Renowned and highly respected actress Sada Thompson has earned critical
acclaim both on stage and TV for her noble, strong-minded matrons, but
her more challenging and compelling work has come when her characters
have displayed darker, more neurotic tones.
Born in Des Moines, Iowa, she was the eldest of
three children of magazine editor Hugh Woodruff Thompson and his wife
Corlyss Gibson. After a family move to New Jersey, Sada developed an
interest in acting, performing in school plays. She subsequently
studied drama at the Carnegie Institute of Technology.
Upon graduating in 1949, she began to build up her resume in regional
stock and with repertory companies appearing in such productions as
"Hay Fever", "The Little Foxes", "Born Yesterday", "The Clandestine
Marriage" and "The Cocktail Party". Making her off-Broadway debut in
1955 with the first concert reading of
Dylan Thomas' "Under Milk Wood",
Sada won a 1957 Drama Desk award for her work in both The Misanthrope"
and "The River Line" and, thereafter, started leaning heavily toward
the classics -- "Much Ado About Nothing," "Othello," "The Merry Wives
of Windsor," "Twelfth Night," "The Tempest" and "Richard II" to name a
few. The 1970s began exceptionally well, hitting her zenith with
complex, transcending performances in both "The Effect of Gamma Rays on
Man-in-the Moon Marigolds" (earning both Drama Desk and Obie awards)
and "Twigs," in which she captured the Tony (as well as Drama Desk,
Obie and Sarah Siddons awards) in which she played four roles--three
sisters and their elderly mother.
This renewed attention for Sada finally lent itself to film and TV
work. The dark-haired, somewhat plump-figured woman with classy but
slightly offbeat features was not deemed marketable for film. So,
despite adding distinctive support to the dramas
Desperate Characters (1971)
and
The Pursuit of Happiness (1971),
it was television that would garner her the attention she longed for
and deserved. She won her first Emmy nomination playing Mary Todd
Lincoln in
Lincoln (1974) opposite
Hal Holbrook's Honest Abe. The following
year, she earned another nomination as
Jack Lemmon's put-upon wife in
The Entertainer (1975),
a TV remake of the 1960 British film. The Emmy would finally come to
her for her sensible mother role in the touching dramatic series
Family (1976). As the proper,
intelligent, slightly remote Kate Lawrence," mother of three, Sada
became a TV symbol of strength, courage and integrity during the show's
four seasons. She went on to receive two more Emmy nominations as
Rhea Perlman's mother on
Cheers (1982) and as accused
California schoolteacher Virginia McMartin, on trial for sexual abuse,
in the mini-movie
Indictment: The McMartin Trial (1995).
The quality of her performance along with those of fellow actors
James Woods,
Shirley Knight and
Henry Thomas (of E.T. fame), lent
an air of distinction to the obvious tabloid-driven material.
In addition to other socially-relevant mini-movies, Sada occasionally
returned to her beloved theater roots. She won a second Sarah Siddons
award for the title role in "Driving Miss Daisy" (1989), and enjoyed a
return to Broadway after nearly 20 years with "Any Given Day" in 1993.
Elsewhere, her warm, soothing voice has been used frequently in
documentary narratives and books-on-tape. Ms. Thompson, who lived in
Connecticut with long-time husband (since 1949) Donald Stewart, had one
daughter,
Liza Stewart, a costume designer.
She died in a Danbury hospital of lung disease on May 4, 2011, at age
83.