Sneha Girap (Editor)

Pamela Blair

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Pamela Blair


Role
  
Actress


Born
  
December 5, 1949 (age 74) (
1949-12-05
)

Occupation
  
Film, stage, television actress

Spouse
  
Don Scardino (m. 1984–1991)

Parents
  
Edgar Joseph Blair, Geraldine Marie Cummings

Nominations
  
Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical

Movies
  
Beavis and Butt‑Head Do Ameri, Annie, 21 Grams, Svengali, Before and After

Similar People
  
Wayne Cilento, April Haney, Lois de Banzie, Don Scardino, Robin Ignico

Lost In Japan - Pamela Blair


Pamela Blair (born December 5, 1949), known as Pam, is an American actress, singer, and dancer best known for originating the role of "Val" in the musical A Chorus Line and several appearances on American soap operas.

Contents

Don't look back in anger (acoustic) - Luke Baker & Pamela Blair.


Early life and career

Born in Bennington, Vermont, to Edgar Joseph and Geraldine Marie (Cummings) Blair; she was raised in a small town with her pony, Tonka. She studied dance, played sports, and dreamed of becoming a Radio City Rockette in order to meet her idols, The Beatles. At age 16, she moved to New York City to attend a private school, The National Academy of Ballet, in her senior year of high school. She later met a friend at a dance class who told her Michael Bennett was looking for dancers for Promises, Promises. Pam auditioned and was hired. Blair comments, "Whenever I don't seem to be getting anywhere in this business, I try to remember that I was once a chambermaid in a small motel in Vermont." She continued to build credits with Seesaw, another Michael Bennett production, and then landed the coveted role of "Curly's Wife", the only female role in the James Earl Jones Broadway revival of Of Mice and Men which later opened at the Kennedy Center to critical acclaim. She also appeared in Sugar, the stage musical version of the film Some Like It Hot, in which she played "Sugar Kane", a role made famous by Marilyn Monroe.

A Chorus Line and Broadway fame

In 1974, Blair was invited by Michael Bennett to participate in the workshops from which A Chorus Line was developed. The character of "Valerie Clark" was in large part, based on her own life, although the surgical enhancement came from another dancer. "Val was based on Mitzi Hamilton, who actually underwent surgery to enhance her figure, and Pam Blair, whose mixture of angelic appearance and ribald tongue entertained Bennett enormously". The angelic looking yet sexy Val has a foul mouth, and introduces the popular Broadway song "Dance: 10; Looks: 3" which tells the story of an unattractive yet talented girl who uses plastic surgery to help her get cast in roles. The song is also known by its chorus, "Tits and Ass". Val is one of the larger roles, and Blair received much attention. Along with the cast, Blair won the 1976 Theatre World Award for Ensemble Performance for the show.

She next originated the role of "Amber" (later "Angel") in 1978's The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas. Her turn as an eager to work prostitute earned her a Drama Desk Award nomination. She can be heard on the cast recording as the lead in Hard Candy Christmas, although the song "Bus from Amarillo" was taken from her before the show opened. Further roles on Broadway include King of Hearts (in the Genevieve Bujold role), "Clelia" in The Nerd, and "Joanne" in A Few Good Men, directed by her then estranged husband, Don Scardino.

Television, film, and later career

Blair has made several appearances on American soap operas such as Loving, Another World, Ryan's Hope, and All My Children, for which she received a Daytime Emmy nomination. She has guest starred on such shows as Law & Order, The Cosby Show, The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd, and Sabrina, the Teenage Witch. Blair guest starred in a Movie of The Week titled MANEATER for Lifetime. She appeared opposite Jodie Foster in the TV film Svengali and in feature films Mighty Aphrodite directed by Woody Allen, 21 Grams with Sean Penn and Benicio del Toro, Before and After with Meryl Streep and Liam Neeson and Annie as the maid Annette ("The silk, no the satin sheets, I think!").

Blair lived in California for a time, where she landed the role of Sabrina's mother on Sabrina, the Teenage Witch, although high profile on-camera success eluded her. However, she has continued to amass many regional and national credits, and still appears in sexually appealing roles such as "Heddi La Rue" in How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying. In 2006, she appeared in the lead role of Miss Mona with the Phoenix Theater's production of The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, directed by Michael Barnard. As noted above, Blair was in the original cast of the musical.

She married actor and director, Don Scardino in 1984, and they divorced in 1991. She lived in Northern New Jersey for a time, and now resides in Arizona where she owns her own Therapeutic and Myofascial Massage Studio for athletes.

Awards

  • 1976 Theatre World Special Award
  • A Chorus Line (winner) (for Ensemble Performance )
  • 1978 Drama Desk Award Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical
  • The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas (nominee)
  • 1987 Daytime Emmy Outstanding Guest Performer in a Drama Series
  • All My Children (nominee)
  • Theater (Broadway)

  • A Few Good Men (1989) ....Lt. Cmdr. Joanne Galloway
  • The Nerd (1987) ....Clelia Waldgrave
  • King of Hearts (1978) ....Jeunefille
  • The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas (1978) ....Amber/Angel
  • A Chorus Line (1975) ....Val
  • Of Mice and Men (1974) ....Curley's Wife
  • Seesaw (1973) ....Ensemble
  • Sugar (1972) ....Ensemble, later Sugar Kane
  • Wild and Wonderful (1971)....Ensemble
  • Promises, Promises (1968)....Ensemble
  • Filmography

    Actress
    2009
    Maneater (TV Mini Series) as
    Cinnamon Mason
    - Part 1 (2009) - Cinnamon Mason (as Pam Blair)
    2003
    21 Grams as
    Doctor
    2000
    The Last Dance (TV Movie) as
    Dance Teacher
    1999
    Angelo (Video short) as
    Mother
    1998
    Sabrina the Teenage Witch (TV Series) as
    Sabrina's Mom
    - Mom vs. Magic (1998) - Sabrina's Mom (as Pam Blair)
    1996
    Beavis and Butt-Head Do America as
    Flight Attendant / White House Tour Guide (voice)
    1996
    Before and After as
    Dr. Ryan's Assistant
    1995
    Mighty Aphrodite as
    Greek Chorus
    1994
    The Cosby Mysteries (TV Series) as
    Julianne
    - One Day at a Time (1994) - Julianne
    1994
    Another World (TV Series) as
    Bonnie Broderick
    - Episode dated 4 March 1994 (1994) - Bonnie Broderick
    - Episode dated 1 March 1994 (1994) - Bonnie Broderick
    - Episode #1.7544 (1994) - Bonnie Broderick
    - Episode #1.7530 (1994) - Bonnie Broderick
    1994
    Law & Order (TV Series) as
    Aileen Wojak
    - Kids (1994) - Aileen Wojak
    1985
    All My Children (TV Series) as
    Mrs. Goodman / Maida Andrews
    - Episode #1.5924 (1992) - Mrs. Goodman
    - Episode #1.5922 (1992) - Mrs. Goodman (credit only)
    - Episode #1.4403 (1986)
    - Episode dated 19 September 1985 (1985) - Maida Andrews
    1992
    Me and Veronica as
    Dawn
    1989
    The Cosby Show (TV Series) as
    Karen
    - Day of the Locusts (1989) - Karen
    - Birthday Blues (1989) - Karen
    1989
    The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd (TV Series) as
    Alison
    - Here's Why You Order from the Spanish Side of the Menu (1989) - Alison
    1983
    Loving (TV Series) as
    Rita Mae Bristow
    - Episode dated 24 May 1985 (1985) - Rita Mae Bristow
    - Episode #1.4 (1983) - Rita Mae Bristow
    - Episode #1.3 (1983) - Rita Mae Bristow
    - Pilot (1983) - Rita Mae Bristow
    1983
    Svengali (TV Movie) as
    Trish
    1982
    Annie as
    Annette (as Pam Blair)
    1980
    Ryan's Hope (TV Series) as
    Elizabeth Shrank Ryan
    - Episode #1.1356 (1980) - Elizabeth Shrank Ryan
    - Episode #1.1355 (1980) - Elizabeth Shrank Ryan
    - Episode #1.1329 (1980) - Elizabeth Shrank Ryan
    - Episode #1.1324 (1980) - Elizabeth Shrank Ryan
    - Episode #1.1322 (1980) - Elizabeth Shrank Ryan
    - Episode #1.1308 (1980) - Elizabeth Shrank Ryan
    - Episode #1.1306 (1980) - Elizabeth Shrank Ryan
    - Episode #1.1302 (1980) - Elizabeth Shrank Ryan
    - Episode #1.1301 (1980) - Elizabeth Shrank Ryan
    Soundtrack
    1990
    Donahue (TV Series) (performer - 1 episode)
    - Episode dated 26 March 1990 (1990) - (performer: "Dance: Ten; Looks: Three")
    1982
    Annie (performer: "I Think I'm Gonna Like It Here", "We Got Annie", "Finale Medley: I Don't Need Anything But You/We Got Annie/Tomorrow" - uncredited)
    Self
    2021
    Broadway: Beyond the Golden Age (Documentary) as
    Self
    1990
    Donahue (TV Series) as
    Self - Guest
    - Episode dated 26 March 1990 (1990) - Self - Guest
    1985
    Family Feud (TV Series) as
    Self - Celebrity Contestant / Self - Celebrity Constestant
    - Guys and Dolls Special: Game 5 (1985) - Self - Celebrity Constestant
    - Guys and Dolls Special: Game 4 (1985) - Self - Celebrity Contestant
    - Guys and Dolls Special: Game 3 (1985) - Self - Celebrity Contestant
    - Guys and Dolls Special: Game 2 (1985) - Self - Celebrity Contestant
    - Guys and Dolls Special: Game 1 (1985) - Self - Celebrity Contestant

    References

    Pamela Blair Wikipedia