
OneWoman Show Exemplifies Womens Lives
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By: Mary Matthews
Community Writer
Photo Courtesy of:
Linda Adams
Photo Description:
Actress Lee Meriwether performed a one-woman show at the San Bernardino Library, acting as various women of Spoon River, based off of Edgar Lee Masters's 1915 Spoon River Anthology.
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San Bernardino got a front-row seat to a one-woman show this week.
Actress Lee Meriwether performed "The Women of Spoon River: Their Voices from the Hill" at the Fedlheym library the evening of April 7.
Published in 1915, Edgar Lee Masters’s Spoon River Anthology is a collection of epitaph poems describing the lives of the inhabitants of the fictional small town of Spoon River, Illinois and includes 212 separate characters providing accounts of their lives, losses and deaths.
In 1962, Charles Aidman adapted Spoon River Anthology for the stage. This production premiered in Los Angeles and starred Betty Garrett, Joyce Van Patten, and Naomi Caryl in the three female roles. Understudying Garrett, Van Patten and Caryl was Lee Meriwether.
The show then had a successful run on Broadway and has since been produced thousands of times around the world.
In 2002, Theatre West revived the show for its 40th anniversary, directed by Garrett and Van Patten. This time, however, Meriwether, the one-time understudy, now appeared in the role originated by Garrett.
Having an affinity for the show and the women of Spoon River, Meriwether often felt that Masters had given short shrift to the female residents of his fictional town.
Of the over 200 characters in the collection, only a handful were women.
Seeing an opportunity to give these women their due, as well as to provide a challenge for herself as an actress, Meriwether set about adapting Masters's work, extracting nearly all of the female characters.
Later, together with writer/actor/director Jim Hesselman, Meriwether discovered that by performing them in a particular order she could create not only personal accounts of the women as individuals, but also depict an overall picture of the life of women in general — both in terms of a particular period and place, but also in universal and eternal terms.
Meriwether was successively: Miss San Francisco, Miss California and Miss America. Though most know Meriwether as “Betty” in the highly successful CBS series, Barnaby Jones — for which she was nominated for both the Golden Globe and the Emmy — or as "Catwoman" in the 1966 Batman movie with Adam West, Meriwether has had starring or recurring roles in no less than nine series, ranging from the first women’s editor with Dave Garroway on the original Today Show on NBC to her three-year run as Lily on The Munsters Today for Universal.
Some of Meriwether’s successful series include: Time Tunnel, The New Andy Griffith Show, Mission:
Impossible, The F.B.I., 12 O’clock High, and Dr. Kildare.
Meriwether studied acting with the famed teacher Lee Strasburg, as well as dancing, singing, and fencing with some of the top coaches in New York.
In addition to portraying “Catwoman,” her noteworthy film roles include Andy Griffith’s pregnant wife in Angel in My Pocket, and Rock Hudson’s southern wife in The Undefeated. Meriwether “swam” with Namu, The Killer Whale and played the “man” killed by Kim Novak in The Legend of Lylah Clare.
Live theatre, however, continues to be her first love.
Attesting to that fact is her long association with Theatre West, a professional actors’ workshop in Hollywood.
Recent national stage credits include: the female version of The Odd Couple, Last Summer at Blue Fish Cove (for which she received the Drama Logue Award for Best Actress as well as the San Francisco Critics Award), The Business of Murder with Van Johnson, Sondheim’s Follies with seven former Miss Americas, a national tour with Anthony Zerbe and Roy Dotrice of Country Matters (Sex and Shakespeare!) and most recently productions of the musicals Hello Dolly; Mame; The King and I with George Chakiris; I Do, I Do; A Little Night Music with her husband, Marshall Borden, and the 20th Anniversary tour of Dan Goggin’s Nunsense with Kaye Ballard, Mimi Hines, Georgia Engel and Darlene Love.
Her free performance was followed by a Q & A and attendees had the opportunity to purchase photographs autographed by Meriwether. Proceeds will benefit Ability First, serving children and adults with special needs, at its Camp Paivika in the San Bernardino Mountains.