The Daily Telegraph

Actress who found fame in the sitcom Laverne & Shirley

- Cindy Williams

CINDY WILLIAMS, the actress and producer who has died aged 75, made her name in the sitcom Happy Days before becoming one half of the duo in the spin-off Laverne & Shirley, which had a hugely successful seven-year run starting in 1976; in Britain it built a loyal following on daytime television, first ITV and then the BBC.

The wisecracki­ng pair were bottle-cappers in a Milwaukee brewery in the late 1950s and the 1960s; Cindy Williams played the straight-laced and naive Shirley Feeney, flatmate and best friend of Penny Marshall’s more worldly-wise and cynical Laverne Defazio.

The show was such a success, Cindy Williams believed, “because we played everyday people. Blue-collar workers. We had things in common with everybody. We struggled to pay the rent, the electric bill, the gas bill. We wanted to maintain the sense that the wolf was always nipping at our characters’ heels and we were just one half-step ahead.”

Cynthia Jane Williams was born into a religious family in Los Angeles on August 22 1947; her mother was a waitress, her father was an electronic­s technician. They soon moved to Dallas, returning to LA when Cindy was 10. She caught the acting bug early, as an escape from her family’s travails: “I was a kid with an alcoholic father whose parents would get in violent fights,” she recalled.

After leaving Birmingham High School she studied theatre at Los Angeles City College. She enrolled at the Actors Studio, but was rarely there as she had begun to pick up work in TV commercial­s and sitcoms.

In 1972 she landed a role as a hippie in George Cukor’s film Travels with My Aunt, loosely based on the Graham Greene novel, then earned a Bafta nomination playing the high-school sweetheart of Ron Howard’s character in George Lucas’s coming-of-age movie American Graffiti (1973).

The following year she was in Francis Ford Coppola’s surveillan­ce masterpiec­e The Conversati­on, playing a woman apparently having an affair and being bugged by Gene Hackman while having the conversati­on on which the film hangs.

Cindy Williams first met Penny Marshall on a double date, then again at Coppola’s Zoetrope studio, where they were both hired as comedy writers. Penny’s brother Garry, who was producing Happy Days, offered them roles in an episode.

Eventually appearing in five, they proved so popular that he commission­ed the spin-off. At one point in its run Laverne & Shirley was the No 1-rated show in America, and when viewing figures started to dip, the girls were relocated to Los Angeles, working in a shop.

But by the eighth series the wheels were starting to come off: Cindy Williams became pregnant and demanded time off, which annoyed the producers, while relations between her and Penny Marshall had begun to deteriorat­e, with Cindy Williams feeling that she was not being treated equably.

“There was a lot of pressure on us,” she said. “Did tempers flare? Yeah, from every direction.” She barely appeared for the rest of the series, and it limped on for the rest of the season before being cancelled after 178 episodes. (The two women were reconciled five years before Penny Marshall’s death aged 75.)

Cindy Williams’s later work included the shortlived sitcom Normal Life and the family comedy Getting By in the 1990s, as well as guest appearance­s in stalwarts of prime-time network TV like Law and Order: Special Victims Unit.

On stage she toured in plays including Grease and Deathtrap, and in 2007 she made her Broadway debut in The Drowsy Chaperone.

In her 2015 memoir Shirley, I Jest! she wrote of her strong Catholic faith. Last year she put on a one-woman show, Me, Myself and Shirley.

She married the singer and actor Bill Hudson in 1982. They divorced in 2000, and she is survived by their daughter and son.

Cindy Williams, born August 22 1947, died January 25 2023

 ?? ?? ‘The wolf was always nipping at our characters’ heels’
‘The wolf was always nipping at our characters’ heels’

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