Lucy Saroyan

Lucy Saroyan (January 17, 1946 April 11, 2003) was an American actress and photographer.

Lucy Saroyan
BornJanuary 17, 1946
DiedApril 11, 2003(2003-04-11) (aged 57)
Years active1968 - 1980

Life and career

Saroyan was born in San Francisco, California, the daughter of the writer William Saroyan and the actress Carol Grace. Her brother is writer Aram Saroyan. Lucy attended the Dalton School in New York, her mother's alma mater, where Carol solidified her lifelong friendships with Gloria Vanderbilt and Oona O'Neill. She spent her adolescent summers at a horse camp in Montana. Following her parents' second divorce, her mother married the actor Walter Matthau[1] and Lucy later worked alongside her stepfather in a number of his films. She also played small parts on Broadway, off-Broadway,[2] and on TV, in addition to working as a film library archivist. Her most notable film role was in Paul Schrader's 1978 film Blue Collar, in which she played Harvey Keitel's wife. She dated comic legend and Blue Collar co-star Richard Pryor during this time.

The first exhibit of Lucy Saroyan's posthumously discovered portraits of A-List Hollywood and New York entertainment figures of the 1970s and 1980s opened at the Craig Krull Gallery in Santa Monica on January 16, 2010. Her portrait of Dennis Hopper was included in the 2009 retrospective exhibit of Hopper's own photography in Paris and Australia.

She died in Thousand Oaks, California, on April 11, 2003, at the age of 57 from cirrhosis of the liver caused by hepatitis C.[1] Her mother died later the same year.

Lucy Saroyan's personal papers, including dozens of letters and postcards to and from her father from early childhood until their eventual estrangement, are now archived in the Fresno County Public Library. The collection also comprises hundreds of personal snapshots of Lucy and her entertainment industry friends and acquaintances, and contact sheets from Lucy's early professional modeling sessions. Notable among the latter are portraits of Lucy and her brother Aram as children, and of Lucy as a young woman by Richard Avedon.

Filmography

References

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