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Jessica Walter, who died unexpectedly Wednesday at home in New York at 80, was a wickedly smart, smartly wicked actress. Her work ran from drama to melodrama and comedy, from big, wide-screen Hollywood productions to quirky small films, through the heights and depths of television, from the middle of the mainstream to close to the edge, leading to late-career fame as a star of the dysfunctional family comedy âArrested Developmentâ and the saucy spy cartoon âArcher.â
Being versatile and open, she was rarely out of work in a six-decade career; there was a youthfulness to her person â even as she did not bother to mask her age â and an adventurousness to her choices that made Walter interesting to an audience whose parents were not born when âPlay Misty for Meâ was released in 1971.
Clint Eastwoodâs directorial debut, and a kind of precursor to âFatal Attraction,â âMistyâ threw a spotlight on Walter â already more than a decade into her career â as a woman who mistakes a one-night stand with Eastwoodâs jazz DJ for a lifetime commitment and, when he drops her, turns murderous. (âThe next scream you hear will be your own,â ran the ads.) Her all-in performance goes right to the edge but not over the top; sheâs more attractive in her psychopathic way than Eastwoodâs actual love interest, played by Donna Mills. (And than Eastwood, for that matter.) Sheâs the smoking engine of the film, and had she stopped acting the next day, we would still remember her.
Walter was casually glamorous and poised and sure of speech, an alumna of New York Cityâs High School of Performing Arts and Sanford Meisnerâs Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre. She had spine and strength; she was not formed to play wallflowers, shrinking violets, dishrags or doormats, nor was she the first person youâd cast as a happy homemaker â although she came close, in a way, as the voice of Fran Sinclair in the Henson puppet show âDinosaurs,â which ran on ABC from 1991 to 1994. (And that was satire, after all.)
Even in the 1965 single-season legal drama âFor the People,â where her role was essentially âwife of the lead,â she projects frisky intelligence, and watching her scenes with William Shatner, you half expect her to walk out on him. You were more likely to find her playing an unhappy wife sleeping with her husbandâs rival (âGrand Prixâ) or making a move on a dead husbandâs friend (in âBye Bye Braverman,â for instance, with George Segal, who died earlier this week), or as an independent ex-wife (a recurring role on âTrapper John, M.D.â).
Emmy-winning actor Jessica Walter, widely known as Lucille Bluth on the TV series âArrested Development,â has died at 80. Her career spanned decades.
If you went to the movies or watched television in the mid- to late 20th century, you knew her face: the widowâs peak, the wide-set eyes, the flaring nostrils. As she established a career in film â there was Sidney Lumetâs adaptation of Mary McCarthyâs âThe Groupâ in which she appeared alongside Candice Bergen, Joan Hackett, Elizabeth Hartman and Shirley Knight, and a supporting part in Robert Rossenâs âLilithâ as Gene Hackmanâs wife â she worked steadily in television beginning with a three-year stretch on the soap opera âLove of Life.â She was in the pilot of âFlipperâ and guest-starred on numerous cop and doctor shows that defined the era: âNaked City,â âBen Casey,â âThe Fugitive,â âThe F.B.I.,â âName of the Game,â âCannon,â âMannix, âColumbo,â âMcCloudâ and the like.
Later decades would bring visits to all sorts of series: âKnots Landingâ and âThe Love Boat,â âMurder, She Wrote,â âTouched by an Angel,â âJoanie Loves Chachi,â âCoach,â âBabylon 5â and various flavors of âLaw & Order.â There were TV movies too, including a turn as a tough con in âWomen in Chains,â with Ida Lupino, and the villainous Morgan Le Fey in a 1978 pass at âDr. Strange,â in which she declares, âYou should learn whose powers to respect,â and in spite of the risible production, there is no doubt.
In 1974, at 33, she got her own series, âAmy Prentiss,â sprung from a two-part, back-door pilot of âIronside,â in which she becomes San Franciscoâs chief of detectives. The âIronsideâ episodes won her an Emmy, but âAmy Prentissâ lasted only three episodes before NBC canceled it â prematurely, one would say, on the basis of the pilot, which may be tracked down online. Walter again stands up to the mighty wind of Shatner, now playing a police lieutenant, and lets the chauvinistic wisecracks of old male detectives roll right off her. Sheâs the boss; she doesnât have to be bossy.
Walter was a regular or recurring actor in a surprising number of other series over the years â longer-lived than âAmy Prentiss,â but not usually all that long â including as Holly Hunterâs mother on âSaving Graceâ; Cynthia Stevensonâs mother on the lovely âOh Babyâ; an alcoholic, once-famous actress on the first season of â90210â; and, paired again with Segal, as part of a separating couple whose adult child moves into their Florida retirement home in âRetired at 35.â
âArrested Developmentâ cast members Jason Bateman, Will Arnett, Tony Hale and David Cross mourned the death of Jessica Walter, who played Lucille Bluth.
She was in her early 60s when in 2003 she took on what has superseded âMistyâ as her defining role: Lucille Bluth on âArrested Development,â entitled and toxic, a psychologically abusive mother, with a quasi-incestuous relationship with her fatally dependent youngest son, like some awful figure from Greek tragedy handed a martini and turned to highly comic ends.
Walter got a lot of mileage from a pursed lip, an arched brow, a widened eye. (She could deliver a particularly alarming wink as well.) In the earlier seasons, especially, when other characters babble on compulsively, Lucille can be terse â lobbing in some well-timed irony grenade or a âWhat the hell is this?â â but sheâs always watching and listening (unless she is making a show of not paying attention). The editors often go to her for reaction shots: horror, disgust, fiendish glee. As Lucille, Walter had a way of holding her head so she often seems to be looking to the side, as if she were hiding in plain sight; she does it in âMistyâ too. (In âAmy Prentiss,â by contrast, she looks everyone straight in the eye.)
Although Walter once described herself as âreally a nice, boring person,â there must have been a spark of the imp within her. She embraced the rude, the weird, the mad. It was a short walk from Lucille Bluth to Malory Archer, the self-aggrandizing, sex-driven head of a spy ring and hostile mother of H. Jon Benjaminâs idiot secret agent in FXâs âArcher.â
Together, âArrested Developmentâ and âArcherâ positioned her within modern comedy and set the stage for her late career, including a hilariously profane turn in Julie Klausner and Billy Eichnerâs âDifficult Peopleâ and a couple of episodes of Tru TVâs âAt Home With Amy Sedarisâ as Amyâs old teacher Mrs. Brittlecrunch, who drops in to cheerily embarrass the host.
Her final appearance to date â thereâs word sheâd completed voice work on the next season of âArcherâ â was in an episode of ABCâs âAmerican Housewife,â âGetting Frank With the Ottos,â which aired in late February. As star Katy Mixonâs step-grandmother, Zooming in to a scene, she plays yet another difficult, remote mother. Itâs a short visit, but perfectly executed. âGet the [bleep] over itâ is nearly her last professionally delivered line, and one canât help but imagine that, had Walter known, sheâd approve.
The complete guide to home viewing
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