Born to play
Tennessee Williams, her harsh beauty, caustic humor and throaty tones
were unmistakable and reminiscent of a bygone era that once idolized
Tallulah Bankhead and
Marlene Dietrich. Her old-fashioned stylings were perhaps too
theatrical or indulgent to make a noticeable dent on film or TV (such
was the case of Bankhead) but perhaps Hollywood was the one who lost
out on what could have been a wonderfully flamboyant character actress.
In any event, actress Carrie Nye belonged to the stage and in return it
embraced her for four decades.
The smoky seductress was born in Mississippi with the highly
untheatrical name of Carolyn Nye McGeoy on October 14, 1936 (some
sources indicate 1937), the daughter of a banker and a housewife. She
began her adult studies at Stephens College in Columbia, Missouri, but
wound up at the Yale School of Drama, where she met the equally droll
but less acerbic wit
Dick Cavett. The couple married in 1964. It was one of
those unique, complimentary pairings, like
Mel Brooks and
Anne Bancroft, that
withstood the test of time. Cavett was not a comedian then but was actively
pursuing a legit acting career. Dick and Carrie subsequently went on to
perform together in such plays as "Charley's Aunt," "Auntie Mame," "The
Brothers Karamazov," "The Skin of Our Teeth" and "Present Laughter"
before he altered the course of his career.
Acting professionally from the age of 14, Carrie played all the
cherished Southern belle roles (Maggie in "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof"
(1958), Cherie in "Bus Stop" (1958) and Blanche (at age 23!) in "A
Streetcar Named Desire" (1959)) before making her Broadway debut in "A
Second String" (based on a novel by Colette) at the Eugene O'Neill
Theatre in 1960. From there she sank her teeth into the classics.
Notable roles included her title character in "Ondine," Celia in "As
You Like It," Lady Macduff (and later Lady Macbeth) in "Macbeth,"
Cressida in "Troilus and Cressida," Regan in "King Lear," Cleopatra in
"Antony and Cleopatra" and Cassandra in "The Trojan Women." On the
lighter side, she replaced
Betsy von Furstenberg in the popular lightweight comedy
"Mary, Mary" and played Cecily Cardew in "The Importance of Being
Earnest." In addition, she received a Tony nomination for her work in
the musical "Half a Sixpence" in 1965.
She didn't make her film debut until age 30 in
The Group (1966), then went on to
make only a handful more --
The Seduction of Joe Tynan (1979),
Creepshow (1982),
Too Scared to Scream (1984) and
Hello Again (1987). She
fared somewhat better in TV-movies, stealing the thunder from under the
Richard Burton/
Elizabeth Taylor pairing in
Divorce His - Divorce Hers (1973), and earning an Emmy nomination for
her divine imitation of Bankhead in
The Scarlett O'Hara War (1980), which only she could have
done true justice.
But for Carrie it was always the theater, particularly regional
theater, that took precedence. With a nonconcentric and powerful
grandeur, she took on a number of lofty roles over the years, including
Eleanor of Aquitaine in "The Lion in Winter," Regina in "The
Little Foxes," the title role in "Hedda Gabler" and an encore
performance of Blanche DuBois in 1973, this time at age 47. She earned
a Drama Desk nomination for "The Man Who Came to Dinner" in 1980 and
played alongside Cavett again in a 1985 production of "Nude with
Violin." Throughout it all, Carrie was an established presence at the
Williamstown Festival, appearing from the late '50s on. Such summer
productions there included "Design for Living" (1977) and "Clothes for
a Summer Hotel (1989),; she took her final curtain there in the role of
Zelda Fitzgerald. She ended her theatrical reign on a bright note in a
musical production of "Mame" (1992).
Carrie pretty much left acting by the mid 1990s. In 2003, however, she
took on a villainess role written especially for her on
Guiding Light (1952). In
1997, the couple's Long Island home (called Tick Hall) went down in
flames. They painstakingly rebuilt an exact replica of the beloved 1883
cottage, which was chronicled in the documentary "From the Ashes: The
Life and Times of Tick Hall (2003)".
A heavy smoker, Carrie died of lung cancer at age 69 in her Manhattan
home. The couple had no children.