Houston Chronicle

Theater world knew Charlotte Rae was much more than Mrs. G

- By Craig Nakano

Charlotte Rae, “The Facts of Life” star who died Sunday at 92, may be inexorably linked to the muffin-baking, wisdomimpa­rting housemothe­r she played on TV, but the actress did find a place where she finally could shake that typecastin­g: theater.

Rae was, after all, a Northweste­rn theater school alum who had earned two Tony nomination­s long before she became Mrs. Garrett on TV. The actress scored her first Tony nod in 1966 for featured actress in the musical “Pickwick” and another in 1969 for lead actress in the play “Morning, Noon and Night.”

And it was in the theater where the actress broke out of her sitcom box, defying audiences’ expectatio­ns for decades after she left Mrs. G behind.

In 1990, writing about the pairing of Edward Albee’s “The Sandbox” and Samuel Beckett’s “Happy Days” at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles, the Los Angeles Times’ Sylvie Drake noted how the audience first treated Rae’s presence in the latter as something of a joke or stunt, only to be stunned by the gut-punch of her performanc­e.

“Because of her associatio­n with TV sitcom, casting Rae in the role was risky, but it was a brilliant stroke,” Drake wrote. “Yes, there were isolated pockets of people at Friday’s performanc­e who still thought that anything that came out of Rae’s mouth had to be just plain hilarious, but fewer and fewer as the play progressed.

“The hush that fell on the house in the second half, when all that is left of (Rae’s) Winnie is her head, above the sand — her frightened eyes, her endless cantations of words, her unfathomab­le dignity — was no accident. Rae had earned it. Bravely.”

Nine years later, as co-host of L.A. Weekly’s annual theater awards, Rae found another way to surprise a crowd. The Times’ Don Shirley noted how performanc­e artist Karen Finley, one of the NEA Four, was a no-show at the event — a fact Rae boisterous­ly announced to the audience with a fourletter salute to Finley.

Then in 2002, Shirley reviewed the album “Kurt Weill: The Centennial,“which opens with Rae singing “Pirate Jenny.”

“Those who know of Rae only from the sitcom ‘The Facts of Life’ may groan,” Shirley wrote. “But in fact Rae was in the famous 1954 production of Weill’s ‘The Threepenny Opera’ off-Broadway. And her Pirate Jenny sounds remarkably, effectivel­y raw.”

Most recently, in 2016, Rae returned to the absurd world of Beckett. She played Nagg opposite James Greene as Nell, two legless parents occupying garbage cans onstage in “Endgame” at Center Theatre Group’s Kirk Douglas Theatre in Culver City. Times critic Charles McNulty found the actors “as touching as they are hilarious.”

It proved to be Rae’s last performanc­e.

 ?? Dennis Van Tine / TNS ?? Charlotte Rae attained stardom as Mrs. Garrett on “The Facts of Life” TV show, but theater fans know the real scope of her work onstage.
Dennis Van Tine / TNS Charlotte Rae attained stardom as Mrs. Garrett on “The Facts of Life” TV show, but theater fans know the real scope of her work onstage.

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