=92s letter-perfect
during the first part of the story.=94 She added, =93Her Marilyn is all
wrong for Phil =97 that=92s what makes their affair so unexpectedly
touching and gives the story so much life.=94

Ms. Clayburgh=92s other films include =93Semi-Tough=94 (1977), opposite Mr.
Reynolds; =93It=92s My Turn=94 (1980), opposite Michael Douglas; =93First
Monday in October=94 (1981), opposite Walter Matthau, in which she
played the first woman appointed to the United States Supreme Court;
and =93I=92m Dancing as Fast as I Can=94 (1982), based on the memoir by
Barbara Gordon about a driven career woman=92s addiction to valium.

Jill Clayburgh was born in Manhattan on April 30, 1944, the daughter
of Albert, an industrial textile salesman, and Julie Clayburgh. She
earned a bachelor=92s degree in theater from Sarah Lawrence College in
1966.

Ms. Clayburgh made her Broadway debut in 1968 in =93The Sudden &
Accidental Re-Education of Horse Johnson,=94 a play starring Jack
Klugman that ran for five performances. Her other Broadway credits
included far more successful shows, among them the Jerry Bock-Sheldon
Harnick musical =93The Rothschilds=94 (1970), opposite Hal Linden; the
Stephen Schwartz musical =93Pippin=94 (1972), opposite John Rubinstein;
and a 1984 revival of No=EBl Coward=92s =93Design for Living=94 that also
starred Frank Langella and Raul Julia.

Her last Broadway appearance, in 2006, was in a revival of =93Barefoot
in the Park=94 at the Cort Theater, with Tony Roberts and Amanda Peet.

Besides Mr. Rabe, whom she married in 1978, Ms. Clayburgh is survived
by a daughter, the actress Lily Rabe, who is starring in the Broadway
production of =93The Merchant of Venice,=94 now in previews at the
Broadhurst Theater; a son, Michael; a stepson, Jason; and a brother,
James.

Her many television credits include guest appearances on =93Law &
Order,=94 =93The Practice=94 and =93Nip/Tuck,=94 and a recurring role on =
=93Ally
McBeal=94 as Ally=92s mother, Jeannie. Most recently Ms. Clayburgh was a
member of the regular cast of =93Dirty Sexy Money,=94 broadcast from 2007
to 2009 on ABC.

Despite her acclaim, Ms. Clayburgh, by all appearances, had a healthy
sense of herself. =93People think about me, =91This wonderful lucky woman,
she=92s got it all,=92 =94 she told The Times in 1982. =93But gee, that=92s=
 how
I feel about Meryl Streep.=94

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