Lily Tomlin
- Actress
- Producer
- Writer
Lily Tomlin was born September 1, 1939 in Detroit, Michigan, to Lillie
Mae (Ford) and Guy Tomlin, who moved to Michigan from Paducah,
Kentucky, during the Great Depression. Her mother was a nurse's aide
and her father was a factory worker. She graduated from Cass Technical
High School in 1957, and later enrolled at Wayne State University. She
began career by doing stand-up comedy in nightclubs in Detroit and New
York City. Her first television appearance was on "The
Merv Griffin Show". She went on to have
astronomical success with several characters, notably Ernestine, a
nosy, condescending telephone operator who generally treated customers
with little sympathy and regard, on
Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In (1967). Other notable
characters are in film include Linnea Reese, a gospel-singing mother
of two deaf children who has an affair with a womanizing country singer
(played by (Keith Carradine) in
Robert Altman's
Nashville (1975), a performance for
which she was nominated for an Academy Award. Violet Newstead who joins her
on-screen coworkers (played by Jane Fonda and
Dolly Parton) in seeking revenge on their
monstrous and sexist boss, Franklin M. Hart Jr., (played by
Dabney Coleman) in the comedy
9 to 5 (1980),
The Incredible Shrinking Woman (1981),
Doreen Piggot in Robert Altman's
Short Cuts (1993),
Cher's best-friend and American compatriot
Georgie Rockwell in
Tea with Mussolini (1999),
deadpan private investigator, and existentialist Vivian Jaffe in
I Heart Huckabees (2004), and
Country-Western singer Rhonda Johnson in
Robert Altman's final film
A Prairie Home Companion (2006).
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