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A photo of Sandy Dennis

Sandy Dennis 1937 - 1992

Sandy Dale Dennis of Westport, Fairfield County, CT was born on April 27, 1937 at Hastings, in NE, and died at age 54 years old on March 2, 1992 at Westport in CT. Sandy Dennis was buried at Lincoln Memorial Park, Lincoln, Nebraska.
Sandy Dale Dennis
Westport, Fairfield County, CT 06880
April 27, 1937
Hastings, in NE
March 2, 1992
Westport in CT
Female
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Sandy Dale Dennis' History: 1937 - 1992

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  • Introduction

    Sandra Dale Dennis (April 27, 1937 – March 2, 1992) was an American theater and film actress. At the height of her career in the 1960s she won two Tony Awards, as well as an Oscar for her performance in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Sandy Dennis Dennis was born in Hastings, Nebraska, the daughter of Yvonne (née Hudson), a secretary, and Jack Dennis, a postal clerk. She had a brother, Frank. Dennis grew up in Kenesaw, Nebraska and Lincoln, Nebraska, graduating from Lincoln High School (Lincoln, Nebraska) in 1955. She attended Nebraska Wesleyan University and the University of Nebraska, appearing in the Lincoln Community Theater Group before moving to New York City at the age of 19. Dennis made her television debut in 1956 in The Guiding Light. She had an early break when cast as an understudy in the Broadway production of The Dark at the Top of the Stairs by William Inge, directed by Elia Kazan. Kazan cast Dennis in her first feature film, Splendor in the Grass (1961), playing Kay. The Complaisant Lover (1961–62) by Graham Greene was more successful, running for 101 performances; Michael Redgrave and Googie Withers were also in the cast. Broadway stardom Dennis achieved Broadway fame with her leading role in Herb Gardner's A Thousand Clowns (1962–63), for which she won a Tony award for her performance alongside Jason Robards. The show ran for 428 performances. Around this time, she guest starred on episodes of the TV series Naked City ("Carrier", 1963), The Fugitive ("The Other Side of the Mountain", 1963), Arrest and Trial ("Somewhat Lower Than the Angels" 1964), and Mr. Broadway ("Don't Mention My Name in Sheboygan", 1964). Dennis was the female lead of the Broadway comedy Any Wednesday (1964–66), which was a sensation, running for 983 performances and winning Dennis a second Tony. Dennis' second film role was as Honey, the fragile, neurotic young wife of George Segal's character in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966). Directed by Mike Nichols, the film was a huge critical and commercial success, and Dennis won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her role. Dennis' first lead role in a movie was in Up the Down Staircase (1967), directed by Robert Mulligan, which was a box office success. So too, was The Fox (1967), directed by Mark Rydell. In 1967 Dennis was voted the 18th biggest star in the US. The Out-of-Towners (1970), a Neil Simon comedy with Jack Lemmon, was a hit. Let Me Hear You Smile (1973) on Broadway only lasted one performance, but Absurd Person Singular (1974–76) was a big hit, running 591 performances. In 1974 she played Joan of Arc in the pilot of Witness to Yesterday, Canadian Patrick Watson's series of interviews with great figures from the past. She had a good part in Alan Alda's The Four Seasons (1981) and was in The Supporting Cast (1981) on Broadway for Gene Saks. She was in the stage production and film version of Robert Altman's Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean (1982). Dennis appeared on Young People's Specials ("The Trouble with Mother", 1985), The Love Boat ("Roommates/Heartbreaker/Out of the Blue", 1985), Alfred Hitchcock Presents ("Arthur, or the Gigolo," 1985), and The Equalizer ("Out of the Past," 1986). She had a supporting role in The Execution (1985), Laughter in the Dark (1986), Woody Allen's Another Woman (1988), 976-EVIL (1989), and Parents (1989). A life member of The Actors Studio and an advocate of method acting, Dennis was often described as neurotic and mannered in her performances; her signature style included running words together and oddly stopping and starting sentences, suddenly going up and down octaves as she spoke, and fluttering her hands. Walter Kerr famously remarked that she treated sentences as "weak, injured things" that needed to be slowly helped "across the street"; Pauline Kael said that she "has made an acting style of postnasal drip." Nonetheless, William Goldman, in his book The Season, referred to her as a quintessential "critics' darling" who got rave reviews no matter how unusual her acting and questionable her choice of material. During her stint in Any Wednesday, Kerr said the following: "Let me tell you about Sandy Dennis. There should be one in every home." Dennis lived with prominent jazz musician Gerry Mulligan from 1965 until they split up in 1974. She lived with actor Eric Roberts from 1980 to 1985. In an interview with People magazine in 1989, Dennis revealed she and Gerry Mulligan had suffered a miscarriage in 1965 and went on to say, "If I'd been a mother, I would have loved the child, but I just didn't have any connection with it when I was pregnant. I never ever wanted children. It would have been like having an elephant." "I've never been married. And I'm not fussy about it. It's just the truth is that I was never married. It isn't true that I was ever married, which means that I never got a divorce. The newspapers jumped to that conclusion. It's so hard to get to somebody and say, "Oh, they're so funny about it." Sandy Dennis died from ovarian cancer at her home in Westport, Connecticut, at age 54.
  • 04/27
    1937

    Birthday

    April 27, 1937
    Birthdate
    Hastings, in NE
    Birthplace
  • Personal Life & Family

    Sandy Dennis Famous memorial Birth 27 Apr 1937 Hastings, Adams County, Nebraska, USA Death 2 Mar 1992 (aged 54) Westport, Fairfield County, Connecticut, USA Burial Lincoln Memorial Park Lincoln, Lancaster County, Nebraska, USA Show Map Plot Mausoleum Number 3, Wall A, Col. 1C (inside the mausoleum) Memorial ID 2622 · View Source Actress. She is best remembered for her role of 'Honey' in "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" (1966), for which she won an Oscar. She began her acting career in various roles on television, beginning with "The Guiding Light" soap opera in 1956. She had a small part in the film, "Splendor in the Grass" (1961) but won two consecutive Tony awards for "A Thousand Clowns" and "Any Wednesday," which led to her being selected for an Oscar-winning role in "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?"(1966). She quickly followed up with an acclaimed performance as a frustrated teacher in "Up the Down Staircase" (1967), played a terminally ill woman in "Sweet November" (1968), and opposite Jack Lemmon as his equally unlucky spouse in "The Out-of-Towners" (1970). She excelled at playing shrill, barely in control, neurotic victims whose whiny voice would either repel audiences or captivate them. After 1982, her film work became sporadic, but she continued making movies until just before her death in 1992. Believed for many years to be married to jazz great Gerry Mulligan, and she eventually let the public know that they had never made it official. She died of ovarian cancer in Westport, Connecticut. Family Members Parents Jack Henry Dennis 1906–1990 Yvonne Vivian Hudson Dennis 1911–1994 Siblings Frank Benjamin Dennis 1929–2017
  • 03/2
    1992

    Death

    March 2, 1992
    Death date
    Ovarian Cancer
    Cause of death
    Westport in CT
    Death location
  • Gravesite & Burial

    mm/dd/yyyy
    Funeral date
    Lincoln Memorial Park, Lincoln, Nebraska
    Burial location
  • Obituary

    Sandy Dennis, Veteran Actress And Prize Winner, Is Dead at 54 By LEE A. DANIELS MARCH 5, 1992 March 5, 1992, Page 00014 The New York Times Archives Sandy Dennis, who as a young actress in the 1960's entranced Broadway and Hollywood with performances that won her two Tony Awards and an Academy Award, died on Monday at her home in Westport, Conn. She was 54 years old. Although the exact cause of her death was not known, Ms. Dennis had been fighting a long battle with cancer, said Doris Elliott, a longtime friend. Ms. Dennis's death was confirmed by a spokesman for the Lewis Funeral Home in Westport. Ms. Dennis, born and raised in Nebraska and blessed with an aura of appealing fragility, came to New York at age 18. Within a decade she had fashioned a string of outstanding performances, and had earned the awards to prove it. Successive Tonys After making her movie debut in 1961 in a supporting role in "Splendor in the Grass," she won a Tony Award in 1963 for her performance on Broadway, opposite Jason Robards, as a social worker in "A Thousand Clowns." A year later she won another Tony as the slightly offbeat mistress of a tycoon, played by Gene Hackman, in "Any Wednesday." Then in 1966, she won an Academy Award as best supporting actress for her portrayal of Honey, the mousy, scared-of-her-own-shadow half of a young faculty couple alternately seduced and browbeaten by Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton in Edward Albee's scalding "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf." She also drew critical praise for her 1967 role as the idealistic schoolteacher in the film "Up the Down Staircase." Bosley Crowther, reviewing that film in The New York Times, praised her portrayal as "engagingly natural, sensitive, literate and thoroughly moving." He said that Ms. Dennis gave "a vivid performance of emotional range and depth," and added that she "sincerely acquaints us with a genuine loving person we can believe wants to find her pupils' wounds and, what's more, try to heal them, which she can't." Her performance won the Moscow Film Festival prize for best actress. Ms. Dennis's success was extraordinary for any actor or actress, but she seemed to recognize that such oversize fame might be ephemeral. In one interview she remarked that acting "isn't like painting a picture or writing a book." "When you finish an acting stint, there's nothing except money," she said. "You have to keep going, giving the best you've got to get something intangible." In her later roles, Ms. Dennis was never able to match the dazzling successes of her earlier years in terms of either public acclaim or favorable reviews. Where critics had once been charmed by her freshness and girl-next-door innocence, many later seemed to detect a mannered nervous quality that drove them to distraction. This affected even Walter Kerr, the longtime Broadway critic, who had praised Ms. Dennis's performance in "Any Wednesday" with the lines: "Let me tell you about Sandy Dennis. There should be one in every home." But in 1967, Mr. Kerr wrote tolerantly but pointedly of Ms. Dennis's "habit" of speaking onstage as though sentences "were poor crippled things that couldn't cross a street without making three false starts from the curb." Still, she continued to work steadily in films and plays and in summer stock. The New Yorker film critic Pauline Kael once complained that Ms. Dennis "has made an acting style of postnasal drip," an assessment Ms. Dennis herself said was correct and worked to change. Mr. Burton once described her as "one of the most genuine eccentrics I know of."
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19 Memories, Stories & Photos about Sandy

George Grizzard and Sandy Dennis
George Grizzard and Sandy Dennis
A photo of George Grizzard and Sandy Dennis.
I gave a tribute to George Grizzard too.
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
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Sudie Bond and Sandy Dennis
Sudie Bond and Sandy Dennis
A photo of Sudie Bond with Sandy Dennis. I was friends with Sudie Bond. She has a tribute too.
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
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I met Sandy Dennis many times.
Sandy was the understudy to actress Evans Evans (real name) in The Dark at the Top of the Stairs.
She was reticent and barely spoke to anybody, but the rest of the cast was very friendly to me.

As the years passed, I kept meeting her again because I was friends with some of her co-stars.

I gave her this tribute because she was enormously gifted, and nobody else did.
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Yvonne and Sandy Dennis
Yvonne and Sandy Dennis
A photo of Sandy Dennis and her mother, Yvonne (Hudson) Dennis
People in photo include: Yvonne (Hudson) Dennis
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
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Sandy Dennis
Sandy Dennis
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
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Sandra Dale Dennis (April 27, 1937 – March 2, 1992) was an American theater and film actress. At the height of her career in the 1960s she won two Tony Awards, as well as an Oscar for her performance in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
Sady Dennis
Dennis was born in Hastings, Nebraska, the daughter of Yvonne (née Hudson), a secretary, and Jack Dennis, a postal clerk.She had a brother, Frank. Dennis grew up in Kenesaw, Nebraska and Lincoln, Nebraska, graduating from Lincoln High School (Lincoln, Nebraska) in 1955.[4] She attended Nebraska Wesleyan University and the University of Nebraska, appearing in the Lincoln Community Theater Group before moving to New York City at the age of 19.
Dennis made her television debut in 1956 in The Guiding Light.
She had an early break when cast as an understudy in the Broadway production of The Dark at the Top of the Stairs by William Inge directed by Elia Kazan. Kazan cast Dennis in her first feature film, Splendor in the Grass (1961), playing Kay.
The Complaisant Lover (1961–62) by Graham Greene was more successful, running for 101 performances; Michael Redgrave and Googie Withers were also in the cast.
Broadway stardom
Dennis achieved Broadway fame with her leading role in Herb Gardner's A Thousand Clowns (1962–63), for which she won a Tony award for her performance alongside Jason Robards. The show ran for 428 performances.
Around this time, she guest starred on episodes of the TV series Naked City ("Carrier", 1963), The Fugitive ("The Other Side of the Mountain", 1963), Arrest and Trial ("Somewhat Lower Than the Angels" 1964), and Mr. Broadway ("Don't Mention My Name in Sheboygan", 1964).
Dennis was the lead of the Broadway comedy Any Wednesday (1964–66), which was a sensation, running for 983 performances and winning Dennis a second Tony.
Dennis' second film role was as Honey, the fragile, neurotic young wife of George Segal's character, in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966). Directed by Mike Nichols, the film was a huge critical and commercial success and Dennis won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her role.
Dennis' first lead role in a movie was in Up the Down Staircase (1967), directed by Robert Mulligan which was a box office success. So too was The Fox (1967), directed by Mark Rydell. In 1967 Dennis was voted the 18th biggest star in the US.[6]
The Out-of-Towners (1970), a Neil Simon comedy with Jack Lemmon, was a hit.
Let Me Hear You Smile (1973) on Broadway only lasted one performance, but Absurd Person Singular (1974–76) was a big hit, running 591 performances.
In 1974 she played Joan of Arc in the pilot of Witness to Yesterday, Canadian Patrick Watson's series of interviews with great figures out of the past.
She had a good part in Alan Alda's The Four Seasons (1981) and was in The Supporting Cast (1981) on Broadway for Gene Saks. She was in the stage production and film version of Robert Altman's Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean (1982).
Dennis appeared on Young People's Specials ("The Trouble with Mother", 1985), The Love Boat ("Roommates/Heartbreaker/Out of the Blue", 1985), Alfred Hitchcock Presents ("Arthur, or the Gigolo", 1985) and The Equalizer ("Out of the Past", 1986). She had a supporting role in The Execution (1985), Laughter in the Dark (1986), Woody Allen's Another Woman (1988), 976-EVIL (1989) and Parents (1989).
A life member of The Actors Studio and an advocate of method acting, Dennis was often described as neurotic and mannered in her performances; her signature style included running words together and oddly stopping and starting sentences, suddenly going up and down octaves as she spoke, and fluttering her hands. Walter Kerr famously remarked that she treated sentences as "weak, injured things" that needed to be slowly helped "across the street"; Pauline Kael said that she "has made an acting style of postnasal drip." Nonetheless, William Goldman, in his book The Season, referred to her as a quintessential "critics' darling" who got rave reviews no matter how unusual her acting and questionable her choice of material. During her stint in Any Wednesday, Kerr said the following: "Let me tell you about Sandy Dennis. There should be one in every home."
Dennis lived with prominent jazz musician Gerry Mulligan from 1965 until they split up in 1974. She lived with actor Eric Roberts from 1980 to 1985.
In an interview with People magazine in 1989, Dennis revealed she and Gerry Mulligan had suffered a miscarriage in 1965 and went on to say, "if I'd been a mother, I would have loved the child, but I just didn't have any connection with it when I was pregnant…I never, ever wanted children. It would have been like having an elephant."
"I've never been married. And I'm not fussy about it. It's just the truth is, that I was never married. It isn't true that I was ever married, which means that I never got a divorce. The newspapers jumped to that conclusion. It's so hard to get to somebody and say...Oh, they're so funny about it."
Sandy Dennis died from ovarian cancer at her home in Westport, Connecticut, at age 54.[15]
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Sandy Dennis' Family Tree & Friends

Sandy Dennis' Family Tree

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Sandy's Friends

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