• Comedian Phyllis Diller Dies at 95


    LOS ANGELES (CNS) – Comedian Phyllis Diller, whose wild hair, trademark
    laugh and mix of bawdy and self-deprecating humor made her a variety show and
    nightclub favorite, died today in Los Angeles at age 95.

    Diller died at 9:30 a.m. at her home, according to her longtime manager
    Milt Suchin.

    “The world has lost a true trailblazer, a gracious and classy woman who
    blazed the way for all other female comics,” Suchin told City News Service.

    “She was a very special, special lady, very supportive of young comics.”

    A cause of death was not immediately released. Suchin said Diller had
    recently injured her wrist and was recuperating at home.

    She was found by her son Perry, “with a smile on her face,” Suchin said.
    Diller suffered a near-fatal heart attack in 1999. She told
    “Entertainment Tonight” at the time that she had considered suicide.

    “Yes, I would have (committed suicide),” she said. “But see, when you
    want to and you can’t move, there isn’t anything you can do about it. There
    isn’t anything around here that I could use for suicide.

    “I’m terribly glad that I didn’t do it because I will be working again
    … I’ll be around to watch my grandchildren. I love to work, you see. I got
    new jokes.”

    Born Phyllis Ada Driver, the comic didn’t start her show biz career
    until the age of 37.

    At the time, she was a working housewife and a mother of five, employed
    as a publicist, newspaper writer and columnist at a San Francisco radio
    station.

    Urged by her husband, Sherwood Diller, she prepared a nightclub act and
    was booked into San Francisco’s Purple Onion.

    She slithered around the piano, lampooned current celebrities,
    brandished a cigarette holder and made fun of high fashion. Originally booked
    for two weeks, Diller’s act received such rave reviews that it was extended for
    almost two years.

    Combining wild costumes, untamed hair and a raucous laugh with self-
    deprecating monologues, she won national acclaim with her mid-1960s television
    routines featuring “Fang,” her imaginary husband.

    In addition to television, film and stage work, Diller made five
    records, wrote four best-selling books and has performed on piano with more
    than 100 symphony orchestras.

    Although she largely retired about 10 years ago, Diller would still show
    up in bit parts, including lending her distinctive voice to the animated Fox
    comedy “Family Guy.”

    “I adored her,” singer Barbra Streisand said of Diller. “She was a
    wondrous spirit who was great to me.”

    Comedian Bob Newhart also hailed Diller as a trailblazer who had a
    unique style that will never be repeated.

    “The thing that strikes me most about Phyllis, aside from a joy to be
    around, was her uniqueness,” Newhart said. “There was no one like Phyllis
    before, and I doubt if there will be anyone after.’

    Funeral services were expected to be private.

    1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)

    Loading ... Loading …

    Comments are closed

     
  • New UCLA head basketball coach Steve Alford apologized today for repeatedly defending one of his players at the University of Iowa in 2002 when the sophomore star was arrested and charged with sexual assault....
    The Gold Line Foothill Extension Construction Authority board of directors recently awarded a $48.7 million design-build contract to Webcor Builders for the intermodal parking facilities and enhancements project....
    “Flamingo Flocking has begun! Flocking is a tradition in San Marino to support Grad Night and help raise funds to make a night for seniors to remember. Residents wake up to a Flock of Flamingos in their yard. With a donation to Grad Night, the fl...
    SAN GABRIEL VALLEY – One day before Southern Californians celebrated Earth Day, they joined together to give their cars a rest to celebrate CicLAvia. What is or was CicLAvia? It’s not just thousands upon thousands of bicyclists pedaling fro...
    Much of Southern California was under a red flag warning today — signifying what the National Weather Service calls “an extremely high fire danger” — as strong Santa Ana winds swept the region, temperatures soared and humidity l...