A photo of the backyard wedding of Penny Marshall and Rob Reiner in 1971.
The daughter of Marjorie Marshall, a tap dance teacher, and Tony Marshall, a film director and producer, and the sister of Garry Marshall (her sister was a casting director and producer), it's not surprising that Penny entered the entertainment industry as well. She was a actress (probably best known for the series "Laverne and Shirley), director, and producer. She brought us years of laughter in her productions.
She married Rob Reiner in 1971 (himself a well known entertainer and the son of Carl Reiner) and they were married for a decade. A previous marriage resulted in a daughter, Tracy (who is also an actor), and Rob adopted her.
Penny died of complications from diabetes on December 18, 2018 in Los Angeles CA - a continent away from her birthplace, The Bronx, New York City.
Schlemiel! Schlimazel! Hasenpfeffer Incorporated! Penny Marshall, star of "Laverne and Shirley" - as well as bringing us decades of entertainment - has died at the age of 75.
Loved Laverne & Shirley. While I was at Sue's recently I 'found' one of the channels aired old episodes at a time which coincided with my need for a morning coffee.
She was an excellent actor and director. From all I've seen, a woman well respected for being respectful of others. BTW, thanks for printing the "Hasenpfeffer." from Laverne and Shirley. I've never known what the company name was being said.
Robert Reiner was born on March 6, 1947 at The Bronx in New York City, New York United States. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Robert Reiner.
Penny Marshall, âLaverne & Shirleyâ Star, Director, Dies at 75
(Nobody knew her by her birth name for over 50 years!)
By CARMEL DAGAN
She was Penny Marshall, Actress and Director.
Penny Marshall, âLaverne & Shirleyâ Star, Director, Dies at 75
Penny Marshall, who starred alongside Cindy Williams in the hit ABC comedy âLaverne & Shirleyâ and then became a successful director, died on Monday night at her Hollywood Hills home due to complications from diabetes. She was 75. Marshall was the first woman to direct a film that grossed more than $100 million, the first woman to direct two films that made more than $100 million, and she was only the second woman director to see her film Oscar-nominated for best picture. âLaverne & Shirleyâ ran from 1976-1983 and proved an enormous success for ABC. It was the No. 3 show on television in 1975-76, No. 2 in 1976-77, and No. 1 in 1977-78 and 1978-79, spawning ancillary revenue in the form of merchandising, a record album, and an animated series based on the show. Marshall began her directing career by helming several episodes of âLaverne & Shirley.â With little experience, she replaced Howard Zieff as director on her feature directorial debut, the Whoopi Goldberg vehicle âJumpinâ Jack Flash,â which grossed a respectable $30 million in 1986. Far more successful, however, was Marshallâs second outing, the 1988 sentimental comedy âBig,â which sported a subtle, delightful, Oscar-nominated performance from Tom Hanks â and hauled $151 million worldwide, reportedly becoming the first film directed by a woman to cross $100 million. Remembering Penny Marshall, Who Forged Her Own Path and Paved the Way for Others
Hollywood Pays Tribute to 'Trailblazer,' 'Pioneer' Penny Marshall
Her third film, the critically acclaimed âAwakenings,â starring Robin Williams and Robert De Niro, and based on the Oliver Sacks book, reeled in $52 million and drew three Oscar nominations â including best picture and best actor for De Niro. The movie was only the second directed by a woman that was nominated for best picture (Randa Hainesâ âChildren of a Lesser Godâ was the first, in 1986). Roger Ebert said, âBecause this movie is not a tearjerker, but an intelligent examination of a bizarre human condition, itâs up to De Niro to make Leonard not an object of sympathy, but a person who helps us wonder about our own tenuous grasp on the world around us.â âA League of Their Own,â set in the world of womenâs baseball during World War II, and starring Hanks, Geena Davis, Madonna, and Rosie OâDonnell, made $132 million worldwide, including about $25 million overseas. The movie was selected in 2012 for inclusion in the National Film Registry, and it spawned a short-lived television adaptation.
Marshallâs run of extraordinary success ended with her next film, the critically derided âRenaissance Man,â which starred Danny DeVito as a reluctant instructor in the U.S. Army. The New York Timesâ Janet Maslin began her review by declaring, âIf youâre looking for a learning experience, âRenaissance Manâ is ready to teach you what the words simile, metaphor, oxymoron, and formula mean.â She returned with some gusto with âThe Preacherâs Wife,â starring Denzel Washington and Whitney Houston in a remake of a 1940s Christmas classic. The Timesâ Stephen Holden was happy to declare, âThe movie is a shrewdly conceived update of the 1947 comic heart-warmer âThe Bishopâs Wife.'â After enumerating a few misgivings, he finished by saying, âAll these loose ends donât keep âThe Preacherâs Wifeâ from producing a mild feel-good glow.â The film made $48 million. After five years, Marshall returned with her final film, 2001âs âRiding in Cars With Boys,â starring Drew Barrymore, which drew so-so reviews and about $35 million worldwide. Peter Rainer in New York magazine said, âBeverly is supposed to be a bad girl running with the wrong crowd, but most of the time she seems to be right out of a serioso episode of âLaverne & Shirley.'â More recently she had directed two episodes of the ABC sitcom âAccording to Jimâ in 2009; the 2010 TV movie âWomen Without Men,â in which she also starred along with Lorraine Bracco, Dyan Cannon, and Roseanne Barr; and two episodes of Showtimeâs âUnited States of Taraâ in 2010 and 2011. Marshall also produced a number of films, including many of her directing projects as well as Ron Howardâs âCinderella Man,â starring Russell Crowe, and Nora Ephronâs feature adaptation of âBewitched,â both in 2005.
But it all started, really, with âLaverne & Shirley.â The show, which premiered in January 1976, scored in the ratings immediately. Within months of the seriesâ debut, Marshall and Williams were asked to record an album, âLaverne & Shirley Sing.â They sang one song from the album, a cover of the Crystalsâ hit âDa Doo Ron Ron,â on a float during the Macyâs Thanksgiving Day Parade that November.
An animated series, âLaverne & Shirley in the Army,â ran in ABCâs Saturday morning lineup in 1981, with Marshall and Williams voicing the characters. After 13 episodes, an animated Fonzie (voiced by Henry Winkler) and his dog were added, and the product was wedded to the animated version of âMork & Mindyâ to create âThe Mork & Mindy/Laverne & Shirley/Fonz Hour.â Marshall and Williams also made crossover appearances â back on âHappy Days,â where theyâd started; on the 1978 pilot of âMork & Mindyâ together with Winklerâs Fonzie; and on the brief Garry Marshall-created show âBlanskyâs Beautiesâ in 1977. Meanwhile, âLaverne & Shirleyâ itself evolved. The first five seasons were set in Milwaukee, with the two leads employed in a brewery; the sixth season relocated the characters to Burbank, Calif.; and then, in the eighth and final season, Williams and her husband feuded with Paramount, the producers, and Marshall when Williams became pregnant, resulting in her abrupt departure from the show, although no one agrees exactly who was to blame. Marshall and Williams did not speak to each other for several years, but eventually reconciled. Penny Marshall was born in the Bronx. Her mother taught tap dancing, while her father directed industrial films. She attended the University of New Mexico for two and a half years. While there, Marshall got pregnant at 19, and soon thereafter married the father, a football player. Marshall made her screen debut in 1968 with small roles in Richard Rushâs âThe Savage Sevenâ and Jerry Parisâ âHow Sweet It Is!,â on which her brother Garry was a writer. She also had small roles in Parisâ 1970 film âThe Grasshopper,â but she found much more work on television, guesting on series including âThat Girl,â âLove, American Style,â and âThe Bob Newhart Show.â From 1972-74 she recurred on âThe Odd Couple,â a show developed for TV by brother Garry, as Myrna, the schlumpy secretary employed by Jack Klugmanâs Oscar Madison. (Marshall reprised the role for the 1993 reunion movie, âThe Odd Couple: Together Againâ). She was a series regular on the critically acclaimed, but short-lived CBS sitcom âPaul Sand in Friends and Lovers,â in which she played Janice, who frequently mocked her brother-in-law, played by Sand, for his romantic failures. In 1975 she guested on âMary Tyler Moore,â but, more importantly, on âHappy Days,â where Marshallâs Laverne De Fazio and Cindy Williamsâ Shirley Feeney first appeared on an episode where Fonzie chooses two girls from his little black book for a double date with Ron Howardâs Richie. (âHappy Daysâ was, like âThe Odd Couple,â co-created by Pennyâs brother Garry.) Letters to the show revealed that viewers liked the Laverne and Shirley characters, and when Garry was asked by then ABC programming exec Fred Silverman to come up with an idea for another sitcom with which to build a Tuesday night comedy block, he devised âLaverne & Shirley.â According to Marley Brantâs book âHappier Days: Paramount Televisionâs Classic Sitcoms 1974-1984,â Marshall and Williams had met on the set of the film âThe Christian Licorice Storeâ in the late 1960s. Later âthe two young women were hired as writers for a bicentennial spoof of American history that Francis Ford Coppolaâs company was doing. The girls liked each other and became friends.â Despite the advice of her brother Garry, who was offering to cast her in her own show, Penny was initially reluctant to take on âLaverne & Shirley.â But she did, and Williams, deciding it would be fun to work with her friend, agreed as well. The chant of âSchlemiel! Schlimazel! Hasenpfeffer Incorporated!â that preceded Cyndi Greccoâs theme song âMaking Our Dreams Come Trueâ in the seriesâ opening montage was drawn from a song Marshall and her friends used to sing on the way to school. Garry created, produced, directed, and wrote for the series. Penny starred, and she directed a few episodes. Their sister Ronny Hallin was the casting director, and their father, Anthony Marshall, was also a producer. The various feuds related to the show were settled over the years, and âGood Morning Americaâ hosted a reunion of the cast in 2012.
In a Yahoo blog post, Kimberly Potts wrote, âPenny Marshall and Cindy Williams reunited (and proved theyâve still got some serious physical comedy skills) for a 2013 episode of the Nickelodeon series âSam & Cat,â in which they played the warring creators of a 1970s TV series called âSalmon Cat.â âSam & Catâ stars Jennette McCurdy and Ariana Grande re-created the iconic âL&Sâ show opening for the episode.â
Her candid autobiography âMy Mother Was Nutsâ was published in 2012.
Marshall was apparently diagnosed with lung and brain cancer in 2009, but then she appeared to make a complete recovery.
She was twice married, the first time to Michael Henry from 1961-63, the second time to actor-director Rob Reiner from 1971-79. Both marriages ended in divorce. She is survived by a daughter by Henry who was adopted by Reiner, actress Tracy Reiner, and Hallin, a TV director. Garry Marshall died in 2016.
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I'm a Founder of AncientFaces and support the community answering questions & helping members make connections to the past (thus my official title of Founder & Content and Community Support ). For me, it's been a labor of love for over 20 years. I truly believe with all of my heart that everyone should be remembered for generations to come.
I am 2nd generation San Jose and have seen a lot of changes in the area while growing up. We used to be known as the "Valley of Heart's Delight" (because the Valley was covered with orchards and there were many canneries to process the food grown here, which shipped all over the US) - now we have adopted the nickname "Capital of Silicon Valley" and Apple, Ebay, Adobe, Netflix, Facebook, and many more tech companies are within a few miles of my current home in San Jose (including AncientFaces). From a small town of 25,000, we have grown to 1 million plus. And when you add in all of the communities surrounding us (for instance, Saratoga, where I attended high school, living a block from our previous Mayor), we are truly one of the big cities in the US. I am so very proud of my hometown. For more information see Kathy - Founder & Content and Community Director My family began AncientFaces because we believe that unique photos and stories that show who people are/were should be shared with the world.
I want to build a place where my son can meet his great-grandparents. My grandmother Marian Joyce (Benning) Kroetch always wanted to meet her great-grandchildren, but she died just a handful of years before my son's birth.
So while she didn't have the opportunity to meet him, at least he will be able to know her.
For more information about what we're building see About AncientFaces. For information on the folks who build and support the community see Daniel - Founder & Creator. My father's side is full blood Sicilian and my mother's side is a combination of Welsh, Scottish, German and a few other European cultures. One of my more colorful (ahem black sheep) family members came over on the Mayflower. He was among the first to be hanged in the New World for a criminal offense he made while onboard the ship.