Lucille Benson was a plump, distinctive, and marvelously quirky
character actress with a heavy down-home Southern accent who portrayed
an offbeat and enjoyable array of colorful supporting dotty old lady
roles in both films and TV shows alike. Benson was born on July 17,
1914 in Scottsboro, Alabama. She was adopted and raised by her aunt
after her mother died of tuberculosis. Lucille graduated from Jackson
County High School, where she was valedictorian and president of her
class. Benson attended both Huntingdon College in Montgomery and
Northwestern's School of Drama in Evanston, Illinois. She worked
briefly as a teacher prior to moving to New York to pursue an acting
career in the 1930's. Lucille appeared in the Broadway plays "The
Doughgirls," "The Day Before Spring," "Happy Birthday," "As the Girls
Go," "Hotel Paradiso," "Period of Adjustment," and "Walking Happy."
Benson acted in the
Tennessee Williams play "Orpheus Descending" at the
Coconut Grove Playhouse in Miami, Florida and co-starred alongside
Donald O'Connor in a three month Las Vegas stage production of "Little
Me." She made her film debut in the 1959 feature
The Fugitive Kind (1960).
Lucille was memorably funny and spirited as the flaky lady at the
Snakerama in
Steven Spielberg's terrific made-for-TV thriller classic
Duel (1971) She later parodied this particular part in the hilariously
raucous
1941 (1979). Benson gave a splendidly creepy and delightful
performance as wacky fleabag hotel owner Aunt Martha in
Paul Bartel's
deliciously perverse horror exploitation oddity
Private Parts (1972). Other
noteworthy film roles include tough lifer prison inmate Billie in
Women in Chains (1972), Billy Pilgrim's mother in
Slaughterhouse-Five (1972), the
eccentric Janet Poole in
The Devil's Daughter (1973), stern, but friendly
whorehouse madam Peg in
Concrete Cowboys (1979), and the doddery Ms.
Elrod in
Halloween II (1981). Lucille had a recurring role as hotel manager
Lilly Sinclair in the sitcom
Bosom Buddies (1980). Among the TV shows Benson
made guest appearances on are
Alice (1976),
Simon & Simon (1981),
The Love Boat (1977),
The Dukes of Hazzard (1979),
Little House on the Prairie (1974),
Eight Is Enough (1977),
The Waltons (1972),
Wonder Woman (1975),
Cannon (1971), and
Bonanza (1959). She
also acted in TV commercials. Lucille Benson died at age 69 from liver
cancer on February 17, 1984.