Deaf West Theatre hosts a memorial to celebrate the life and career of Tony Award-winning actress and deaf activist Phyllis Frelich tonight, Oct. 20 at 8 p.m. at the Mark Taper Forum. Ms. Frelich, who was deaf, passed away from progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) in April. She was 70.
"Phyllis was a beloved figure within the deaf community, and it felt appropriate that we host a service," said Deaf West Theatre artistic director David J. Kurs. "She starred in our inaugural production of The Gin Game in 1990 and figured in our productions numerous times over the years. In addition to her many starring roles, she directed, taught acting, and was for many years an activist for equal access for all deaf performers." Ms. Frelich is perhaps best remembered for her groundbreaking role as a deaf woman in a relationship with a hearing man in Children of a Lesser God by Mark Medoff. Inspired by Ms. Frelich's real-life marriage to scenic designer Robert Steinberg, the play received the 1980 Tony Award for Best Play, and Ms. Frelich and co-star John Rubinstein captured Tonys for Best Actress and Best Actor respectively. Her other roles included a high-strung playwright in The Hands of Its Enemy, and an anthropologist who befriends a gorilla she has taught to sign in the Broadway production of Prymate - both parts written for her by Medoff. In 2003, she appeared on Broadway in Deaf West Theatre's Tony Award-winning revival of Big River. On screen, she starred with Mare Winningham and Ed Waterstreet in the 1985 television movie Love Is Never Silent, the story of deaf parents of a daughter who can hear, and she had a recurring role on Santa Barbara. She guest starred on numerous series, including Barney Miller, L.A. Law, ER, and, most recently, on CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.Videos