Texarkana Gazette

Phyllis Newman, Tony Award-winning Broadway star, is dead at 86

- By Mihir Zaveri

Phyllis Newman, the Tony Award-winning Broadway star who began her acting career as a young child and, driven by her own later struggles with breast cancer, raised millions of dollars to help women in entertainm­ent deal with serious health problems, died Sunday at her home in Manhattan. She was 86.

Her death was confirmed by her daughter, Amanda Green.

Newman’s career would come to include acting, writing and directing roles in movies, television and on Broadway. Her wit drew many admirers, including talk show host Johnny Carson, who invited her to be the first woman to guest host “The Tonight Show.”

But her acting career began as a young child in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

Newman’s mother, Rachel Newman, immigrated from Lithuania and worked as a fortunetel­ler on the Atlantic City boardwalk. Her father, Sigmund Archur, came from Warsaw, Poland, and was a hypnotist.

At age 4, Newman performed in a Carmen Miranda routine at hotels, Green said.

“We were just your ordinary all-American family trying to make a buck in the summer before the ‘big war,’ ” Newman recalled in her 1988 book, “Just in Time: Notes From My Life.”

Newman got her start on Broadway as Judy Holliday’s understudy in “Bells Are Ringing.”

In 1960, she married lyricist and playwright Adolph Green, who died in 2002. She is survived by their two children: Amanda Green, 55, is a Broadway lyricist and composer, and Adam Green, 58, is a theater critic and writer.

Both children’s careers were inspired by their parents, Amanda Green said. “We saw how much fun they were having, doing what they were doing,” she said.

Newman won a Tony in 1962 for her supporting role in the musical “Subways Are for Sleeping,” which featured a book and lyrics written by her husband and his regular collaborat­or, Betty Comden.

Newman spent the entire musical in a bath towel. And in winning the Tony, she bested Barbra Streisand in her breakthrou­gh role.

She appeared in the television series “Coming of Age” and the soap opera “One Life to Live,” and was nominated for another Tony in 1987 for playing Aunt Blanche in Neil Simon’s “Broadway Bound.”

In 1995, Newman founded the Phyllis Newman Women’s Health Initiative, a program of the Actors Fund of America. She would raise millions of dollars as part of the fund, and her efforts earned her a special Tony, the Isabelle Stevenson Award, in 2009.

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