Hyde Alumni News
Frances Sternhagen: The Ultimate Character
Frances Sternhagen: The Ultimate Character Villain, crank, crackpot,
biddy. Frances Sternhagen has spent a lifetime perfecting the worst
aspects of her character. She's done a good job of it. The Hyde
School alumni parent has snagged two Tonys, two Obies, and two Drama
Desk Awards on her way to being inducted into the Theatre Hall of
Fame.
"I make a nice villain," laughs Sternhagen, taking a break from
filming Sex in the City, in which she plays the obnoxious,
controlling mother of hunk Trey. "Most
of us who are character actors tend to really enjoy being someone
else. We spend our lives imitating and mimicking people."
Life hasn't always been easy for Sternhagen. She switched from
teaching to acting in her 20s, overcoming daunting odds. "They would
listen to my audition pieces and say, 'Miss Sternhagen, I advise
you to give up teaching if you want to act. You deliver everything
like you're leading girls onto the hockey field.' "
Sternhagen stuck with it, however, cutting her teeth at Arena Stage
in Washington, D.C., before heading up to the New York stage. She
had critical success onstage, earning a prestigious Charles Durwin
award, but only began to hit commercial success with a series of
commercials in the 1970s. "I was the Colgate toothpaste lady, the
character was named Mrs. Marsh," recalls Sternhagen. "My children
were sort of embarrassed for me, but it started paying for college
tuition and for a couple of years of Hyde."
Along the way, Sternhagen married the actor Tom Carlin and raised
six children, four of whom eventually attended The Hyde Schools.
Sternhagen credits The Hyde School with helping her and her family
through some painful years.
"My late husband had an accident with the two older boys and it
was devastating," says Sternhagen. "My son Paul later said that
his confidence just went after that accident. He slipped into some
underachieving behavior. But he spent a couple of years at Hyde
and had a breakthrough and did very well."
During the Hyde years, Sternhagen's career took off. She played
Peter Firth's mother in the Broadway production of Equus,
sharing the stage with Richard Burton. "We had to take another exit
because the crowds around the stage door were just impossible,"
she recalls. "He and Elizabeth Taylor were still somewhat of an
item. On opening night, Elizabeth left a note in lipstick on his
mirror. It said something like, 'You're wonderful darling, all the
best.' He was a sweet, nice man."
Sternhagen branched out into movies, playing scrappy older women
in films such as Independence Day, Misery, Doc Hollywood and
Raising Cain. On the small screen, she became known for her
signature Cheers role of Ester Claven, the formidable mother
of mailman Cliffy Claven. "I was the obnoxious domineering mother,"
says Sternhagen. "Really ridiculous, but great fun to play."
As often as possible, Sternhagen brought her children along on
film shoots. "There were times when I was jealous of my family,"
says Sternhagen. "I was stuck in the studio all day, while they
were out viewing the sites in Greece and Germany and France." Something
about it must have rubbed off, because all of her children have
chosen a life in the arts — four are actors, one is a dancer,
one a musician.
There have been times when life and art intersected. In the theatrical
tradition that has given rise to such shows such as A Chorus
Line, or even America's Spirit, Sternhagen's family
developed a semi-autobiographical performance piece called Family
Affairs that they performed around the Westchester, N.Y., area.
"The show was scenes and songs about various family conflicts and
issues," says Sternhagen. " It was a wonderful program, with three
of our children performing with us."
Sternhagen lauds the emphasis on performing arts at Hyde. "The
fact that every single child, faculty member and parent has to do
something — it makes an enormous difference in how they approach
things from then on. For somebody like me, being on stage is the
only place I know who I am. But for people who don't think they're
talented … or don't have a need to perform, it takes an enormous
amount of courage.
"I think it's very interesting that character development is now
beginning to be recognized in quite a lot of schools in the country.
I think The Hyde School should get more credit for what it started
doing in the 1960s."
>return to newsletters |