Liz Smith | 08/15/2008 10:00 am
Lesley Ann Warren: From Cinderella to Sex Symbol to Actress With Staying Power!

Lesley Ann Warren in May 2008 © AP
“You know, I’ve been into Chinese medicine for about 20 years. And that, along with eating right and exercise, has helped me face up to aging with a certain amount of acceptance. I wanted to age with grace and, most of all, dignity. I mean, I think it’s an important message for young women now, who are rushing off to plastic surgeons when they’re still young.”
That’s Lesley Ann Warren, who began her career as the pristine “Cinderella” (the 1967 TV version) and who has come to establish herself as one of Hollywood’s finer, still alluring, character actresses.
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I met Lesley Ann a few weeks ago in New York, as her new TV series “In Plain Sight” was rocketing off to a great start on the USA network. (It has just been picked up for a second season.) She plays Jinx, the maddening, often tipsy, poignantly frustrated mother of witness protection detective Mary McCormack. The season finale airs this Sunday, with a significant emphasis on Jinx. If Lesley Ann doesn’t eventually end up with an Emmy nod, there’s no justice in TV land!
Lesley Ann is slim and pale. Her skin has an almost translucent quality. She gives off a fragile vulnerability that reminds me of Marilyn Monroe or Natalie Wood. I say this, and she is overwhelmed. “Oh, God. You just mentioned my two favorites. I can’t get over your saying that. You know, years ago, there was supposed to be a musical version of ‘Bus Stop.’ It was going to be called ‘Cherie,’ her character’s name. I went up for it, and got it, but the show never happened.”
One show that did happen was a musical version of “Gone With the Wind.” It closed before reaching Broadway, but Lesley Ann was thrilled to be interpreting a role originally played by another of her idols, Vivien Leigh. (Singing and dancing in a tightly laced corset was another matter.)
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This actress has done lots of TV. She enlivened “Will & Grace” a few seasons back, and recently came off a stint on “Desperate Housewives,” appearing as Terri Hatcher’s mom. Movie fans probably know her best from her Oscar-nominated turn in “Victor Victoria,” as the brassy Harlow-esque showgirl who loses James Garner to Julie Andrews in drag. And her quirky 1984 movie “Choose Me,” co-starring Keith Carradine and Geneviève Bujold, is beloved by many. She says of “Choose Me”: “I’m crazy about that movie, and it ushered in a new phase. I was maturing physically, and that was commented on. I feel lucky that my transition began with such a good film.”
But she started off as a Disney star in wholesome movies like “The Happiest Millionaire” and “The One and Only, Genuine, Original Family Band.” However, as the Swinging Sixties evolved, the actress feared her career would not. The Disney organization had its strictures. She laughs, remembering the studio’s consternation when she married hairdresser Jon Peters (later of Barbra Streisand fame.) “He had long hair. Well, long for that time, and you know — they wouldn’t let him into Disneyland!” (She is now married to Ronald Taft. She has a son by her wedlock with Peters.)
“Times were changing, and my image didn’t work. I didn’t necessarily want it to work. I had to leave Disney and regroup. It took a while, but I did!”
——————————
Slowly, she reestablished herself. She has perfected a specific type — been around but not used up, a bit cynical but still optimistic, smart in a dumb way, or dumb in a smart way. Wildly wacky or slightly tragic. She is always appealing and always recognizably Lesley Ann Warren. Talking again about the youth culture, she says, “After a while, if you are lucky enough to have lasted and if your work has been meaningful, you have to protect yourself. You have to be willing not to work, rather than become something you are not. When I show up onscreen, I want people to know, that’s Lesley Ann Warren, and take it from there.”
And what was it that attracted her to TV’s “In Plain Sight?” She says, “The writing, the writing, the writing! When I sat down with them, and I saw the arc of my character, what she really was; all her demons, and how she was going to be revealed, I was hooked. I had to do it!”
In last week’s episode, Jinx — a would-be actress — auditions for the lead role in a local company version of “Sweet Charity” although, as Lesley Ann says, “Jinx is about 20 years too old!” The audition scene is riveting — she is singing, plaintively, when she spots her daughter (McCormack) who has followed her into the audition, not realizing what her mother was up to. They have a contentious relationship, and Jinx does hit the bottle. She breaks off the song and flies into a desperate, humiliated rage, confronting her daughter and fleeing. It is a spectacular transition of emotions.
And by the way, her co-star, Ms. McCormack, is terrific as the policewoman — sexy, tough, conflicted and all-too-human. She joins Kyra Sedgwick and Holly Hunter as one of TV’s most complex crime-fighting women.
That’s Lesley Ann Warren, who began her career as the pristine “Cinderella” (the 1967 TV version) and who has come to establish herself as one of Hollywood’s finer, still alluring, character actresses.
——————————
I met Lesley Ann a few weeks ago in New York, as her new TV series “In Plain Sight” was rocketing off to a great start on the USA network. (It has just been picked up for a second season.) She plays Jinx, the maddening, often tipsy, poignantly frustrated mother of witness protection detective Mary McCormack. The season finale airs this Sunday, with a significant emphasis on Jinx. If Lesley Ann doesn’t eventually end up with an Emmy nod, there’s no justice in TV land!
Lesley Ann is slim and pale. Her skin has an almost translucent quality. She gives off a fragile vulnerability that reminds me of Marilyn Monroe or Natalie Wood. I say this, and she is overwhelmed. “Oh, God. You just mentioned my two favorites. I can’t get over your saying that. You know, years ago, there was supposed to be a musical version of ‘Bus Stop.’ It was going to be called ‘Cherie,’ her character’s name. I went up for it, and got it, but the show never happened.”
One show that did happen was a musical version of “Gone With the Wind.” It closed before reaching Broadway, but Lesley Ann was thrilled to be interpreting a role originally played by another of her idols, Vivien Leigh. (Singing and dancing in a tightly laced corset was another matter.)
——————————
This actress has done lots of TV. She enlivened “Will & Grace” a few seasons back, and recently came off a stint on “Desperate Housewives,” appearing as Terri Hatcher’s mom. Movie fans probably know her best from her Oscar-nominated turn in “Victor Victoria,” as the brassy Harlow-esque showgirl who loses James Garner to Julie Andrews in drag. And her quirky 1984 movie “Choose Me,” co-starring Keith Carradine and Geneviève Bujold, is beloved by many. She says of “Choose Me”: “I’m crazy about that movie, and it ushered in a new phase. I was maturing physically, and that was commented on. I feel lucky that my transition began with such a good film.”
But she started off as a Disney star in wholesome movies like “The Happiest Millionaire” and “The One and Only, Genuine, Original Family Band.” However, as the Swinging Sixties evolved, the actress feared her career would not. The Disney organization had its strictures. She laughs, remembering the studio’s consternation when she married hairdresser Jon Peters (later of Barbra Streisand fame.) “He had long hair. Well, long for that time, and you know — they wouldn’t let him into Disneyland!” (She is now married to Ronald Taft. She has a son by her wedlock with Peters.)
“Times were changing, and my image didn’t work. I didn’t necessarily want it to work. I had to leave Disney and regroup. It took a while, but I did!”
——————————
Slowly, she reestablished herself. She has perfected a specific type — been around but not used up, a bit cynical but still optimistic, smart in a dumb way, or dumb in a smart way. Wildly wacky or slightly tragic. She is always appealing and always recognizably Lesley Ann Warren. Talking again about the youth culture, she says, “After a while, if you are lucky enough to have lasted and if your work has been meaningful, you have to protect yourself. You have to be willing not to work, rather than become something you are not. When I show up onscreen, I want people to know, that’s Lesley Ann Warren, and take it from there.”
And what was it that attracted her to TV’s “In Plain Sight?” She says, “The writing, the writing, the writing! When I sat down with them, and I saw the arc of my character, what she really was; all her demons, and how she was going to be revealed, I was hooked. I had to do it!”
In last week’s episode, Jinx — a would-be actress — auditions for the lead role in a local company version of “Sweet Charity” although, as Lesley Ann says, “Jinx is about 20 years too old!” The audition scene is riveting — she is singing, plaintively, when she spots her daughter (McCormack) who has followed her into the audition, not realizing what her mother was up to. They have a contentious relationship, and Jinx does hit the bottle. She breaks off the song and flies into a desperate, humiliated rage, confronting her daughter and fleeing. It is a spectacular transition of emotions.
And by the way, her co-star, Ms. McCormack, is terrific as the policewoman — sexy, tough, conflicted and all-too-human. She joins Kyra Sedgwick and Holly Hunter as one of TV’s most complex crime-fighting women.
























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