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Jan Maxwell

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Occupation
  
Actress

Spouse
  
Robert Emmet Lunney

Years active
  
1994-present

Siblings
  
Richard Maxwell


Name
  
Jan Maxwell

Movies
  
Something Sweet

Role
  
Television actress

Children
  
Will Maxwell-Lunney

Jan Maxwell Stage Scenes Jan Maxwell The New York Times gt Theater

Born
  
November 20, 1956 (age 67) (
1956-11-20
)
Fargo, North Dakota, U.S.

Awards
  
Five time Tony nominee, Drama Desk Award, Lucille Lortel Award

Similar People
  
Bernadette Peters, Ron Raines, Danny Burstein, Anthony Giardina, Elaine Paige

American actress and singer Jan Maxwell Died at 61


Jan Maxwell (born November 20, 1956) is an American stage and television actress. She is a five-time Tony Award nominee and two-time Drama Desk Award winner.

Contents

Jan Maxwell Jan Maxwell Broadway Theatre Credits Photos Who39s Who

Maxwell made her Broadway debut in 1989, as an understudy in the musical City of Angels. She received her first Tony nomination in 2005 for the musical Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. Her other nominations were for Coram Boy in 2007, Lend Me a Tenor and The Royal Family both in 2010, and Follies in 2012. Her nominations in two separate categories in 2010, made her only the fourth actress to achieve two nominations in a single year. Her 2012 nomination for Follies made her only the second actress to receive a Tony nomination in all four acting categories. Her other Broadway credits include, Dancing at Lughnasa (1992), A Doll's House (1997), The Sound of Music (1998) and The Dinner Party (2001).

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Maxwell has appeared in films and television shows such as I Am Michael with James Franco, Neil LaBute's Billy and Billie (2014–15), The Divide (2014), The Good Wife (2014), and Gossip Girl (2009–2011). From 1994-2003, she appeared in four episodes of the NBC drama Law & Order, each time as a different character.

Jan Maxwell Jan Maxwell Pictures Photos amp Images Zimbio

Personal life

Jan Maxwell Jan Maxwell Biography Broadwaycom

She is the daughter of former First District Judge Ralph B. Maxwell (who served in North Dakota from 1967–1978) and Elizabeth Maxwell, a lawyer for the EPA. She attended West Fargo High School, West Fargo, North Dakota and Moorhead State University.

She is married to actor Robert Emmet Lunney, and they have a son, Will Maxwell-Lunney (born 1995).

Career

Maxwell made her Broadway debut as an understudy in the Cy Coleman – David Zippel musical City of Angels in 1989. She eventually took over the dual roles of Carla Haywood and Alaura Kingsley.

She appeared in Brian Friel's Dancing at Lughnasa in 1992, which won the Tony Award for Best Play. She replaced original cast member Brid Brennan in the role of Agnes. In 1997, she appeared in A Doll's House opposite Janet McTeer. In 1998, she played Elsa Schraeder in the first Broadway revival of Rodgers and Hammerstein's The Sound of Music. She then starred opposite John Ritter and Henry Winkler in Neil Simon's The Dinner Party in 2000 and in Sixteen Wounded in 2004 with Judd Hirsch and Martha Plimpton. On television during this time, between 1994 and 2003, she made four guest appearances in the long-running NBC crime drama Law & Order, each time as a different character

In 2005, she received a Tony Award nomination for Best Featured Actress in a Musical, for the role of Baroness Bomburst in the stage production of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. She also won the Drama Desk Award for this role. In 2006, she starred in Roundabout Theatre Company's Off-Broadway revival of Joe Orton's Entertaining Mr. Sloane for which she received a Drama Desk nomination for Best Actress. Also in 2006, she reunited with her Sound of Music co-star Richard Chamberlain in Hawaii Opera Theatre's production of Rodgers and Hammerstein's The King and I in Honolulu, Hawaii. In 2007, she starred as Mrs. Lynch in the Broadway production of Helen Edmundson's Coram Boy at the Imperial Theatre, for which she received her second Tony Award nomination, for Best Featured Actress in a Play, as well as another Drama Desk Award nomination for Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play.

Her off-Broadway and regional credits include performances in The Seagull at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in 1985, in House & Garden at the Manhattan Theatre Club in 2002, in A Bad Friend at the Newhouse Theater, Lincoln Center in 2003 and at Carnegie Hall in the Stephen Sondheim concert, Opening Doors, in 2004.

In 2008 she appeared Off-Broadway with the Potomac Theatre Project/NYC in Howard Barker's Scenes from an Execution and was nominated for a Drama Desk and NYITT award. In 2008, Maxwell appeared on Broadway in the Manhattan Theater Club production of To Be or Not to Be in the role of Maria Tura at the Friedman Theatre.

She appeared as Julie Cavendish in the Broadway revival of The Royal Family at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre in late 2009. For this role she won the 2010 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actress in a Play. Maxwell starred as Maria in the Broadway revival of Lend Me a Tenor, which began performances at the Music Box Theatre on March 11, 2010. She won the Outer Critics Circle Award as Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play for this role. Maxwell received two 2010 Tony Award nominations: one for her leading role in The Royal Family in 2009 and another for her featured role in Lend Me a Tenor in 2010. She is only the fourth actress to receive double nominations in a single year.

Maxwell played the role of Phyllis Rogers Stone in the Kennedy Center production of the Stephen Sondheim–James Goldman musical Follies, running from 7 May to 19 June 2011 at the Eisenhower Theater in Washington, DC. Her co-stars were Bernadette Peters, Elaine Paige, Ron Raines and Danny Burstein. She reprised her role in the Broadway limited engagement at the Marquis Theatre, which ran from August 7, 2011 (previews) through January 22, 2012. On October 29, after the Saturday matinee, Maxwell was hit by a minivan, suffering injuries to her arm and leg, fracturing her fibula. She missed the following two shows, but was back on Tuesday. Maxwell received Helen Hayes, Fred Astaire, Drama League, Outer Critics Circle, Drama Desk and Tony Award nominations for Best Leading Actress in a Musical for this role. The Tony nomination (her fifth) made her only the second actress to receive nominations in all four acting categories; the first was Angela Lansbury. In 2014, Audra McDonald became the third actress to achieve this. Maxwell reprised her role in this production's transfer to the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles, California from 3 May to 9 June 2012.

She appeared in the PTP/NYC (The Potomac Theatre Project) Off-Broadway production of the Howard Barker play Victory: Choices in Reaction, in a limited engagement in July 2011. In 2013, Maxwell played the role of Skinner in Howard Barker's The Castle, A Triumph with PTP/NYC at the Atlantic Theatre, Stage 2. She appeared in the Off-Broadway production of the Anthony Giardina play, The City of Conversation at the Lincoln Center Mitzi Newhouse Theater, from May 5, 2014 to July 26, 2014. She was nominated for the 2015 Lucille Lortel Award, Outstanding Actress in a Play, the 2015 Outer Critics Circle Award, Outstanding Actress in a Play, the 2015 Drama Desk Award, Best Actress in a Play and 2015 Drama League Award, Distinguished Performance Award. In an interview with Time Out New York in July 2016, Maxwell announced that she was retiring from theatre.

She is also a voice actress and has read several audio books, including Mary Higgins Clark's Two Little Girls in Blue and No Place Like Home.

Maxwell starred as a "scheming Senator" in the new CBS TV series BrainDead alongside Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Aaron Tveit and Tony Shalhoub, which aired from June to September 2016.

Filmography

Actress
2017
Madam Secretary (TV Series) as
Vice President Teresa Hurst
- Swept Away (2017) - Vice President Teresa Hurst
2017
Gotham (TV Series) as
Margaret Hearst
- Mad City: Ghosts (2017) - Margaret Hearst
2016
BrainDead (TV Series) as
Ella Pollack
- Talking Points Toward a Wholistic View of Activism in Government: Can the Top Rebel? (2016) - Ella Pollack
- The Path to War Part Two: The Impact of Propaganda on Congressional War Votes (2016) - Ella Pollack
- Taking on Water: How Leaks in D.C. Are Discovered and Patched (2016) - Ella Pollack
- The Path to War Part One: The Gathering Political Storm (2016) - Ella Pollack
- Notes Toward a Post-Reagan Theory of Party Alliance, Tribalist, and Loyalty: Past as Prologue (2016) - Ella Pollack
- Back to Work: A Behind-the-Scenes Look at Congress and How It Gets Things Done (and Often Doesn't) (2016) - Ella Pollack
- Wake Up Grassroots: The Nine Virtues of Participatory Democracy, and How We Can Keep America Great by Encouraging an Informed Electorate (2016) - Ella Pollack
- Goring Oxes: How You Can Survive the War on Government Through Five Easy Steps (2016) - Ella Pollack
- Playing Politics: Living Life in the Shadow of the Budget Showdown - A Critique (2016) - Ella Pollack
2015
Billy & Billie (TV Series) as
Candice
- Incesticide (2016) - Candice
- Smells Like Teen Spirit (2015) - Candice
- Lithium (2015) - Candice
- Territorial Pissings (2015) - Candice
- Endless, Nameless (2015) - Candice
- Breed (2015) - Candice
- In Bloom (2015) - Candice
2015
Left Behind (Short) as
Alison
2015
I Am Michael as
Coltry
2014
The Good Wife (TV Series) as
Camilla Vargas
- Old Spice (2014) - Camilla Vargas
- Shiny Objects (2014) - Camilla Vargas
2014
The Divide (TV Series) as
Maxine
- I Can't Go Back (2014) - Maxine
- I'm for Justice (2014) - Maxine
- Never Forget (2014) - Maxine
- Facts Are the Enemy (2014) - Maxine
- The Way Men Divide (2014) - Maxine
- No Such Thing as Justice (2014) - Maxine
2012
Dick Punch (TV Series) as
Mom
- Oops! Torture. (2012) - Mom
- A Fundamentalist Mormon Visits (2012) - Mom
- Stripper Break (2012) - Mom
- Deus Ex Mommymus (2012) - Mom
2009
Gossip Girl (TV Series) as
Headmistress Queller
- The Wrong Goodbye (2011) - Headmistress Queller
- The Goodbye Gossip Girl (2009) - Headmistress Queller
- The Age of Dissonance (2009) - Headmistress Queller
- Carrnal Knowledge (2009) - Headmistress Queller
- You've Got Yale! (2009) - Headmistress Queller
2009
One Life to Live (TV Series) as
Cindy
- The Waiting Is the Hardest Part (2009) - Cindy
- Mother Knows Bess (2009) - Cindy
- Hit Me with Your Best Shot (2009) - Cindy
- Found and Lost (2009) - Cindy
- Hope Is Alive (2009) - Cindy
2008
Grand Theft Auto IV (Video Game) as
The Crowd of Liberty City (voice)
2007
All My Children (TV Series) as
Judge Myatt
- Episode #1.9745 (2007) - Judge Myatt
- Episode #1.9744 (2007) - Judge Myatt
- Episode #1.9743 (2007) - Judge Myatt
1994
Law & Order (TV Series) as
Judge Ruth Alexander / Marian Reger / Mrs. Sarah Talbert / ...
- Floater (2003) - Judge Ruth Alexander
- Dissonance (2000) - Marian Reger
- Denial (1997) - Mrs. Sarah Talbert
- Second Opinion (1994) - Dr. Nancy Haas
2000
Something Sweet
1999
Miss Spider's Tea Party (Video Game)(voice)
Miscellaneous
2005
An Unfinished Life (adr loop group)
Self
2016
Nova (TV Series documentary) as
Self - Narrator
- Memory Hackers (2016) - Self - Narrator (voice)
2012
The 66th Annual Tony Awards (TV Special documentary) as
Self - Nominee
2010
Working in the Theatre (TV Series documentary) as
Self
- Equal Exchange: Actors 2010 (2010) - Self
2010
The 64th Annual Tony Awards (TV Special) as
Self - Nominee & Presenter
2007
The 61st Annual Tony Awards (TV Special) as
Self - Nominee
2005
The 59th Annual Tony Awards (TV Special) as
Self - Nominee
Archive Footage
2018
The 72nd Annual Tony Awards (TV Special) as
Self

References

Jan Maxwell Wikipedia


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