This article is about the actress. Shelley Winters is also a character in the webcomic Scary Go Round.
Shelley Winters (August 18, 1920 – January 14, 2006) was a two-time Academy Award-winning American actress.
She studied in the Hollywood Studio Club, sharing the same bedroom with another beginner: Marilyn Monroe. As the New York Times obituary noted, "A major movie presence for more than five decades, Shelley Winters turned herself into a widely respected actress who won two Oscars." Winters originally broke into Hollywood as "the Blonde Bombshell," but quickly tired of the role's limitations. She washed off her makeup and played against type to set up Elizabeth Taylor's beauty in A Place in the Sun, still a landmark American film.
As the Associated Press reported, the general public was unaware of how serious a craftswoman Winters was. "Although she was in demand as a character actress, Winters continued to study her craft. She attended Charles Laughton's Shakespeare classes and worked at the Actors Studio, both as student and teacher."
Her first movie was What a Woman! (1943). In 1959, she won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for The Diary of Anne Frank and another for A Patch of Blue (1965). Notable later roles included her turn as the once gorgeous, alcoholic former starlet "Fay Estabrook" in Harper (1966) and in The Poseidon Adventure (1972) as the ill-fated "Mrs. Emmanuel Rosen", for which she received her final Oscar nomination. (She later reunited with her Poseidon costar, Jack Albertson in a number of episodes of Albertson's sitcom Chico and the Man during the mid-1970s.)
Always conscious of her Jewish heritage-- she had first learned her trade in the Borscht Belt-- she donated her Oscar for Anne Frank to the Anne Frank Museum in Amsterdam.
As the Associated Press reported, "During her 50 years as a widely known personality, Winters was rarely out of the news. Her stormy marriages, her romances with famous stars, her forays into politics and feminist causes kept her name before the public. She delighted in giving provocative interviews and seemed to have an opinion on everything."
That led to a second career as a writer. Though not an overwhelming beauty, her acting, wit, and "chutzpah" gave her a love life to rival Monroe's. In late life, she recalled her conquests in autobiographies so popular they undermined her reputation as a serious actor. She wrote of a yearly rendezvous she kept with William Holden, as well as her affairs with Burt Lancaster and Marlon Brando.
Winters suffered an enormous weight gain later in life, frequently stating that it was a marketing tool, since there were plenty of prominent normal-weight older actresses but fewer overweight ones, and her obesity would enable her to find work more easily. Although few believed this explanation, she was seldom if ever out of work throughout most of her career.
She was married four times. Her husbands were:
Shortly before her death, Winters married long-time companion Gerry DeFord, with whom she had lived for nineteen years. Though Winters' daughter objected to the marriage, the actress Sally Kirkland, an ordained minister, performed a legal wedding ceremony for the two at Winters' deathbed. Non-denominational last rites for Winters were performed by Kirkland, a minister of the Movement of Spiritual Inner Awareness.
Audiences born in the 1980's knew her primarily for the autobiographies and for her television work, in which she played a humorous parody of her public persona. In a recurring role in the early 1990s, Winters played the title character's grandmother on the top-rated ABC sitcom Roseanne, which had the bizarre effect of making her play Estelle Parsons' (who played Roseanne's lesbian mother) mother, although Parsons was only 7 years younger, and looked about the same age as Winters.
She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1750 Vine Street.
She was inducted into the St. Louis Walk of Fame in 1992.
1920 births | 2006 deaths | Best Actress Academy Award nominees | Best Supporting Actress Oscar | Best Supporting Actress Academy Award nominees | Hollywood Walk of Fame | American film actors | Jewish American actors | Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute alumni | Batman actors | People from Illinois | People who use their mother's surname | Entertainers who died in their 80s | St. Louis Walk of Fame | Deaths from cardiovascular disease
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