Blythe Katherine Danner (born February 3, 1943) is an American actress. She is the mother of actress Gwyneth Paltrow and director Jake Paltrow.
Early life
Danner was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the daughter of Katharine and Harry Earl Danner, a bank executive.She has a brother, opera singer/actor Harry Danner, a sister, former performer turned director Dorothy (Dottie) Danner, and a half brother, violin maker William Moennig. Danner is of Pennsylvania Dutch ancestry.She attended George School, a private Quaker secondary school in Newtown, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and Bard College, where she graduated in 1965.
Career
Danner first appeared on stage with the Theater Company of Boston and the Trinity Square Repertory Company (now Trinity Repertory Company) in Providence, Rhode Island. She first gained national attention at age 25 by winning the Theatre World Award for her performance in the Lincoln Center Rep's production of The Miser. In 1970, she appeared in her first film role, in a television production of Dr. Cook's Garden. She was the toast of Broadway when she created the adorable ingenue in Butterflies are Free for which she won a Tony Award in 1970 (a role Goldie Hawn played in the film).
In 1972, Danner portrayed Martha Jefferson in the movie version of 1776. Also that same year, she played a jilted wife opposite Peter Falkand John Cassavetes in the Columbo episode "Etude in Black".
Her earliest starring film role was opposite Alan Alda in To Kill a Clown (1972). Not by coincidence, Danner appeared in the episode ofM*A*S*H entitled The More I See You, playing the love interest of Alda's character Hawkeye. She played the role of Zelda Fitzgerald in The Last of the Belles (1974). She was the eponymous heroine in the film Lovin' Molly (1974) (directed by Sidney Lumet). She appeared inFutureworld playing Tracy Ballard with co-star Peter Fonda (1976). In the film version of Neil Simon's semi-autobiographical play Brighton Beach Memoirs (1986), she portrayed a middle-aged Jewish mother, and in the 1982 TV movie Inside the Third Reich, she played the wife ofAlbert Speer. She has appeared in two films based on the novels of Pat Conroy, The Great Santini (1979) and The Prince of Tides (1991), as well as two television movies adapted from books by Anne Tyler, Saint Maybe and Back When We Were Grownups, both for the Hallmark Hall of Fame.
Danner is more recently known for her role opposite Robert De Niro in the 2000 comedy hit Meet the Parents, and its sequels, Meet the Fockers and Little Fockers.
From 2001 to 2006, she regularly appeared on Will & Grace as Will Truman's mother Marilyn. From 2004 to 2006, she starred in the TV series Huff. In 2005, she was nominated for three Emmy Awards: for her work on Will & Grace, Huff and Back When We Were Grownups. Emmy host Ellen DeGeneres poked fun at Blythe Danner during the award ceremony, saying that Danner should not be nervous because she was almost certain to win at least one Emmy, which she did, for Huff. In July 2006, she won a second consecutive Emmy award for Huff. For 25 years, she has been a regular performer at the Williamstown Summer Theater Festival, where she also serves on the Board of Directors.
In 2006, Danner was awarded an inaugural Katharine Hepburn Medal, alongside fellow honoree Lauren Bacall, which recognizes "women whose lives, work and contributions embody the intelligence, drive and independence of the four-time-Oscar-winning actress," by Bryn Mawr College's Katharine Houghton Hepburn Center.
Environmental activism
In addition to her acting work, Blythe Danner has been involved in environmental issues such as recycling and conservation for over 30 years. She has been active with INFORM, Inc., is on the Board of Environmental Advocates of New York and the Board of Directors of theEnvironmental Media Association, and won the 2002 EMA Board of Directors Ongoing Commitment Award. She was instrumental in implementing curbside recycling in Santa Monica and in retaining the New York City recycling program despite threatened budget cuts in 1991[citation needed]. In 2002 Danner, her husband Bruce Paltrow, and her daughter Gwyneth Paltrow worked together on a series of public service announcements encouraging use of alternative energy sources and alternative fuel vehicles.
Health care activism
After the passing of her husband Bruce Paltrow to oral cancer, she became involved with the Oral Cancer Foundation, a national 501(c)3 non profit charity. In 2005 she filmed a public service announcement that played on TV stations around the country about the risks associated with oral cancer, and through that shared the personal pain associated with the loss of her husband publicly to further awareness of the disease and the need for early detection. She continues to donate her time to the foundation, and has appeared on morning talk shows, and has done interviews in high profile magazines such as People to further public awareness of the disease and its risk factors. Through The Bruce Paltrow Oral Cancer Fund, administered by the Oral Cancer Foundation, she continues to raise awareness and funding for oral cancer issues, particularly those involving communities in which disparities in health care exist.
Personal life
Danner is the widow of producer/director Bruce Paltrow, who died from complications of pneumonia while battling oral cancer in 2002, and the mother of actress Gwyneth Paltrow and director Jake Paltrow. Danner first co-starred with her daughter in 1992 in the TV movie Cruel Doubtand then again in the 2003 film Sylvia, playing mother to Gwyneth Paltrow's titular character.
She is also the aunt of actresses Hillary Danner and Katherine Moennig and is sister-in-law (through brother Harry) of opera director Dorothy Danner.
Additionally, she is mother-in-law to Coldplay front man Chris Martin, who married Gwyneth in 2003, and is grandmother to their two children: Apple Blythe Alison Martin and Moses Bruce Anthony Martin.
Although she has worked frequently on TV and on stage, Danner put her film career on hold for a number of years to raise her children. Danner often said the proudest night of her life was when Gwyneth won an Academy Award for Best Actress (for Shakespeare in Love) and Danner was the first person her daughter thanked, tearfully, followed by her father and grandfather.
Awards
- Emmy Awards
- Tony Awards
- 1970 Butterflies Are Free
Filmography
- To Kill a Clown (1972)
- 1776 (1972)
- Lovin' Molly (1974)
- Hearts of the West (1975)
- Futureworld (1976)
- The Great Santini (1979)
- Man, Woman and Child (1983)
- Starring... the Actors (1984) (documentary)
- Brighton Beach Memoirs (1986)
- Another Woman (1988)
- Mr. and Mrs. Bridge (1990)
- Alice (1990)
- The Prince of Tides (1991)
- Husbands and Wives (1992)
- Napoleon (1995) (voice)
- Homage (1995)
- To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar (1995)
- The Myth of Fingerprints (1997)
- Mad City (1997)
- The Farmhouse (video title: Eye of the Storm) (1998)
- The Proposition (1998)
- No Looking Back (1998)
- The X-Files (1998)
- Forces of Nature (1999)
- The Love Letter (1999)
- Things I Forgot to Remember (1999)
- Meet the Parents (2000)
- The Invisible Circus (2001)
- The Quality of Light (2003)
- Three Days of Rain (2003)
- Sylvia (2003)
- Howl's Moving Castle (2004) (voice in English dubbed version)
- Meet the Fockers (2004)
- Stolen (2006) (documentary)
- The Last Kiss (2006)
- The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2 (2008)
- Side by Each (2008)
- Waiting for Forever (2009)
- The Lightkeepers (2009)
- Little Fockers (2010)
- Paul (2011)
Television work
- George M! (1970)
- Dr. Cook's Garden (1971)
- Columbo: Etude in Black (1972)
- Adam's Rib (1973) (cancelled after 13 episodes)
- F. Scott Fitzgerald and The Last of the Belles (1974)
- Sidekicks (1974)
- M*A*S*H (1976)
- Eccentricities of a Nightingale (1976)
- A Love Affair: The Eleanor and Lou Gehrig Story (1978)
- Are You in the House Alone? (1978)
- Too Far to Go (1979)
- You Can't Take It with You (1979)
- Inside the Third Reich (1982) (miniseries)
- In Defense of Kids (1983)
- Helen Keller: The Miracle Continues (1984)
- Guilty Conscience (1985)
- Tattingers (1988 - 1989)
- Money, Power, Murder (1989)
- Judgment (1990)
- Never Forget (1991)
- Getting Up and Going Home (1992)
- Cruel Doubt (1992) (miniseries)
- Lincoln (1992) (miniseries) (voice only)
- Tracey Ullman Takes On New York (1993)
- Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All (1994) (miniseries)
- Leave of Absence (1994)
- The West (1996) (miniseries) (voice only)
- Thomas Jefferson (documentary) (voice only)
- A Call to Remember (1997)
- From the Earth to the Moon (1998) (narrator in episode 12)
- Saint Maybe (1998)
- Murder She Purred: A Mrs. Murphy Mystery (1998) (voice only)
- Mark Twain (2001) (documentary) (voice only)
- Will & Grace (recurring cast member from 2001 - 2006)
- We Were the Mulvaneys (2002)
- Presidio Med (2002 - 2003)
- Huff (2004 - 2006)
- Pretty/Handsome (2008) (unsold pilot)
- Medium episode "A Taste of Her Own Medicine" (2 March 2009)
Theater work
- The Glass Menagerie (1965) (Boston)
- The Service of Joseph Axminster (1965–1966) (Boston)
- The Way Out of the Way In (1965–1966) (Boston)
- The Knack (1965–1966) (Boston)
- The Infantry (1966) (Off Broadway)
- A Midsummer Night's Dream (1967) (Providence, Rhode Island)
- Three Sisters (1967) (Providence)
- Mata Hari (1967) (Washington DC, closed out of town before Broadway opening)
- Summertree (1968) (Off Broadway)
- Cyrano de Bergerac (April 25 - June 8, 1968) (Broadway)
- Up Eden (1968) (Off Broadway)
- Lovers (July 25 - November 30, 1968) (Broadway) (standby for Fionnuala Flanagan)
- Someone's Comin' Hungry (1969) (Off Broadway)
- The Miser (May 8 - June 21, 1969) (Broadway)
- Butterflies Are Free (October 21, 1969 - July 2, 1972) (Broadway)
- Major Barbara (1971) (Los Angeles)
- Twelfth Night (March 2 - April 8, 1972) (Broadway)
- The Seagull (1974) (Williamstown Theatre Festival)
- Ring Round the Moon (1975) (Williamstown Theatre Festival)
- The New York Idea (1977) (Brooklyn Academy of Music)
- Children of the Sun (1979) (Williamstown Theatre Festival)
- Betrayal (January 5 - May 31, 1980) (Broadway)
- The Philadelphia Story (November 14, 1980 - January 4, 1981) (Broadway)
- Blithe Spirit (March 31 - June 28, 1987) (Broadway)
- A Streetcar Named Desire (March 20 - May 22, 1988) (Broadway)
- Much Ado About Nothing (1988) (New York Shakespeare Festival)
- Love Letters (1989) (Off Broadway)
- Picnic (1991) (Williamstown Theatre Festival)
- The Seagull (1994) (Williamstown Theatre Festival)
- Sylvia (1995) (Off Broadway)
- Moonlight (1995–1996) (Off Broadway)
- The Deep Blue Sea (March 26 - May 10, 1998) (Broadway)
- Ancestral Voices (1999) (staged reading) (Off Broadway)
- Tonight (2000) (Williamstown Theatre Festival)
- Follies (April 5 - July 14, 2001) (Broadway)
- Little Murders (2001) (staged reading) (Off Broadway)
- Carousel (2002) (concert performance) (Carnegie Hall)
- The Chekhov Cycle (2002) (Williamstown Theatre Festival)
- All About Eve (2003) (staged reading) (Los Angeles)


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