She has been on the cover of Time, People, American Film, and The Advocate. She's been on the silver screen, the little screen, in comedy clubs, and onstage for over four decades.
Lily Tomlin is a staple of American comedy. Best known for her larger-than-life and still-believable characters, many remember her from Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In TV, where
Tomlin introduced viewers to Ernestine, the snappy telephone operator, and Edith Ann, the little girl who sits in the big chair and tells it like she sees it. Her ingenuity and knack for creating such loveable, laughable characters have rendered her a following that will last a lifetime
Another highlight of
Tomlin's career (look up the word "longevity"), and perhaps one that most comprehensively captures her talents, is her long-running off-Broadway show The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe, on which she collaborated with partner in showbiz and life, Jane Wagner, and won the Tony Award for Best Actress in 1986. The show was so celebrated, in fact, that it was revived for a second run in the year 2000. It was also made into a movie (which the making of was made into a documentary, simply titled Lily Tomlin, in 1986) and published as a book. In the show,
Tomlin plays a host of characters, from bag lady to angst-ridden punk rock teen.
Not a conventional leading lady,
Lily Tomlin has still managed to capture the hearts and imagination of millions of Americans in such box-office hits as 9 to 5 with
Dolly Parton and
Jane Fonda, All of Me with
Steve Martin, and Big Business with
Bette Midler. And who can forget
Lily Tomlin in the '80s remake of The Incredible Shrinking Woman, in which she played both a disappearing housewife and the incorrigible super-consumer woman Mrs. Judy Beasley?
Before her string of box-office comedies,
Tomlin was nominated for an Oscar for her dramatic role in Nashville, directed by
Robert Altman. Later,
Tomlin would team up again with
Altman for a part in his award-winning Short Cuts, playing opposite
Tom Waits. Additionally,
Lily Tomlin played the character of Miss Jane in the remake of The Beverly Hillbillies, produced two animated specials revolving around the character of Edith Ann (who also made her own guest appearances on Sesame Street and Saturday Night Live), and had a regular role on Murphy Brown as Kay Carter-Shepley, the new FYI producer.
Throughout the '70s, when
Tomlin was touring her act in nightclubs, she made a series of sound recordings, including
This Is a Recording,
That's the Truth, and
Modern Scream. Before pursuing a career in comedy,
Lily Tomlin (born Mary Jean) was premed at Wayne State University in Detroit, MI. ~ Sandy Lawson