Five-Time Tony Nominee Jan Maxwell Dies at 61
She was not on the list.
Jan Maxwell, a beloved and extravagantly gifted Broadway
regular known for her patrician elegance, crisp command and dry humor, died
Sunday of complications from cancer, her son William Maxwell-Lunny confirmed.
She was 61.
Over a New York stage career spanning 26 years, Maxwell
worked with distinction across plays and musicals, new work and classics,
making her Broadway debut in 1989 as a replacement in the cast of the Cy
Coleman-David Zippel-Larry Gelbart musical, City of Angels.
In 2010 she secured dual Tony Award nominations for
back-to-back productions in a single season, being recognized for featured
actress in a play for the Ken Ludwig farce Lend Me a Tenor, directed by Stanley
Tucci; and for lead actress in a play for the George S. Kaufman-Edna Ferber
comedy, The Royal Family, in which she starred opposite theater legend Rosemary
Harris, in the same role Harris had played 34 years earlier.
Two seasons later in 2012, Maxwell earned a Tony nomination
for lead actress in a musical for a revival of Stephen Sondheim and James
Goldman's Follies. Having earlier been nominated for featured actress in a
musical for Chitty Chitty Bang Bang in 2005, that made Maxwell only the fourth
performer in Tony Awards history to land nominations in all four possible
acting categories. Her fifth nomination was for featured actress in the play
Coram Boy in 2007.
Phyllis Stone, the bored, brittle trophy wife in Follies,
seething with wounded rage while tossing off withering quips, was the kind of
plum role Maxwell bit into with infinite nuance. Her magnificent vocal delivery
of the stinging rebuke "Could I Leave You?" was indelible in a
production she later accompanied to the Ahmanson in Los Angeles.
But Maxwell's consummate professionalism and inventive line
readings were no less noteworthy in an overblown dud like Chitty Chitty Bang
Bang. She appeared alongside Marc Kudisch as the malevolent Baron and Baroness
Bomburst of Vulgaria, exchanging infantile endearments and hatching despotic
schemes with a mischievous spirit that elevated the lumbering show every time
they were onstage.
Maxwell's other Broadway appearances were in the 1991
premiere of Brian Friel's Dancing at Lughnasa; in a 1997 revival of Ibsen's A
Doll’s House with Janet McTeer; as Baroness Schraeder in a 1998 revival of The
Sound of Music; and in the 2000 premiere of Neil Simon's The Dinner Party, starring
opposite John Ritter and Henry Winkler.
More recently, she appeared in the drama Sixteen Wounded
(2004), with Judd Hirsch and Martha Plimpton; and in a short-lived adaptation
of the classic Lubitsch screen comedy To Be Or Not To Be (2008), in the Carole
Lombard role.
Among her many lauded off-Broadway performances were roles
in Israel Horovitz's My Old Lady and Alan Ayckbourn's House & Garden (both
in 2002); Ionesco's The Bald Soprano (2004); Joe Orton's Entertaining Mr.
Sloane (2006), a production she exited abruptly due to the allegedly volatile
behavior of co-star Alec Baldwin; and Anthony Giardina's The City of
Conversation (2014), in which she originated the role of influential Washington
socialite Hester Ferris.
Her regional theater credits include The Seagull and The
King and I. She had a long and admirable association with the work of Howard
Barker, championing the British dramatist's political plays in various
productions for the tiny Potomac Theatre Project.
Maxwell was born in North Dakota in 1956, the daughter of
former First District Judge Ralph B. Maxwell and Elizabeth Maxwell, a lawyer
for the Environmental Protection Agency. She credited seeing a production of A
Streetcar Named Desire at the Guthrie Theatre in Minneapolis at age 16 as a
defining moment. She played summer stock while studying at Moorhead State
University in Minnesota, making frequent trips to New York to binge on theater.
Her numerous television credits include All My Children, One
Life to Live, Gossip Girl, The Divide, BrainDead, Gotham and Madam Secretary.
She also made repeat guest appearances on two shows that were longtime casting
mainstays for top New York theater talent, The Good Wife and Law & Order,
in the latter playing four different characters over a nine-year period.
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