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Life Is Grand for This Grande Dame

Cloris Leachman, left, with Tilly Scott Pedersen, says she
Cloris Leachman, left, with Tilly Scott Pedersen, says she "had the most wonderful time" filming "The Women," a remake of the 1939 movie about a group of high-society friends. (By Claudette Barius)
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By Ellen McCarthy
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, September 12, 2008

Cloris Leachman talks about her existence with the kind of relish -- the head-back, eyes-closed indulgence -- most of us reserve for a spectacular dessert.

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"Ahhhhhh," she exhales as if words were not enough. "Life is wonnnnnnderful. Ahhhhhh."

It's particularly wonderful at the moment, because Leachman is in bed. ("Well, I'm at the Four Seasons, and who wouldn't want to get into bed?")

She is 82, the mother of five, grandmother of six, great-grandmother of one. She just stole the show at a roast of Bob Saget, she's about to become the oldest contestant on "Dancing With the Stars" and this weekend she appears on the big screen alongside Meg Ryan and Annette Bening in the X-chromosome ensemble dramedy "The Women."

She is in the 60th year of her professional career, having thus far garnered nine Emmys and an Oscar. Her single complaint is that there aren't more roles -- bigger roles -- for folks her age. Regardless, Leachman intends to nab a few more statues before she's through; "Mmmmhmmm," she purrs. "At least several."

"I kind of saw my life when I was about 6," she recalls of her start, as a child in Des Moines. "I saw myself standing in a pool of light."

Two years later her mother would dress her up as a grasshopper in a homemade production of one of Aesop's fables. Twelve years after that she would represent Chicago in the Miss America pageant. By the mid-1950s she was a television regular and started appearing in films with the likes of Paul Newman. The Academy Award came in 1971 for her work as a supporting actress in "The Last Picture Show."

Leachman was Mary Tyler Moore's pushy landlord, the second-string ditzy den mom on "The Facts of Life" and the bitter, chain-smoking grandma on "Malcolm in the Middle."

These days, it seems, if there's a role for a zany old woman, she's got it. Foul-mouthed grande dame? She's a shoo-in. Deadpanning blue-hair in an apron?

Well, that's the part she was offered in "The Women," a remake of the 1939 movie based on the play by Clare Booth Luce about a group of high-society friends torn apart after one of them learns her husband is cheating.

"I had the most wonderful time," she says of filming "The Women," which also features Debra Messing, Jada Pinkett Smith, Eva Mendes, Candice Bergen and Bette Midler. "The house was so beautiful, so much fun to be in. And the girls were just darling, wonderful women. Such good actresses."

She adored the gig. She always does.


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