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Penny Marshall

Highest Rated: 98% Big (1988)

Lowest Rated: 0% Getting Away With Murder (1996)

Birthday: Oct 15, 1943

Birthplace: Bronx, New York, USA

A naturally gifted comedienne, Penny Marshall transcended an early brush with fame via the TV sitcom "Laverne and Shirley" (ABC, 1976-1983) to become a successful feature film director, with such titles as "Big" (1988), "A League of Their Own" (1992) and "Riding in Cars with Boys" (2001) among her credits. She made her way into the record books by becoming the first female filmmaker to helm two movies that reached the $100 million mark at the box office. Born Carole Penny Marshall in The Bronx, NYC, on Oct. 15, 1942, Marshall's original family name was Marsciarielli, but her father - an industrial film director and television producer - changed his surname years prior to her birth, as ethnic-sounding names often did at the time. A born iconoclast - Marshall earned her parents' ire as a youth for attending movies on her own and dating boys that did not meet with their approval - she also developed a taste for performing at an early age, forming a dance group with friends that appeared on the "The Ted Mack Amateur Hour" and "The Jackie Gleason Show" (Dumont/CBS; 1952-1970). She also reportedly appeared in a TV spot for Head 'n' Shoulders shampoo opposite fellow unknown Farrah Fawcett; Marshall's offbeat looks landed her the role of the funny "plain Jane" - a characterization that would dog her for the rest of her acting career. Marshall graduated from a private girls' school and attended college at the University of New Mexico, where she became pregnant by a schoolmate, Michael Henry - their daughter, Tracy Reiner, who took her surname from stepfather Rob Reiner, later appeared in Marshall's "Big" and "A League of Their Own" as well as "When Harry Met Sally" (1989) and "Apollo 13" (1995). The couple married in 1961, but was divorced two years later. Perhaps due to her personal tumult at the time, Marshall, who had been studying math and psychology, did not complete her schooling. To make ends meet, Marshall worked as a secretary and landed a tiny role in the biker exploitation feature "The Savage Seven" (1968). Her big break came that same year courtesy of her older brother Garry Marshall, who was rising through the ranks of television sitcom writers, and who cast her in the James Garner-Debbie Reynolds comedy "How Sweet It Is!" (1968), which also marked her brother's debut as a feature film producer. Garry also cast her in his next film, a counterculture comedy-drama called "The Grasshopper" (1970), and hired her to play Myrna, secretary to Oscar Madison (Jack Klugman) on his hit comedy series "The Odd Couple" (ABC, 1970-75). In 1971, she married fellow actor Rob Reiner - and was ironically one of the finalists for the role of Gloria Stivic opposite Reiner on "All in the Family (CBS, 1971-79) - and guested on several comic series, including "The Bob Newhart Show" (CBS, 1972-78) and as Mary's neighbor Paula on "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" (CBS, 1970-77), in addition to her duties on "The Odd Couple." Marshall also began trying her hand at writing scripts with actress Cindy Williams, who was fresh from her success in George Lucas' nostalgic comedy "American Graffiti" (1972). Garry Marshall approached the duo to guest star on his new comedy series, "Happy Days" (ABC, 1974-1984), as Laverne DeFazio and Shirley Feeney - two "fast girls" who would double date Fonzie (Henry Winkler) and Richie Cunningham (Ron Howard). The pair's natural comic timing was a hit with audiences, so not surprisingly, in 1976, a TV series was developed for the duo. "Laverne and Shirley" was a substantial hit right out of the gate. Set in the late 1950s, it imagined Marshall and Williams as lifelong friends living in Milwaukee and working at a local brewery. Though the pair were the stars of the show, audiences responded strongly to Laverne's father Frank (Phil Foster), their landlady Edna Babish (Betty Garrett), and in particular, to their miscreant neighbors Lenny and Squiggy (LA improv comic vets Michael McKean and David L. Lander). "Laverne and Shirley" was a Top Ten series for its first four seasons, and ended its third and fourth seasons at #1. Like "Happy Days," it also spawned a wealth of merchandise, including dolls, board games, and even a 1976 record featuring Marshall and Williams as their characters. Marshall frequently appeared as Laverne on other series produced by her brother, including the pilot for "Mork and Mindy" (ABC, 1978-1982), and lent her voice to an animated Laverne in the grim "Laverne and Shirley in the Army" (ABC, 1981-82. Both actresses were nominated for Golden Globes in 1978, with Marshall earning two more in 1979 and 1980. Despite this success, it became evident to Williams that Marshall was getting the lion's share of the laughs, while she was stuck in a tepid semi-romantic storyline with Eddie Mekka's Carmine "The Big Ragu" Ragusa. Williams walked off the set of the series in 1976, and draconian measures were instated to make sure that both actresses were receiving equal due in scripts. The rumored rancor between the two leads was so serious, that it led to the duration of each actress's lines being literally timed with stopwatches. Marshall herself suffered miserably due to the tension, and developed recurring and severe anxiety attacks due to the notion that she had achieved her fame entirely through her connection to her producer brother. To make matters worse, she and Reiner were undergoing a painful and protracted divorce, which was eventually granted in 1981. Meanwhile, Williams became pregnant with her first child, but the show's producers refused to write this development into the script. Williams quit the show in 1982, and the series -which had already suffered a ratings decline after producers moved its location to Burbank, CA - limped along with Marshall until 1983, when it was cancelled. And not a moment too soon for Marshall, who was adamantly opposed to being typecast as the L-sweater sporting wiseacre for the rest of her career. Marshall decided to focus her post-"Laverne" career behind the camera. She had directed four episodes of the series between 1979 and 1981, and found it to her liking. She got her first opportunity to direct a feature when she replaced Howard Zieff on the Whoopi Goldberg comedy "Jumpin' Jack Flash" (1986). Though the film tanked at the box office, it gave her the confidence to branch out with her own project. So in 1989, she teamed up with the then-not-quite-A-lister Tom Hanks on the charming fantasy "Big," about a young boy who wishes to become an adult - and does, without losing his adolescent attitude and interests. A box office smash, "Big" was the first feature by a woman director to break the $100 million mark in ticket sales, establishing Marshall as a major director in Hollywood seemingly overnight. Her next picture, "Awakenings" (1990), did not surface for two years due to 20th Century Fox, which wanted Marshall's friend Robin Williams and Robert De Niro for the lead roles of real life scientist Oliver Sacks and a comatose patient who revives after the drug L-dopamine is administered. A bittersweet drama with terrific performances by all involved, this film was also a success, even earning three Academy Award nominations, including one for Best Picture. Two years later, Marshall surpassed herself upon the release of "A League of Their Own" (1992), a funny and emotional film based on the women's baseball leagues that sprung up during World War II. Well acted by Geena Davis and Tom Hanks, and featuring scene-stealing performances by Marshall's friend Rosie O'Donnell and Lori Petty, the film fared moderately well, but developed a devoted fan base from both genders on home video and DVD. Marshall's subsequent films would receive mixed reviews and responses from audiences and critics. 1994's "Renaissance Man," with Danny Devito and Mark Wahlberg, fizzled without a trace, but "The Preacher's Wife" (1996), a remake of "The Bishop's Wife" with Denzel Washington and Whitney Houston, fared slightly better. She next helmed "Riding in Cars with Boys" (2001), a somewhat sad drama about a young mother's difficult life, which was marketed as a comedy; thus failing to connect with an audience, despite the presence of Drew Barrymore in the lead. Marshall's turns as producer followed a similar path; she scored as a producer of friend Ron Howard's "Cinderella Man" (2005), but fell flat with a big-screen version of "Bewitched" (2005). Marshall made sporadic appearances in films and television during this period, including cameos as herself in "Get Shorty" (1995) and friend Albert Brooks' "Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World" (2005). She and Williams also patched up their relationship together after over a decade's estrangement, and began making appearances together on television specials about "Laverne and Shirley;" even earning their stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at the same time. In 2007, it was announced that both would appear in a "loosely scripted" reality series in which both would live together, a la Laverne and Shirley, in Marshall's house, but the project never got off the ground. Marshall appeared in two of her brother's later films, "New Year's Eve" (2011) and "Mother's Day" (2016), as well as a cameo as herself in the comedy "Coming To America" (2014) and directed a handful of episodes of TV sitcoms, but as she entered her 70s, her workload slowed in part due to increasing health problems. Penny Marshall died at her home in Hollywood on December 17, 2018, of complications from diabetes. She was 75.

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Highest-Rated Movies

98% 82% Big Watchlist
89% 70% Get Shorty
Watchlist
82% 84% A League of Their Own Watchlist 81% 89% Awakenings Watchlist
75% 53% The Hard Way
Watchlist
62% 41% The Preacher's Wife Watchlist
50% 42% With Friends Like These...
Watchlist
49% 66% Riding in Cars With Boys
Watchlist
44% 27% Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World
Watchlist
33% 58% Jumpin' Jack Flash
Watchlist

Filmography

Movies TV Shows
Mother's Day 8% 44% 2016 Opening Mom Narrator Voice Going to America 98% 2014 Self New Year's Eve 7% 45% 2011 Self Everybody Wants to Be Italian 9% 34% 2007 Teresa Actor Alice, Upside Down 50% 2007 Mrs. Plotkin Actor Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World 44% 27% 2005 Penny Marshall Actor Bewitched 23% 28% 2005 Producer Stateside 24% 60% 2004 Lt. Chevetone Actor Riding in Cars With Boys 49% 66% 2001 Director Jackie's Back! 87% 1999 Self Special Delivery 1999 Actor With Friends Like These... 50% 42% 1998 Producer The Preacher's Wife 62% 41% 1996 Director Getting Away With Murder 0% 20% 1996 Producer Get Shorty 89% 70% 1995 Self Renaissance Man 12% 53% 1994 Director Calendar Girl 11% 31% 1993 Executive Producer A League of Their Own 82% 84% 1992 Director, Executive Producer The Hard Way 75% 53% 1991 Angie Actor Awakenings 81% 89% 1990 Director, Executive Producer Big 98% 82% 1988 Director Jumpin' Jack Flash 33% 58% 1986 Director Challenge of a Lifetime 1985 Nora Schoonover Actor Triable 1985 Nora Schoonover Actor Love Thy Neighbor 1984 Linda Wilson Actor
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