Lily Tomlin

Lily Tomlin

  • Born: 1939-9-1
  • Birthplace: Detroit, Michigan
  • Height: 5' 5½" (1.66 m)
  • Profession: actor
  • Nationality: America
  • Representative Works: Grease Love, Nine to Five, Shrinking Wife
  • Lily Tomlin (Lily Tomlin), born on September 1, 1939 in Detroit, Michigan, is an actor.
    In 1969, he joined the crew of the TV series "Laugh and Smile", and his unique acting skills soon won wide acclaim and his reputation gradually gained. In 1975 and 1977, she won the New York Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actress for her films " Nashville " and "Cats and Detectives" respectively. Other major films include "Greasy Love", " Nine to Five ", "Shrunken Wife" and so on.

    Personal Life

    In 2013, he married Jane Wagner, a same-sex partner who has been in love for 42 years   .
    Extended Reading
    • Genesis 2022-07-07 15:56:52

      Vito Russo

      Five stars for Vito Russo's (1946-1990) seminal research and the century-old history of social change depicted in the film.

      The Celluloid Closet reveals how queers are represented in Hollywood films. They lived in shadows, stood for being bullied, and most often ended up dying as punishment for...

    • Declan 2022-07-07 17:22:50

      Staged Development Summary

      From the two men dancing in Edison's experimental short film in 1895 to the birth of this documentary in 1995, the period is the history of the development of Hollywood gay films spanning a hundred years. Interview the filmmaker to record the image of gays on the screen, and make a pertinent...

    The Celluloid Closet quotes

    • Shirley MacLaine: None of us were really aware. We might have been forerunners, but we weren't really, because we didn't do the picture right. We were in the mindset of not understanding what we were basically doing. These days, there would be a tremendous outcry, as well there should be. Why would Martha break down and say, "Oh my god, what's wrong with me, I'm so polluted, I've ruined you." She would fight! She would fight for her budding preference. And when you look at it, to have Martha play that scene - and no one questioned it - what that meant, or what the alternatives could have been underneath the dialog, it's mind boggling. The profundity of this subject was not in the lexicon of our rehearsal period. Audrey and I never talked about this. Isn't that amazing? Truly amazing.

    • Susan Sarandon: Oh, movies are important and they're dangerous because we're the keeper of the dreams. You go into a little dark room and become incredibly vulnerable - on one hand all your perspectives can be challenged, you could feel something you couldn't feel normally. It can encourage you to be the protagonist in your own life. On the other hand it can completely misshape you.