Patti LuPone

Patti Ann LuPone (born April 21, 1949) is an American actress and singer best known for her work in stage musicals. She has won two Tony Awards, two Olivier Awards, two Grammy Awards, and was a 2006 inductee to the American Theater Hall of Fame.[1][2]

Patti LuPone
Patti LuPone (2014)
Born (1949-04-21) April 21, 1949
EducationJuilliard School (BFA)
OccupationActress, singer
Years active1970–present
Spouse(s)
Matthew Johnston
(m. 1988)
Children1
RelativesRobert LuPone (brother)
Adelina Patti (great-great aunt)
Websitepattilupone.net

LuPone began her professional career with The Acting Company in 1972 and made her Broadway debut in Three Sisters in 1973. She received the first of seven Tony Award nominations for the 1975 musical The Robber Bridegroom. She won the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical for her role as Eva Perón in the 1979 original Broadway production of Andrew Lloyd Webber's Evita. She played Fantine in the original London cast of Les Misérables and Moll in The Cradle Will Rock, winning the 1985 Olivier Award for Best Actress in a Musical for her work in both. She won a second Tony Award for her role as Rose in the 2008 Broadway revival of Gypsy and a second Olivier Award in 2019, winning Best Supporting Actress in a Musical for her role as Joanne in the West End revival of Stephen Sondheim's Company. She has two Grammy Awards for the recording of the 2007 Los Angeles Opera production of Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny.

Other stage musical performances include her Tony-nominated role as Reno Sweeney in the 1987 Broadway revival of Anything Goes, her Olivier-nominated role as Norma Desmond in the 1993 original production of Sunset Boulevard in London, her Tony-nominated role as Mrs. Lovett in the new 2005 Broadway production of Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, her Tony-nominated role as Lucia in the 2010 original Broadway production of Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown, and her Tony-nominated role as Helena Rubenstein in the 2017 original Broadway production of War Paint. She is currently starring in the 2021 Broadway transfer of the successful West End revival of Company alongside Katrina Lenk.[3]

On television, she starred in the drama series Life Goes On (1989–1993) and received Emmy Award nominations for the TV movie The Song Spinner (1995) and her guest role in the sitcom Frasier (1998). She also had appeared in three Ryan Murphy series, American Horror Story: Coven (2013–2014), and Pose (2019) both on FX, and Hollywood (2020) on Netflix.[4] She guest starred in Penny Dreadful (2014–2016) before returning in a lead role. She voiced the character Yellow Diamond in the animated series Steven Universe (2013–2019) and Steven Universe Future (2019–2020). She also appeared on The CW comedy Crazy Ex-Girlfriend as Rabbi Shari (2017). Her film appearances include Steven Spielberg's 1941 (1979), Spike Lee's Summer of Sam (1999), Peter Weir's Witness (1985), as well as Driving Miss Daisy (1989), State and Main (2000), and The Comedian (2016). She is the featured 200th episode guest on The Theatre Podcast with Alan Seales (2022).

Early life and training

LuPone was born on April 21, 1949, in Northport, New York, on Long Island, the daughter of Angela Louise (née Patti), a library administrator at the C.W. Post Campus of Long Island University, and Orlando Joseph LuPone, a school administrator and English teacher at Walt Whitman High School in Huntington, Long Island. Her great-great aunt was 19th-century opera singer Adelina Patti.[5] Her older brother Robert LuPone is a Tony-nominated actor, dancer, and director who originated the role of Zach, the director, in A Chorus Line[6]. LuPone is Italian-American and Roman Catholic.[7]

LuPone was part of the first graduating class of Juilliard's Drama Division (1968–1972: Group 1),[8] which also included actors Kevin Kline and David Ogden Stiers.[9] She graduated from Juilliard in 1972 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree.[10] LuPone has a mezzo-soprano vocal range,[11][12][13] and she is known for her strong/high "Broadway" belt singing voice. In a 2008 interview, she maintained that she was "an actor who sings", and thankful she "had a voice".[14]

Career

1970s: Early career

In 1972, LuPone became one of the original members of The Acting Company, formed by John Houseman.[15] The Acting Company is a nationally touring repertory theater company.[16] LuPone's stint with the company lasted from 1972 to 1976, and she appeared in many of their productions, such as The Cradle Will Rock, The School for Scandal, Women Beware Women, The Beggar’s Opera, The Time of Your Life, The Lower Depths, The Hostage, Next Time I’ll Sing to You, Measure for Measure, Scapin, Edward II, The Orchestra, Love’s Labours Lost, Arms and the Man, and The Way of the World. She made her Broadway debut in the play The Three Sisters as Irina in 1973.[17] For her work in The Robber Bridegroom (1975) she received her first Tony Award nomination, for Best Featured Actress in a Musical.[18] The Acting Company honored LuPone on March 12, 2012, in an event called "Patti's Turn" at the Kaye Playhouse.[19]

In 1976, theater producer David Merrick hired LuPone as a replacement to play Genevieve, the title role of the troubled pre-Broadway production of The Baker's Wife. The production toured at length but Merrick deemed it unworthy of Broadway and it closed out of town.[20]

Since 1977, LuPone has frequently collaborated with David Mamet, appearing in his plays The Woods, All Men Are Whores, The Blue Hour, The Water Engine (1978),[21] Edmond and The Old Neighborhood (1997).[22] The New York Times reviewer wrote of LuPone in The Old Neighborhood, "Those who know Ms. LuPone only as a musical comedy star will be stunned by the naturalistic fire she delivers here. As Jolly, a part inspired by Mr. Mamet's real-life sister and his realized female character, Ms. LuPone finds conflicting layers of past and present selves in practically every line. She emerges as both loving matriarch and wounded adolescent, sentimental and devastatingly clear-eyed."[23] In 1978, she appeared in the Broadway musical adaptation of Studs Terkel's Working, which ran for only 24 performances.[24]

In 1979, LuPone starred in the original Broadway production of Evita, the musical based on the life of Eva Perón, composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice, and directed by Harold Prince.[25] Although LuPone was hailed by critics, she has since said that her time in Evita was not an enjoyable one. In a 2007 interview, she stated "Evita was the worst experience of my life," she said. "I was screaming my way through a part that could only have been written by a man who hates women. And I had no support from the producers, who wanted a star performance onstage but treated me as an unknown backstage. It was like Beirut, and I fought like a banshee."[26] Despite the trouble, LuPone won her first Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical.[27] It was not until she had reprised the role in a production in Sydney when she had finally enjoyed the part and felt comfortable singing the score.[28] LuPone and her co-star, Mandy Patinkin, remained close friends both on and off the stage.

1980s

In May 1983, founding alumni of The Acting Company reunited for an off-Broadway revival of Marc Blitzstein's landmark labor musical The Cradle Will Rock at the American Place Theater. It was narrated by John Houseman with LuPone in the roles of Moll and Sister Mister.[29] The production premiered at The Acting Company's summer residence at Chautauqua Institution, toured the United States including an engagement at the Highland Park, Illinois' Ravinia Festival in 1984 and played in London's West End.

When the run ended, LuPone remained in London to create the role of Fantine in Cameron Mackintosh's original London production of Les Misérables, in 1985, which premiered at the Barbican Theatre, at that time the London home of the Royal Shakespeare Company.[30] LuPone had previously worked for Mackintosh in a short-lived Broadway revival of Oliver! in 1984, playing Nancy opposite Ron Moody as Fagin.[31] For her work in both The Cradle Will Rock and Les Misérables, LuPone received the 1985 Olivier Award for Best Actress in a Musical.[32][33]

She returned to Broadway in 1987 to star as nightclub singer Reno Sweeney in the Lincoln Center Theater revival of Cole Porter's Anything Goes. She starred opposite Howard McGillin, and they both received Tony nominations for their performances.[34][35] The Lincoln Center cast reassembled for a one-night-only concert performance of Anything Goes in New York in 2002.[36]

1990s

In 1993, LuPone returned to London to create the role of Norma Desmond in the original production of Andrew Lloyd Webber's Sunset Boulevard at the Adelphi Theater. There was much anticipation of LuPone appearing in another Lloyd Webber musical, the first since her performance in Evita. Her time in the show was difficult, and she was abruptly fired by Lloyd Webber and replaced by Glenn Close, who opened the show in Los Angeles and eventually on Broadway.[37][38]

In November 1995, LuPone starred in her one-woman show, Patti LuPone on Broadway, at the Walter Kerr Theatre.[39] For her work, she received an Outer Critics Circle Award. The following year, she was selected by producer Robert Whitehead to succeed his wife, Zoe Caldwell in the Broadway production of Terrence McNally's play Master Class, based on the master classes given by operatic diva Maria Callas at Juilliard.[37] LuPone received positive reviews, with Vincent Canby writing "Ms. LuPone really is vulnerable here in a way that wasn't anticipated: she's in the process of creating a role for which she isn't ideally suited, but she's working like a trouper to get it right."[40] She appeared in the play in the West End. In November 2001, she starred in a Broadway revival of Noises Off, with Peter Gallagher and Faith Prince.[41]

LuPone with artist Ken Fallin at The Wall Street Journal's Tony Awards party, which LuPone hosted and at which Fallin's work was auctioned for charity

LuPone has performed in many New York concert productions of musicals including Pal Joey with Peter Gallagher and Bebe Neuwirth, Annie Get Your Gun with Peter Gallagher, Sweeney Todd with George Hearn in both New York and San Francisco, Anything Goes with Howard McGillin, Can-Can with Michael Nouri for City Center Encores!, Candide with Kristin Chenoweth, Passion with Michael Cerveris and Audra McDonald and Gypsy with Boyd Gaines and Laura Benanti for City Center Encores!. Her performances in Sweeney Todd, and Candide were recorded and broadcast for PBSs Great Performances and were released on DVD. The concert staging of Passion was televised as part of Live from Lincoln Center.

2000s

Since 2001, LuPone has been a regular performer at the Chicago Ravinia Festival. She starred in a six-year-long series of concert presentations of Stephen Sondheim musicals, which began in honor of his seventieth birthday. Her roles here have included Mrs. Lovett in Sweeney Todd, Fosca in Passion, Cora Hoover Hooper in Anyone Can Whistle, Rose in Gypsy and two different roles in Sunday in the Park with George.[42]

She returned to Broadway in October 2005 to star as Mrs. Lovett in John Doyle's new Broadway production of Sweeney Todd. In this radically different interpretation of the musical, the ten actors on stage also served as the show's orchestra, and LuPone played the tuba and orchestra bells as well as performing the score vocally.[43] For her performance, she received a Tony Award nomination as well as Golden Icon Award for Best Female Musical Theater Performance.[44] In August 2006, LuPone took a three-week leave from Sweeney in order to play Rose in Lonny Price's production of Gypsy at Ravinia.[42] Sweeney Todd closed in September 2006.

On February 10, 2007, LuPone starred with Audra McDonald in the Los Angeles Opera production of Kurt Weill's opera Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny directed by John Doyle.[45] The cast recording of Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny was recognized at the 51st Grammy Awards as Best Classical Album and Best Opera Recording in February 2009.[46]

Following the Ravinia Festival production of Gypsy, LuPone and author Arthur Laurents mended a decade-long rift, and she was cast in the City Center Encores! Summer Stars production of the show. Laurents directed LuPone in Gypsy for a 22-performance run (July 9, 2007 – July 29, 2007) at City Center.[47] This production of Gypsy then transferred to Broadway, opening March 27, 2008 at the St. James Theatre.[48] LuPone won the Outer Critics Circle Award, Drama League Award, Drama Desk Award and Tony Award for her performance in Gypsy.[49][50] It closed on January 11, 2009.

2010s

In August 2010, LuPone appeared in a three-day run of Irving Berlin's Annie Get Your Gun where she played the title role opposite Patrick Cassidy at the Ravinia Festival, directed by Lonny Price.[51] That same year, LuPone created the role of Lucia in the original Broadway production of Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown, which opened at the Belasco Theater on November 4, 2010, and closed on January 2, 2011 after 23 preview and 69 regular performances. LuPone was nominated for a Tony and Drama Desk, and an Outer Critics Circle Award for her performance.

LuPone's memoir recounting her life and career from childhood onwards, was published in September 2010 titled Patti LuPone: A Memoir.[52][53]

In 2011, LuPone played the role of Joanne in a four-night limited engagement concert production of Stephen Sondheim's musical Company at the New York Philharmonic, conducted by Paul Gemignani. The production starred Neil Patrick Harris as Bobby. Harris had previously worked with LuPone in the 2000 and 2001 concert productions of Sweeney Todd. The cast of Company performed the song "Side by Side by Side" at the 65th Tony Awards on June 12, 2011.

LuPone made her New York City Ballet debut in May 2011 in a production of The Seven Deadly Sins directed and choreographed by Lynne Taylor-Corbett. A piece she had previously performed, LuPone sang the role of Anna in the Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht score.[54]

Patti LuPone on January 13, 2012, outside the Ethel Barrymore Theatre.

LuPone concluded a 63-performance Broadway engagement of her concert with former Evita co-star Mandy Patinkin entitled An Evening with Patti LuPone and Mandy Patinkin. The run started on November 21, 2011, at the Ethel Barrymore Theater and ended on January 13, 2012.[55]

In the fall of 2012, LuPone appeared with Debra Winger in the premiere of David Mamet's play The Anarchist. Despite the play receiving less than stellar reviews from critics, LuPone received widespread praise for her role as Cathy.

In early 2015, she returned to Los Angeles Opera to perform the role of Samira in a new production of John Corigliano's The Ghosts of Versailles, receiving positive reviews.[56][57] In April 2016, an audio recording of the production was released by Pentatone (PTC 5186538, a 2-SACD album).[58] It won the 2017 Grammy Awards for Best Classical Album and for Best Opera Recording.[59]

In June 2015, LuPone appeared in the Douglas Carter Beane play Shows for Days at Lincoln Center Theater.[60] In October 2015, LuPone, along with the current Fantine on the West End, joined her castmates to celebrate the 30th anniversary of Les Misérables.[61]

In 2017, LuPone originated the role of Helena Rubinstein in the musical War Paint on Broadway, after performing the role in the summer of 2016 in the musical's world premiere at Chicago's Goodman Theatre.[62] Performing opposite Christine Ebersole as Rubinstein's longtime competitor Elizabeth Arden, LuPone stayed with the role for War Paint's entire run at the Nederlander Theatre, from March 7 to November 5, 2017.[63]

In September 2017, it was announced that LuPone would star as Joanne in the 2018 London revival of Company alongside Rosalie Craig as Bobbie in a gender-swapped production directed by Marianne Elliot.[64] For her performance she received her second Laurence Olivier Award, this time for Outstanding Actress in a Supporting Role in a Musical. In August 2019, it was announced that the production would move to Broadway, with LuPone returning as Joanne and Katrina Lenk as Bobbie.[65]

2020s

A transfer of the successful West End production of Company was set to open at the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre on March 22, 2020, coinciding with Stephen Sondheim's 90th birthday but was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[66] The production returned featuring LuPone starring opposite Katrina Lenk with previews starting on November 15, 2021, before officially opening December 9, 2021.[67]

Solo concerts and tours

LuPone performs regularly in her solo shows Matters of the Heart; Coulda, Woulda, Shoulda; and The Lady With the Torch[68] which sold out at Carnegie Hall. For example, she performed her one-woman show The Gypsy In My Soul at the Caramoor Fall Festival, New York, in September 2010.[69]

She also appears at venues across North America in concerts with Mandy Patinkin, at such venues as the Mayo Center for the Performing Arts in September 2010.[70][71]

She appeared as the inaugural act at a new cabaret space, 54 Below, in New York City in June 2012. According to The New York Times reviewer, "Nowadays Ms. LuPone generates more raw excitement than any other performer on the Broadway and cabaret axis, with the possible exception of Liza Minnelli.... And her brilliant show, conceived and directed by her long-time collaborator, Scott Wittman, deserves many lives, perhaps even a Broadway run in an expanded edition. It certifies Ms. LuPone's place in the lineage of quirky international chanteuses like Lotte Lenya, Marlene Dietrich and Edith Piaf, who, like Ms. LuPone, conquered show business with forceful, outsize personalities while playing by their own musical rules."[72]

She also appeared as the inaugural act at the Sharon L. Morse Entertainment Center in The Villages, Florida on April 30, 2015, to a sold-out audience of residents mainly 55 years-of-age and older.[73]

Film and television work

Among LuPone's film credits are Fighting Back, Witness, Steven Universe The Movie, Just Looking, The Victim, Summer of Sam, Driving Miss Daisy, King of the Gypsies, 1941, Wise Guys, Nancy Savoca's The 24 Hour Woman and Savoca's Union Square, Family Prayers, and City by the Sea. She has also worked with playwright David Mamet on The Water Engine, the critically acclaimed State and Main, and Heist. In 2011, the feature film Union Square (film), co-written and directed by the Sundance Film Festival's Grand Jury Award Winner, Nancy Savoca, was premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival. In it, LuPone co-starred with Mira Sorvino, Tammy Blanchard, Mike Doyle, Michael Rispoli and Daphne Rubin-Vega.[74]

She played Lady Bird Johnson in the TV movie, LBJ: The Early Years (1987).[75][76] LuPone played Libby Thatcher on the television drama Life Goes On, which ran on ABC from 1989 to 1993.[77][78][79] In the 1990s she had a recurring role as defense attorney Ruth Miller on Law & Order. She has twice been nominated for an Emmy Award: for the TV movie The Song Spinner (1995, Daytime Emmy Award nominee),[80] and for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series on Frasier in 1998. She had a cameo as herself that year on an episode of Saturday Night Live hosted by Kelsey Grammer.

LuPone's TV work also included a recurring role on her cousin Tom Fontana's HBO series in its final season, Oz (2003).[81] She appeared as herself on a February 2005 episode of Will & Grace.[82] She also appeared on the series Ugly Betty in March 2007 as the mother of Marc St. James (played by Michael Urie).[83] LuPone had a recurring guest role as Frank Rossitano's mother on 30 Rock. LuPone appeared as herself in the season two finale of the television series Glee.[84]

LuPone guest starred on Army Wives on July 8, 2012. She reunited with fellow guest star Kellie Martin as her mother once again.[85][86] LuPone appeared in the 2013 film Parker, an action-thriller.[87]

In 2013, LuPone was cast in the third season of the FX series American Horror Story as Joan Ramsey, a religious mother with a hidden past,[88] and played herself in the third season of HBO's Girls. In 2015, she appeared in several episodes of the Showtime horror series Penny Dreadful as a cantankerous yet powerful white witch. She returned to the show in 2016 in the role of Dr. Seward, an alienist aiding Eva Green's character. Seward is an adaptation of John Seward from Bram Stoker's Dracula, and claims to be a descendant of Joan Clayton, the character LuPone portrayed in the second season. Also in 2016, she began appearing in Steven Universe as the voice of Yellow Diamond, reprising the role in the movie and the epilogue series Steven Universe Future.[89] In 2019, LuPone played an antagonistic role in Pose, appearing in second season of the series. The following year she teamed up with social media star Randy Rainbow to perform a duet song parody on Donald Trump three weeks before the 2020 US election.

Views on theatre conduct

LuPone opposes recording, photographs, and other electronic distractions in live theatre. "Where's the elegance?" she asked in a blog post on her official site. "I mean, I'm glad they show up because God knows it's a dying art form and I guess I'm glad they're all comfortable, sleeping, eating and drinking, things they should be doing at home and in a restaurant. But it's just not done in the theater or shouldn't be." LuPone has been the subject of some controversy due to the bluntness of her statements regarding this matter.[90]

A related incident occurred at the second to last performance of Gypsy on January 10, 2009. LuPone, irritated by flash photography, stopped in the middle of "Rose's Turn" and loudly demanded that the interloper be removed from the theatre. After he was removed, LuPone restarted her number. The audience applauded her stance.[91][92] The event was recorded by another audience member, who released it on YouTube.[93] She later stated that such distractions drive "people in the audience nuts. They can't concentrate on the stage if, in their peripheral vision, they're seeing texting, they're seeing cameras, they're listening to phone calls. How can we do our job if the audience is distracted?", and also mentioned that "the interesting thing is I'm not the first one that's done it".[94]

On July 8, 2015, during the second act of Shows for Days at the Lincoln Center Theater, LuPone grabbed an audience member's cellphone while leaving the stage as the audience member had been using their phone during the play. It was returned after the show. LuPone stated:

We work hard on stage to create a world that is being totally destroyed by a few, rude, self-absorbed and inconsiderate audience members who are controlled by their phones. They cannot put them down. When a phone goes off or when a LED screen can be seen in the dark it ruins the experience for everyone else – the majority of the audience at that performance and the actors on stage. I am so defeated by this issue that I seriously question whether I want to work on stage anymore. Now I'm putting battle gear on over my costume to marshal the audience as well as perform.[95]

Personal life

LuPone is married to Matthew Johnston. The couple's wedding ceremony was on the stage of the Vivian Beaumont Theater at Lincoln Center on December 12, 1988, after filming the TV movie LBJ; Johnston was a cameraman.[96] They have one child.[78] They reside in Edisto Beach, South Carolina[97] and Kent, Connecticut.[98]

In February 2022, LuPone tested positive for COVID-19.[99]

Acting credits

Theatre

Sources: Playbill Vault;[100] Internet Broadway Database;[101] Internet Off-Broadway Database[102]

Year Show Role Notes Ref.
1972 The School for Scandal Lady Teazle Professional stage debut
Off-Broadway (City Center Acting Company)
1972 Women Beware Women Bianca Off-Broadway (City Center Acting Company)
1972 The Hostage Colette/ Kathleen Off-Broadway (City Center Acting Company)
1972 The Lower Depths Natasha Off-Broadway (City Center Acting Company)
1972 Next Time I'll Sing To You Lizzie Off-Broadway (City Center Acting Company)
1973 Three Sisters Irina Broadway (debut)
1973 The Beggar's Opera Lucy Lockit Broadway
1973 Measure For Measure Boy and Understudy, Julietta Broadway
1973 Scapin Hyancinthe Broadway
1974 Next Time I'll Sing To You Lizzie Broadway
1975 The Robber Bridegroom Rosamund Musgrove Original Broadway Production
1975 Edward II Prince Edward Broadway
1975 The Time of Your Life Kitty Duval Broadway
1975 Three Sisters Irina Broadway
1978 The Water Engine Rita Broadway (Replacement)
1978 Working Nora Watson, Roberta Victor Broadway
1978 Catchpenny Twist Monagh Hartford Stage; [103]
1979 Evita Eva Perón Original Broadway Production
1982 The Woods Ruth Off-Broadway [104]
1982 Edmond Mrs. Burke Replacement
1983 America Kicks Up Its Heels Cleo Off-Broadway [105]
1983 The Cradle Will Rock Moll/Sister Mister Off-Broadway [106]
1984 Oliver! Nancy Broadway Revival
1984 Accidental Death of an Anarchist The Reporter Broadway
1985 The Cradle Will Rock Moll Original West End Production, Old Vic [107]
1985 Les Misérables Fantine Original West End Production [108]
1987 Anything Goes Reno Sweeney Broadway Revival
1993 Company Host Concert staging of the show
1993 Sunset Boulevard Norma Desmond Original West End Production [109]
1995 Patti LuPone on Broadway Herself Broadway (Walter Kerr Theatre); Solo concert [110][111]
1995 Pal Joey Vera Simpson Encores! Staged Concert [112]
1996 Master Class Maria Callas Broadway Replacement (July 1996 – January 1997) [113]
1997 The Old Neighborhood Jolly Broadway
2000 Matters of the Heart Herself Solo Concert at Lincoln Center Beaumont Theater [114]
2000 Sweeney Todd Mrs. Lovett New York Philharmonic Concert [115]
2001 Noises Off Dotty Ottley Broadway Revival
2002 Runt of the Litter VO: National Anthem
2002 Anything Goes Reno Sweeney Reunion Concert, Lincoln Center, Beaumont Theater [116]
2003 Passion Fosca Regional Concert (Ravinia Festival)
2004 Can-Can La Mome Pistache Encores! Staged Concert [117]
2004 Candide Old Lady New York Philharmonic Staged Concert [118]
2004 Sunday in the Park with George Yvonne Regional Concert (Ravinia Festival) [119]
2005 Regina Regina Giddens Kennedy Center Concert [120]
2005 Children And Art Performer Stephen Sondheim Tribute Concert Benefit
New Amsterdam Theatre, New York City
[121]
2005 Anyone Can Whistle Cora Hoover Hooper Regional Concert (Ravinia Festival) [122]
2005 Sweeney Todd Mrs. Lovett Broadway Revival
2006 Gypsy Rose Hovick Regional Concert (Ravinia Festival)
2007 Encores! Staged Concert
2007 Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny Begbick Los Angeles Opera Revival [123]
2008 Gypsy Rose Hovick Broadway Revival
2010 Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown Lucia Original Broadway Production
2011 An Evening with Patti LuPone and Mandy Patinkin Herself Concert, Ethel Barrymore Theatre [124]
2011 Company Joanne New York Philharmonic Concert [125]
2012 The Anarchist Cathy Original Broadway Production
2015 The Ghosts of Versailles Samira Los Angeles Opera Revival [126]
2015 Shows For Days Irene Off-Broadway [127]
2016 War Paint Helena Rubinstein Goodman Theatre
2017 Original Broadway Production
2018 Company Joanne West End Revival [128]
2020 Broadway Revival [129]
2021 Broadway Revival

Film

Sources: TCM;[130] AllMovie[131]

Year Title Role Notes Ref.
1978 King of the Gypsies Unknown Uncredited
1979 1941 Lydia Hedberg
1982 Fighting Back Lisa D'Angelo
1985 Witness Elaine
1986 Wise Guys Wanda Valentini
1989 Driving Miss Daisy Florine Werthan
1993 Family Prayers Aunt Nan [132]
1999 The 24 Hour Woman Joan Marshall [133]
1999 Summer of Sam Helen [134]
2000 State and Main Sherry Bailey
2001 Heist Betty Croft
2002 City by the Sea Maggie
2011 Company Joanne Filmed production [135][136]
2011 Union Square Lucia
2013 Parker Ascension Cienfuegos
2016 The Comedian Flo Berkowitz
2019 Cliffs of Freedom Yia-Yia
2019 Last Christmas Joyce
2022 The School for Good and Evil
2022 Disappointment Blvd.

Television

Sources: TCM;[130] AllMovie[131]

Year Title Role Notes Ref.
1976 The Time of Your Life Kitty Duval Television film
1987 Cowboy Joe Linda Tidmunk Television film
1987 LBJ: The Early Years Lady Bird Johnson Television film
1989–93 Life Goes On Elizabeth "Libby" Thatcher 83 episodes
1992 The Water Engine Rita Lang Television film
1993 Frasier Pam (voice) Episode: "Dinner at Eight"
1995 The Song Spinner Zantalalia Television film
1996 Remember WENN Grace Cavendish Episode: "There But for the Grace"
1996–97 Law & Order Ruth Miller 2 episodes
1998 Frasier Aunt Zora Crane Episode: "Beware of Greeks"
1999 Encore! Encore! Wine critic Episode: "A Review to Remember"
2001 Touched by an Angel Alice Dupree Episode: "Thief of Hearts"
2002 Monday Night Mayhem Emmy Cosell Television film
2003 In-Laws Rochelle Landis Episode: "Mother's Nature"
2003 Oz Stella Coffa 7 episodes
2005 Live from Lincoln Center Fosca Episode: "Passion"
2005 Will & Grace Herself Episode: "Bully Woolley"
2007 Ugly Betty Mrs. Weiner Episode: "Don't Ask, Don't Tell"
2009–12 30 Rock Sylvia Rossitano 3 episodes
2011 Glee Herself Episode: "New York"
2012 Army Wives Ms. Galassini Episode: "Battle Scars"
2013–14 American Horror Story: Coven Joan Ramsey 4 episodes
2014 Girls Herself 2 episodes
2015 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Lydia Lebasi Episode: "Agent Provocateur"
2015 Penny Dreadful Joan Clayton Episode: "The Nightcomers"
2016–19 Steven Universe Yellow Diamond Voice; 8 episodes
2016 Penny Dreadful Dr. Florence Seward 8 episodes
2017 Crazy Ex-Girlfriend Rabbi Shari Episode: "Will Scarsdale Like Josh's Shayna Punim?"
2017 BoJack Horseman Mimi Stilton Voice; Episode: "The Judge"
2017–21 Vampirina Nanpire Voice; 19 episodes
2018 Mom Rita Episode: "Taco Bowl and a Tubby Seamstress" [137]
2019 The Simpsons Cheryl Monroe Voice; Episode: "The Girl on the Bus"
2019 Pose Ms. Frederica Norman 5 episodes [138][139]
2019 Steven Universe: The Movie Yellow Diamond Voice; Television film [140]
2020 Steven Universe Future Yellow Diamond Voice; 2 episodes
2020 Hollywood Avis Amberg 7 episodes
2020 Penny Dreadful: City of Angels Vocalist Episode: "Hide and Seek"
2021 Central Park Roberta McCullough Voice; Episode: "Down to the Underwire"
2021 F Is for Family Nora Murphy Voice; 3 episodes [141]

Discography

Selected recordings include:

  • The Baker’s Wife (Original cast recording)
  • Evita (Original Broadway cast recording)
  • The Cradle Will Rock (The Acting Company recording)
  • Les Misérables (Original London Cast recording)
  • Anything Goes (New Broadway Cast Recording)
  • Heat Wave (John Mauceri conducting the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra)
  • Patti LuPone Live (Solo Album)
  • Sunset Boulevard (World Premiere/Original London Cast Recording)
  • Matters of the Heart (Solo Album)
  • Sweeney Todd (New York Philharmonic recording)
  • Sweeney Todd (2005 Broadway Cast recording)
  • The Lady with the Torch (Solo Album)
  • The Lady With the Torch...Still Burning (Solo Album)
  • To Hell and Back (Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra World Premier recording)
  • Gypsy (2008 Broadway Revival Cast Recording)
  • Patti LuPone At Les Mouches (Live Solo Recording of 1980 club act)[142]
  • Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown (Original Broadway Cast Recording)
  • Far Away Places (Solo Album)
  • Company (New York Philharmonic recording)
  • War Paint (Original Broadway cast recording)
  • Don't Monkey with Broadway (Solo Album)
  • Company (Revival London cast recording)

Her live performance of "Don't Cry for Me Argentina" at the Grammy Awards was released on the 1994 album Grammy's Greatest Moments Volume IV.[143]

In 2009 LuPone's 1985 recording of "I Dreamed a Dream" reached No. 45 on the UK Singles Chart[144] It also reached the Billboard magazine Hot Digital Songs and Hot Singles Recurrents charts in the US.

LuPone recorded a duet with Seth MacFarlane (who was in character as Glenn Quagmire) on the 2005 album Family Guy: Live In Vegas.

A live concert special film, An Evening with Patti LuPone, was filmed in July 2012 and released in November 2012 on SethTv.com with 104 minutes of Patti LuPone songs and stories with host Seth Rudetsky.[145]

A new CD of one of her shows, The Lady with the Torch, was released in 2006 on Sh-K-Boom Records. In December she released bonus tracks for that CD only available on iTunes and the Sh-K-Boom website.[146]

Awards and nominations

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