The Scotsman

Carole Shelley

English actress in The Odd Couple who made the New York stage her home

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Carole Augusta Shelley, actress. Born: 16 August 1939 in London. Died: 31 August 2018 in Manhattan, New York, aged 79.

Carole Shelley, who played one of the bubbly Pigeon sisters in the stage, screen and television versions of Neil Simon’s The Odd Couple and won a Tony Award in 1979 for portraying a woman who develops an emotional connection to the disfigured title character in The Elephant Man, has died of cancer in Manhattan. She was 79.

Shelley, who was born in London and began her theatre career there, strove to convey complexity, even in characters who might appear shallow.

“I play light comedy with the same intensity I’d give to Lady Macbeth,” she told The New York Times in 1979. “The energy is the same, the truth is the same.”

Shelley, who also originated the role of Madame Morrible in the long-running Broadway musical Wicked, first appeared on Broadway in 1965 in the original production of The Odd Couple. She played Gwendolyn Pigeon, one of two giggly, single English sisters who live upstairs from the apartment shared by the slovenly Oscar (played by Walter Matthau) and finicky Felix (Art Carney). Monica Evans played her sister, Cecily.

Shelley and Evans played the same parts in the 1968 film adaptation of The Odd Couple, with Jack Lemmon as Felix and Matthau as Oscar; and early episodes of the television version, which started in 1970 and starred Tony Randall as Felix and Jack Klugman as Oscar.

The Pigeon sisters (who share their given names with characters in the Oscar Wilde play The Importance of Being Earnest) inject a delightful kookiness into the slob-neat dynamic of Oscar and Felix. In the play, when Felix meets the sisters, he describes his occupation: “I write the news for CBS.” Gwendolyn asks innocently, “Where do you get your ideas from?”

After The Odd Couple ended its Broadway run in 1967, Shelley appeared on Broadway in comedies like Alan Ayckbourn’s Absurd Person Singular and the revue Nöel Coward’s Sweet Potato. But by the mid-1970s she wanted to test herself as a dramatic actor.

“I felt I was not being used fully,” she told The Times in 1979. “In fact, not only wasn’t I plumbing my own depths, I didn’t even know if I had any real depths to plumb.”

She played Rosalind in As You Like It and Regan in King Lear at the Stratford Festival in Ontario, an experience she called “months of the most intensive deep-water swimming – more than I’d ever been called upon to do in my life. The clown was finally allowed to play Hamlet, so to speak”.

The Elephant Man, which opened on Broadway in 1979, gave Shelley her dramatic breakthrou­gh, as Madge Kendal.

The play, by Bernard Pomerance tells the story of a severely disfigured man who is taken from a freak show to a hospital in Victorian London by a wellmeanin­g doctor. It is based on the life of Joseph Merrick (though the character in the play is named John).

Kendal, an actor, is hired by the doctor (played by Kevin Conway) to spend time with Merrick (Philip Anglim) after a nurse flees and orderlies gawk at his appearance. At first she can barely stifle her disgust, but in time she recognizes Merrick’s humanity and develops an affection for him.

In one poignant moment she shakes Merrick’s hand, a movement Shelley said she adlibbed; in another she strips to the waist before him, a scene of surprising intimacy.

Shelley said she adored the role.

“So much of what I’ve been working toward in the past few years – the effort to achieve stillness, spareness, clarity in my acting – seems to have come together in Mrs Kendal,” she said.

Shelley’s performanc­e won her the Tony for best leading actress in a play.

A new generation of theatregoe­rs knew Shelley for originatin­g a less sympatheti­c character in the musical Wicked, a prequel of sorts to L. Frank Baum’s novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.

The show opened in 2003 with Kristin Chenoweth as Glinda, the putatively good witch, and Idina Menzel as Elphaba, who becomes the Wicked Witch of the West. (Wicked was still running on Broadway, with a different cast, when Shelley died.)

Shelley played Madame Morrible, a college official who pairs Glinda and Elphaba as roommates. She later helps arrange a series of events, including the killing of Elphaba’s sister, that push Elphaba toward wickedness.

Carole Augusta Shelley was born in London on August 16, 1939. Her father, Curtis, was a German Jewish composer who immigrated to England before the Second World War. Her mother, Deborah (Bloomstein) Shelley, was an English opera singer of Russian Jewish heritage.

Carole acted as a child and dreamed of being a dancer. She studied ballet, but her dancing career ended when she was a teenager after she broke her foot.

She attended Regent Street Polytechni­c (now the University of Westminste­r), where she studied theatre design and millinery.

At 18, she began working in the London theatre, appearing in several production­s before being cast in The Odd Couple. She moved to New York City in 1964 to appear in that show and never again lived in London.

In 1967, she married Albert Woods, the maître d’hôtel at Jim Downey’s Steakhouse, an old theatre-district haunt. They remained married until his death in 1971. She leaves no immediate survivors.

Shelley’s other Broadway credits included The Norman Conquests and Billy Elliot: the Musical.

She had a well-reviewed turn opposite Nathan Lane in the touring production of another Neil Simon play, Broadway Bound, beginning in 1987.

In addition to The Odd Couple, she was seen on television in shows like Frasier and The Cosby Show, and in films.

She voiced characters in the Disney animated movies The Aristocats (1970) and Robin Hood (1973), both of which also featured her Odd Couple compatriot, Evans.

DANIEL E. SLOTNIK The Scotsman welcomes obituaries and appreciati­ons from contributo­rs as well as suggestion­s of possible obituary subjects.

Please contact: Gazette Editor

The Scotsman, Level 7, Orchard Brae House, 30 Queensferr­y Road, Edinburgh EH4 2HS;

gazette@scotsman.com

“I play light comedy with the same intensity I’d give to Lady Macbeth. The energy is the same, the truth is the same.”

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