Marcia Wallace
{{short description|American actress and comedienne (1942–2013)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2022}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Marcia Wallace
| image = Marcia Wallace at 47th Emmy Awards.jpg
| caption = Wallace in 1994
| birth_name = Marcia Karen Wallace
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1942|11|1}}
| birth_place = Creston, Iowa, U.S.
| death_date = {{Death date and age|2013|10|25|1942|11|1}}
| death_place = Los Angeles, California, U.S.
| alma_mater = Parsons College
| known_for = The Bob Newhart Show
Full House
The Simpsons
| occupation = {{hlist|Actress|comedian}}
| years_active = 1967–2013
| spouse = {{Marriage|Dennis Hawley|1986|1992|end=died}}
| children = 1
}}
Marcia Karen Wallace (November 1, 1942 – October 25, 2013) was an American actress and comedian, primarily known for her roles on sitcoms. She is best known for her roles as receptionist Carol Kester on the 1970s sitcom The Bob Newhart Show, Mrs. Carruthers on Full House, and as the voice of elementary school teacher Edna Krabappel on the animated series The Simpsons, for which she won an Emmy in 1992. The character was retired after her death but sporadically appears through archive recording.
Wallace was known for her tall frame, red hair, and distinctive laugh. She had a career spanning five decades on TV, film, and stage. She was a frequent guest on The Merv Griffin Show, which led to her receiving a personal request to appear on The Bob Newhart Show in a role created especially for her. Diagnosed with breast cancer in 1985, she became a cancer activist, and remained so throughout her life.
Early life
Wallace was born in Creston, Iowa, on November 1, 1942, the eldest of three children of Arthur "Poke" Wallace and wife Joann.{{cite news| last=Longden| first=Tom| url=http://www.parsonscollege.org/content/album/stories/wallace.html| title=Creston's Marcia Wallace brings humor to every role| newspaper=The Des Moines Register| via=Parsons College alumni website| date=April 10, 2005| access-date=October 5, 2012}} Her father owned and operated Wallace Sundries, a general merchandise store in the typical small rural country Iowa town, where Marcia, her sister Sharon, and brother Jim would often help. While Wallace was in the local high school, a teacher encouraged her to consider a career in acting after she did well in a school play. Following her 1960 graduation from Creston High School, Wallace attended nearby Parsons College in Fairfield, Iowa, which had offered her a full scholarship. She was a member of the Delta Nu chapter of Delta Zeta sorority. At Parsons, she majored in English and Theater, graduating in 1964, and performing in several campus productions, including Brigadoon and The Music Man.
Career
On the day she graduated from college at Parsons, Wallace moved from Iowa to New York with $148 in her pocket. To make ends meet, she typed scripts, performed in summer stock local theatre, did commercials, and worked as a substitute English teacher in The Bronx in the late 1960s. After performing for a year in a New York City / Greenwich Village nightclub, Wallace and four fellow entertainer friends formed an improvisational group called The Fourth Wall. In 1968, Wallace appeared for a year off-Broadway with the group. Afterwards, she made several other appearances in improvisational shows,{{iobdb name|9331|Marcia Wallace}} and, after losing {{convert|100|lb}} from her previous weight of 230, appeared in a nude production of Dark of the Moon at the avant-garde Mercer Arts Center in Greenwich Village (now known as The Kitchen - a performing arts institution relocated to the West Village area of Manhattan).{{iobdb title|3202|Dark of the Moon}}
File:Bob Newhart Show Carols Wedding 1975.JPG (right) and Will Mackenzie in a fourth-season episode of The Bob Newhart Show, "Carol's Wedding", in 1975]]
Wallace was a semiregular on The Merv Griffin Show long-running syndicated daytime talk / variety show, appearing over 75 times. When the show moved its production from New York to Los Angeles, Wallace moved with it at Griffin's request. One of these appearances in March 1972 led to a phone call from TV producer Grant Tinker (husband of comedic actress and fellow producer Mary Tyler Moore), who offered her a supporting role on their new The Bob Newhart Show on the recommendation of CBS-TV founder and longtime chairman William S. ("Bill") Paley. The role of "Carol Kester" (later "Carol Kester Bondurant"), the sarcastic and eccentric office receptionist to "Dr. Robert Hartley", Bob Newhart's central character, was written specifically for her. Newhart and Wallace later reprised their roles from The Bob Newhart Show to guest roles on "Anything but Cured", an episode of Murphy Brown (starring Candice Bergen).
When The Bob Newhart Show ended its six-season run in 1978, Wallace began three decades of television appearances on various game shows, including Match Game; Hollywood Squares; Password Plus and Super Password; Celebrity Whew!; Crosswits; Hot Potato; Body Language; The $25,000 Pyramid; Double Talk; Win, Lose or Draw; Tattletales; To Tell the Truth; and Acting Crazy. She was also on special celebrity episodes of the Ray Combs version of Family Feud and the Jim Perry version of Card Sharks. In April 2008, she appeared on the interactive show GSN Live on the cable TV channel Game Show Network (GSN).
Other brief television roles include: as Darrin's secretary in "Laugh, Clown, Laugh", a Bewitched episode in 1971; two appearances on The Brady Bunch (once as Marcia's teacher in "Getting Davy Jones" and once as the woman who sells Jan a mod wig in "Will the Real Jan Brady Please Stand Up?"); as school principal Mrs. Lyman in two episodes of ALF; and as Mrs. Carruthers in a few episodes of Full House. Wallace also had guest appearances on programs Charles in Charge; Murder, She Wrote; Magnum, P.I.; Columbo; and A Different World. On one of the last episodes of Taxi, she portrayed herself, chosen as the ideal date of Rev. Jim Ignatowski. Later, Wallace played the maid on the satirical series That's My Bush!, and, in 2009, appeared on the daytime soap opera The Young and the Restless, playing Annie Wilkes, an inefficient assistant kidnapper.
After The Simpsons animated series started in 1989, Wallace joined the voice acting cast as the voice of Edna Krabappel, whom she played until her death in 2013. In 1992, she received a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance for the episode "Bart the Lover" on The Simpsons.
On film, Wallace appeared in such features as My Mom's a Werewolf, Teen Witch, and Ghoulies III: Ghoulies Go to College. In the 2008 film Tru Loved, she played a high school drama teacher who sponsors a gay–straight alliance.
Wallace's work onstage included An Almost Perfect Person in Los Angeles which she also produced; a tour of the female version of Neil Simon's The Odd Couple; Same Time, Next Year; Twigs; It Had to Be You; Supporting Cast; Prisoner of Second Avenue; and Plaza Suite. Wallace made her musical stage debut in the August 1983 California Musical Theatre's Sacramento Music Circus production of Gypsy: A Musical Fable in Sacramento.{{cite news| url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1915&dat=19830810&id=LgsiAAAAIBAJ&sjid=EXMFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1822%2C1759093| title=Actors enjoy their stay, on and off stage| date=August 10, 1983|newspaper=The Day| access-date=October 28, 2013| first=Carol| last=Brown| location=New London, Conn| page=18}} She returned the following season in the musical Promises, Promises. Other stage productions included Born Yesterday; You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown; Steel Magnolias; and Last of the Red Hot Lovers, in which she played all three female roles at various times. She performed in The Vagina Monologues production in Los Angeles, New York, Chicago and San Diego.[http://www.marciawallace.com/bio.php Biography] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151031014212/http://www.marciawallace.com/bio.php |date=October 31, 2015 }} from [http://www.marciawallace.com MarciaWallace.com] In 2013, shortly before her death, she voiced the character of the librarian in Monsters University, and in 2014 (posthumously) she portrayed herself in the movie Muffin Top: A Love Story.
Personal life
Wallace married hotelier Dennis Hawley on May 18, 1986, in a Buddhist ceremony.{{cite web| url=http://data.desmoinesregister.com/dmr/famous-iowans/marcia-wallace| title=Famous Iowans - Marcia Wallace| newspaper=The Des Moines Register| access-date=November 2, 2015| archive-date=November 5, 2013| archive-url=https://archive.today/20131105011556/http://data.desmoinesregister.com/dmr/famous-iowans/marcia-wallace| url-status=dead}} The couple adopted an infant son, Michael Wallace "Mikey" Hawley. Dennis died from pancreatic cancer in June 1992.{{cite magazine| url=https://people.com/archive/after-the-laughter-vol-37-no-8/| title=After the Laughter| last=Sanz| first=Cynthia| journal=People| date=March 2, 1992| access-date=September 1, 2020}}
Before her marriage, Wallace was diagnosed with breast cancer in 1985,{{cite web |url=http://www.speakwellbeing.com/marcia-wallace.php |title=Marcia Wallace |publisher=The Speak Well Being Group |access-date=December 23, 2008|url-status=dead| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081121105318/http://www.speakwellbeing.com/marcia-wallace.php| archive-date=November 21, 2008| df=mdy-all}} after which she became an activist and lecturer on the subject.{{cite web |title=Corporate Speakers - Cancer survivor and speaker Marcia Wallace |url=http://corporateartists.com/speaker_marcia_wallace.html |website=Corporate Artists |access-date=February 12, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060617113433/http://corporateartists.com/speaker_marcia_wallace.html |archive-date=June 17, 2006}} On January 27, 2007, Wallace won the Gilda Radner Courage Award. It was annually given by the longtime nationally prominent institution in the medical fight against the disease of cancer, the Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center in Buffalo, New York. It was given to her six years before her death for helping educate Americans about the importance of early cancer detection and inspiring others through her 20 years as a breast cancer survivor.
Wallace was a member of Delta Zeta sorority from her college years at Parsons College in Iowa, and was named the "Delta Zeta 2010 Woman of the Year" at their 2010 Biennial National Convention in Tucson, Arizona. Her autobiography, titled Don't Look Back, We're Not Going That Way, was published in 2004. Besides describing her film and TV career, the book importantly recounts the early detection of her breast cancer, the early loss of her husband Dennis, her nervous breakdown, her single motherhood, and other personal experiences such as a private history of bulimia. She credited the title of the book to her father, who used the phrase often during her childhood.
She was noted on a list of "Famous Iowans" by her important state capital daily newspaper, the Des Moines Register, in November 2013.
Illness, death and funeral
Wallace died from pneumonia and sepsis on October 25, 2013, at age 70. Breast cancer was also listed as a significant condition on her death certificate.{{cite news |url=http://www.torontosun.com/2013/11/24/marcia-wallaces-death-caused-by-pneumonia-and-breast-cancer |title=Marcia Wallace's death caused by pneumonia and breast cancer |date=November 24, 2013 |access-date=March 10, 2014 |newspaper=Toronto Sun}} Wallace was cremated following a private funeral service.{{cite magazine| url=http://insidetv.ew.com/2013/10/26/marcia-wallace-actress-from-the-simpsons-and-the-bob-newhart-show-dies-at-70| title=Marcia Wallace, actress from 'The Simpsons' and 'The Bob Newhart Show', dies at 70| magazine=Entertainment Weekly| date=October 26, 2013| access-date=October 26, 2013| archive-date=October 29, 2013| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131029032254/http://insidetv.ew.com/2013/10/26/marcia-wallace-actress-from-the-simpsons-and-the-bob-newhart-show-dies-at-70| url-status=bot: unknown}}
Staff on The Simpsons had reportedly been aware of her ill health. Showrunner Al Jean said, "I was tremendously saddened to learn this morning of the passing of the brilliant and gracious Marcia Wallace."{{cite news| title='Simpsons' star Marcia Wallace dies at 70| newspaper=Chicago Tribune| agency=Reuters| date=October 26, 2013| url=http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-marcia-wallace-dead-20131026,0,3012297.story| url-status=dead| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131029032254/http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-marcia-wallace-dead-20131026,0,3012297.story| archive-date=October 29, 2013| df=mdy-all}} Yeardley Smith, who voices Lisa Simpson, tweeted, "Heaven is now a much funnier place b/c of you, Marcia."{{cite news| title=Marcia Wallace dies: Tributes as voice of The Simpsons' Edna Krabappel passes away aged 70| first=Jessica| last=Best| newspaper=Daily Mirror| location=London| date=October 26, 2013| url=https://www.mirror.co.uk/tv/tv-news/marcia-wallace-dies-simpsons-edna-2640702#ixzz2irNygNP0}} Former co-star Bob Newhart commented on his Facebook fan page, "Marcia's death came as quite a shock, she left us too early. She was a talented actress and dear friend[.]"{{cite web| url=https://www.facebook.com/pages/Bob-Newhart/147547279204 |title=Bob Newhart| website=Facebook| access-date=November 2, 2015}} Al Jean said that producers planned to retire her "irreplaceable" character Edna Krabappel. The Simpsons episode "Four Regrettings and a Funeral" was shown on November 3, 2013, and dedicated to her.{{cite news| last=Hughes| first=Jason| title='The Simpsons' Pays Tribute to Marcia Wallace with Final Chalkboard Message| url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/11/04/the-simpsons-tribute-marcia-wallace-chalkboard-message-video_n_4210838.html| access-date=November 4, 2013| newspaper=HuffPost| date=November 4, 2013}} Wallace had recorded lines for several upcoming episodes, and her final episode, "The Man Who Grew Too Much", aired on March 9, 2014.
In February 2021, it was announced that archival recordings of Marcia Wallace's voice that she provided as Edna Krabappel would be making a final appearance on The Simpsons. The character is mentioned in a chalkboard gag and shown in flashback scenes in the show's 696th episode, entitled "Diary Queen". In an interview with Variety regarding the announcement, Al Jean remarked, "We never got the chance to give sort of a proper goodbye to her in the show, and this is a small attempt to do that."{{cite news| url=https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/simpsons-brought-back-marcia-wallace-013015733.html?guccounter=1| title=Here's How 'The Simpsons' Brought Back the Late Marcia Wallace to Say Goodbye to Mrs. Krabappel| first=Michael| last=Schneider| date=February 21, 2021| magazine=Variety| via=Yahoo! Entertainment| access-date=June 9, 2022| archive-date=February 22, 2021| archive-url=https://archive.today/20210222112309/https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/simpsons-brought-back-marcia-wallace-013015733.html?guccounter=1| url-status=bot: unknown}}
Filmography
=Film=
class="wikitable sortable"
! Year ! Title ! Role ! class="unsortable" | Notes |
1980
|Alice Kidd | |
1989
|Ms. Edith Malloy | |
1989
|Peggy | |
1990
|Ghoulies III: Ghoulies Go to College |Miss Boggs |Video |
1998
|{{sortname|The|Christmas Path|nolink=1}} |Mrs. Claus | |
2001
|You Never Know | |Short |
2004
|Forever for Now |Ellie | |
2007
|{{sortname|The|Simpsons Movie}} |(voice, scenes deleted) |
2007
|Alma | |
2008
|Mrs. Lewis | |
2013
|Additional Voices (voice) | |
2014
|Marcia Wallace |Released posthumously in November 2014 |
=Television=
class="wikitable sortable"
! Year ! Title ! Role ! class="unsortable" | Notes |
1967
|{{sortname|The|Invaders}} |Courtroom Spectator (uncredited) |Season 2 Episode 6: "The Trial" |
1971
|Betty |Season 7 Episode 27: "Laugh, Clown, Laugh" |
1971
|{{sortname|The|Brady Bunch}} |Saleswoman / Mrs. Robbins |2 episodes |
1972
|Woman / Woman in Inquest (uncredited) |2 episodes |
1972
|Bertha |Season 3 Episode 16: "segment: Love and the Topless Policy" |
1972–1978
|{{sortname|The|Bob Newhart Show}} |Carol Kester Bondurant |Series regular |
1978
|Augusta |Season 1 Episode 417: "Second Chorus" |
1978
|{{sortname|The|Love Boat}} |Mrs. O'Roarke |Season 1 Episode 23: "Musical Cabins" |
1978
|Connie Martin |Season 1 Episode 0: "Flying High" |
1979
|{{sortname|The|Castaways on Gilligan's Island}} |Myra Elliott |TV Movie |
1979
|Martha Meeks |Season 3 Episode 13: "The Inventor/On the Other Side" |
1980
|Boom Boom Shavelson |TV Movie |
1980
|Characters |Leila Flynn |TV Movie |
1980
|Marcia Wallace (uncredited) |Season 4 Episode 6: "The Great 5K Star Race and Boulder Wrap Party: Part 2" |
1981
|Barbara Terranova |Season 1 Episode 18: "Beauty Knows No Pain" |
1982
|Taxi |Marcia Wallace |Season 5 Episode 1: "Love Un-American Style" |
1983
|Hilda |Season 2 Episode 20: "Glenlawn Street Blues" |
1984
|Daisy and Cary's Friend |Season 1 Episode 1: "Maxwell Ltd: Finder of Lost Loves Pilot" |
1985
|Grace |Season 4 Episode 17: "The Bag Lady" |
1986
|Polly Barth |Season 3 Episode 5: "Corned Beef and Carnage" |
1987
|ALF |Mrs. Lyman |2 episodes |
1988
|Miss Phillips |Season 5 Episode 16: "Another Day in the Life" |
1988
|Mrs. Wynn |Season 2 Episode 4: "The View from the Rear Terrace" |
1988
|Miss Cratchit |Season 4 Episode 12: "Tag, You're It" |
1989–1990
|Dodo |2 episodes |
1990
| |Season 1 Episode 10: "The Substitute" |
1990–2014, 2018-2019, 2021
|{{sortname|The|Simpsons}} |Edna Krabappel / Various |Series regular |
1991
|{{sortname|The|Munsters Today}} |Dr. Susan Evans |Season 3 Episode 22: "Diary of a Mad Munsterwife" |
1991–1992
|Clovis / Mrs. Cavanaugh (voice) / Didi Lovelost (voice) |4 episodes |
1992
|Agnes Biederbeck |Season 1 Episode 8: "Coming Home" |
1992
|Female Tourist (voice) |Season 1 Episode 8: "Dogzapoppin'/The Hairy Ape/A Fear of Kites" |
1992
|Waitress |Season 6 Episode 13: "White Christmas" |
1992
|(voice) |Season 3 Episode 6: "When It Rains... It Snows" |
1992–1993
|{{sortname|The|Addams Family|The Addams Family (1992 TV series)}} |Mrs. Blossom (voice) |21 episodes |
1993
|'Dark Interlude' Actress (voice) |Season 2 Episode 3: "Mudslide" |
1993
|Captain Planet and the Planeteers |Mrs. Wheeler (voice) |Season 4 Episode 10: "Talkin' Trash" |
1993–1995
|Mrs. Carruthers |4 episodes |
1994
|Oopa (voice) |Season 2 Episode 37: "The Game" |
1994–1998
|Carol - Secretary #66 / Molly |2 episodes |
1995
|Kirk |Lamerle |Season 1 Episode 7: "The Crush" |
1996
|{{sortname|The|Bold and the Beautiful}} |Librarian |Episode 2386: "Episode #1.2386" |
1997
|Angela |Season 1 Episode 1: "Marty Buys the Farm" |
1997
|Marcia |Season 1 Episode 8: "The Cameo Episode" |
1998
|Woman - Old Woman (voice) |Season 3 Episode 9: "Driver's Sped" |
1998
|Woman - Old Woman (voice) |Season 3 Episode 9: "The Day I Was Born/Factory Follies/I.M. Weasel: Driver's Sped" |
1998
|{{sortname|The|Angry Beavers}} |Mrs. Beaver (voice) |Season 2 Episode 11: "If You Insisters/Alley Oops!" |
1999
|Head Nurse |Season 1 Episode 22: "Uh-Oh Baby" |
2001
|Maggie Hawley |8 episodes |
2002
|Glenda |Season 4 Episode 21: "Smoke and Mirrors" |
2002
|Mrs. Rapple (voice) |Season 9 Episode 9: "They Came from the Backyard/Lil's Phil of Trash" |
2003
|Nurse |3 episodes |
2004
|Triple Play |Waitress |TV Short |
2009
|{{sortname|The|Young and the Restless}} |Annie Wilkes |14 episodes (Recurring role) |
2010
|Vampire Mob |Virginia Jones (2010) | |
=Video games=
class="wikitable sortable"
! Year ! Title ! Role ! class="unsortable" | Notes |
1997
|The Simpsons: Virtual Springfield |Edna Krabappel (voice) |(uncredited) |
2001
|Edna Krabappel (voice) | |
2007
|Edna Krabappel (voice) | |
=Music videos=
class="wikitable sortable"
! Year ! Title ! Role |
1990
|Edna Krabappel (voice) |
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{Commons category}}
- {{IMDb name|0908761}}
- {{rotten-tomatoes-person|marcia_wallace}}
- {{iobdb name|9331|Marcia Wallace}}
- {{Tcmdb name|https://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/person/201138%7C0/Marcia-Wallace#overview}}
- {{discogs artist|Marcia Wallace}}
{{EmmyAward VoiceOver 1990-2000}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Wallace, Marcia}}
Category:20th-century American actresses
Category:21st-century American actresses
Category:American film actresses
Category:American soap opera actresses
Category:American stage actresses
Category:American television actresses
Category:American television personalities
Category:American women television personalities
Category:American video game actresses
Category:American voice actresses
Category:American women comedians
Category:Converts to Sōka Gakkai
Category:Deaths from breast cancer in California
Category:Deaths from pneumonia in California
Category:Members of Sōka Gakkai
Category:American Nichiren Buddhists
Category:Parsons College alumni
Category:People from Creston, Iowa
Category:Primetime Emmy Award winners
Category:20th-century American comedians
Category:21st-century American comedians