Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Lynne Thigpen

Encyclopedia : L : LY : LYN : Lynne Thigpen


Lynne Thigpen
Enlarge
Lynne Thigpen

Lynne Thigpen (December 22, 1948March 12, 2003) was an American actress.

She was born Cherlynne Theresa Thigpen in Joliet, Illinois, and obtained a degree in teaching. She taught high school English briefly in Joliet, while studying theatre and dance at the University of Illinois, then, in 1971, moved to New York City where she began a prolific theater career, appearing initially in musicals such as Godspell, The Night that Made America Famous, The Magic Show, Working, and Tintypes. Her first film was Godspell in 1973.

While her later work emphasized acting over singing, her intriguing dusky voice made its way to over 20 socially relevant books on tape.

Thigpen may be best known for her role in the children’s geography TV show Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?. In the series, she played the role of "The Chief" of the ACME Detective Agency, a role that involved both education and comedy, and, on occasion, musical performance. Frequently seen on television dramas, her last film role was Anger Management, released April 11, 2003.

Death

She was found unconscious at her home in Marina del Rey, California, by a friend and died of cerebral hemorrhage. She had been complaining of headaches for several days. She was 54. Drugs and foul play were ruled out by the coroner's autopsy, which found "acute cardiac dysfunction, non-traumatic systemic and spontaneous intraventricular hemorrhage and hemorrhage in the brain" as well as an enlarged heart.

At the time of her death, she was appearing in the CBS television series The District with Craig T. Nelson, in which she played feisty Ella Farmer. Farmer claimed to be not a survivor but an overcomer, succeeding in getting promoted several steps from a lowly clerical job to a powerful administrator, adopting an orphaned nephew, and beating recurrent bouts of cancer. When Thigpen died, the show had a funeral for Farmer as well, but the show itself was said to have jumped the shark#redirect , and was cancelled following 2003-2004 season. The series survives in reruns on the USA Network.

According to Tara Mooney ('Shadow'), interviewed by Ray D'Arcy on Ireland's Today FM in 2005, Thigpen's untimely death also led to the three-year hiatus of Bear in the Big Blue House, a film version of which had been planned. After Thigpen's death, she said, "their hearts just weren't in it anymore."

Friends have established a [non-profit foundation] in her name to help young actresses and actors learn how to survive and succeed in New York Theater, to mentor the next generation of Broadway stars.

An elementary school in Joliet, Illinois is named for her.[link]

Credits

Stage

Radio

Screen

Television

Software

Voice

Awards (nominations)

Los Angeles Drama Critics award Obie Award Tony Award NAACP Image Awards AudioFile Awards Daytime Emmy Awards

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: