USA TODAY International Edition

Actress brought spirit to beloved ‘ Shirley’

- Andrew Dalton

Family, friends and TV fans were mourning Cindy Williams, who played Shirley opposite Penny Marshall’s Laverne on the sitcom “Laverne & Shirley,” one of the most popular shows of its time.

Williams, 75, died in Los Angeles last Wednesday after a brief illness, her children, Zak and Emily Hudson, said in a statement Monday released through family spokeswoma­n Liza Cranis.

“The passing of our kind, hilarious mother, Cindy Williams, has brought us insurmount­able sadness that could never truly be expressed,” the statement said. “Knowing and loving her has been our joy and privilege. She was one of a kind, beautiful, generous and possessed a brilliant sense of humor and a glittering spirit that everyone loved.”

Williams worked with some of Hollywood’s elite directors in a film career that preceded her full- time move to television, appearing in George Cukor’s 1972 “Travels With My Aunt,” George Lucas’ 1973 “American Graffiti” and Francis Ford Coppola’s “The Conversati­on” from 1974.

But she was by far best known for “Laverne & Shirley,” the “Happy Days” spinoff that ran on ABC from 1976 to 1983.

Williams played the straitlace­d Shirley Feeney to Marshall’s more libertine Laverne DeFazio on the show about a pair of blue- collar roommates who toiled on the assembly line of a Milwaukee brewery in the 1950s and ’ 60s.

“They were beloved characters,” Williams told The Associated Press in 2002.

DeFazio was quick- tempered and defensive; Feeney was naive and trusting. The actors drew upon their own lives for plot inspiratio­n.

“We’d make up a list at the start of each season of what talents we had,” Marshall told the AP in 2002. “Cindy could touch her tongue to her nose and we used it in the show. I did tap dance.”

Williams told the AP in 2013 that she and Marshall had “very different personalit­ies,” but tales of the two clashing during the making of the show were “a bit overblown.”

The series was the rare network hit about working- class characters, with its self- empowering opening song: “Give us any chance, we’ll take it, read us any rule, we’ll break it.”

That opening would become as popular as the show itself. Williams’ and Marshall’s chant of “schlemiel, schlimazel” as they skipped together became a cultural phenomenon and oft- invoked piece of nostalgia.

Marshall, whose brother Garry Marshall co- created the series, died in 2018.

The show also starred Michael McKean and David Lander as Laverne and Shirley’s oddball hangers- on Lenny and Squiggy. Lander died in 2020.

As ratings dropped in the sixth season, the characters moved from Milwaukee to Burbank, California, trading their brewery jobs for work at a department store.

In 1982, Williams became pregnant and wanted her working hours curtailed. When her demands weren’t met, she walked off the set and filed suit against its production company. She appeared infrequent­ly during the final season.

Williams was born one of two sisters in the Van Nuys area of Los Angeles in 1947. Her family moved to Dallas soon after she was born, but returned to Los Angeles, where she took up acting while attending Birmingham High School and majoring in theater arts at LA City College.

Her acting career began with small roles in television starting in 1969, with appearance­s on “Room 222,” “Nanny and the Professor” and ” Love, American Style.”

Her part in Lucas’ “American Graffiti” would become a defining role. The film was a forerunner to a nostalgia boom for the 1950s and early 1960s that would follow. “Happy Days,” starring her “American Graffiti” co- star Ron Howard, would premiere the following year. The characters of Laverne and Shirley made their first TV appearance as dates of Henry Winkler’s Fonzie before they got their own show.

Lucas also considered her for the role of Princess Leia in “Star Wars,” a role that went to Carrie Fisher.

In the past three decades, Williams made guest appearance­s on dozens of TV series including “7th Heaven,” “8 Simple Rules” and “Law and Order: Special Victims Unit.” In 2013, she and Marshall appeared in a “Laverne & Shirley” tribute episode of the Nickelodeo­n series “Sam and Cat.”

Last year, Williams appeared in a one- woman stage show full of stories from her career, “Me, Myself and Shirley,” at a theater in Palm Springs, California, near her home in Desert Hot Springs.

Williams was married to singer Bill Hudson of the musical group the Hudson Brothers from 1982 until 2000. Hudson was the father to her two children.

 ?? GEORGE BRICH/ AP FILE ?? “Laverne & Shirley” co- stars Penny Marshall, left, and Cindy Williams headed one of the most popular shows during its 1976- 1983 run.
GEORGE BRICH/ AP FILE “Laverne & Shirley” co- stars Penny Marshall, left, and Cindy Williams headed one of the most popular shows during its 1976- 1983 run.
 ?? AP ?? Williams also appeared on the big screen, starring in George Lucas’ “American Graffiti” and Francis Ford Coppola’s “The Conversati­on.”
AP Williams also appeared on the big screen, starring in George Lucas’ “American Graffiti” and Francis Ford Coppola’s “The Conversati­on.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States