LOS ANGELES (AP) — Judy Tenuta, a brash standup who cheekily styled herself because the “Goddess of Love” and toured with George Carlin as she built her career in the 1980s golden age of comedy, died Thursday. She was 72.
Tenuta died Thursday afternoon at home in Los Angeles, with her family around her, publicist Roger Neal told The Associated Press. The cause of death was ovarian cancer.
“She was a very funny, amazing performer,” Neal mentioned, and it was all the time a “pleased time to be round her.”
Tenuta had claimed her birthdate as Nov. 7, 1965, but she was born in 1949, Neal said. “She was old school so she would never tell her real age but now that she’s gone we can tell her real age,” he added.
Her heart-shaped face, topped by bouffant hair with a flower accent, conveyed an impression of sweet innocence that was quickly shattered by her loud, gravelly delivery and acidic humor, expletives included. The accordion she made part of her act was “an instrument of love and submission,” as she fondly called it.
She was among a generation of performers who drove the popularity of live comedy in clubs nationwide including the Comedy Store in Los Angeles, Laff Stop in Houston and Caroline’s in New York City. A typically male-dominated field found room for women, including Tenuta.
Tenuta gained national attention in 1987 with “On Location: Women of the Night,” a HBO special in which she starred with Ellen DeGeneres, Paula Poundstone and Rita Rudner.
In 1988′s “American Comedy Awards” TV special, Tenuta was named best female comedy club performer opposite male winner Jerry Seinfeld. Other honorees that year for their club or screen work included Robin Williams, Lily Tomlin and Bette Midler.
“I would trade it in a minute, if I could just be a wife and mother,” wisecracked the gold lame-wrapped, gum-chewing Tenuta, who accepted her award from Carlin.
She was a frequent guest on late-night talk shows and game shows and with radio shock jock Howard Stern. Her acting and voiceover credits were eclectic, including appearances on “The Weird Al Show” and “Space Ghost Coast to Coast.” She appeared onstage in “The Vagina Monologues” in Los Angeles and Chicago.
Tenuta grew up within the Chicago suburb of Maywood, attending Catholic colleges that included one she dubbed “St. Obnoxious and Bondage.” She mentioned she was the “isolated, petite flower” — Petite Flower turning into one of her stage nicknames — in a Catholic household that included six brothers.
After graduating faculty, she labored at odd jobs that included wrapping meat and taking stock at an outlet for Catholic non secular apparel.
“I got fired because they caught me trying the stuff on,” Tenuta mentioned a 1989 interview with The Associated Press. “So the boss came in, and I guess he got kind of upset. And I said, ‘Well, I have to see if they look good, pig. I’m trying to make improvements for these broads.”’
Tenuta went on to hitch the Chicago comedy troupe Second City earlier than beginning her solo standup profession. Despite her outlandish garments and weird stage look, Tenuta mentioned most individuals caught on instantly to her act, which included the self-centered faith she referred to as “Judy-ism.”
“In my religion, I’m the only one that gets to complain. The really nice thing about my religion is you can forget all about your problems and think about mine for a while,” she instructed AP.
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Associated Press journalist Mallika Sen contributed to this report from New York.
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This story has been up to date to appropriate Tenuta’s age to 72.
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