Thompson, Sada (b. 1929), actress. She was born in Des Moines, Iowa, and studied theatre at Carnegie Tech before making her professional debut in 1947 in Massachusetts. Thompson first acted in New York in an Off‐Broadway revival of Under Milkwood (1953), followed by many other roles in various Manhattan venues. She was praised for her Emilia in Othello (1964) and Dorine in Tartuffe (1965) but didn't become a name in New York until 1970, with her chilling performance as the bitter Beatrice in The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man‐in‐the‐Moon Marigolds. Thompson was similarly lauded for playing three very different sisters and their mother in Twigs (1971). Much of the rest of her long career has been in regional theatre.
Career Highlights: Our Town, The Entertainer, The Patron Saint of Liars
First Major Screen Credit: The Entertainer (1975)
Biography
Born in Des Moines, Sada Thompson grew up in New Jersey, where her magazine-editor father had been transferred. Active in high school plays, she was all of 16 when she first appeared at the Carnegie Institute of Technology, playing Nick's Ma in a campus production of The Time of Your Life. Graduating from Carnegie with a BFA in 1949, Thompson launched her professional career, playing mature and sometimes elderly women at a time when she herself was barely old enough to vote. While working at New York's 92nd Street YMHA, a Jewish cultural center, she participated in the first-ever reading of Dylan Thomas' Under Milk Wood, which led to her off-Broadway debut in the 1955 staging of that same piece. She spent the next decade in regional theatre, returning to New York for her first real breakthrough performance in the Lincoln Center's production of Tartuffe. A few years later, Thompson won an Obie Award for her work in Paul Zindel's The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds, and in 1971 she copped the Tony award for her interpretation of four different women in the Broadway production Twigs. On the strength of this success, she was signed to play the Bunker Family's free-spirited neighbor Irene Lorenzo on All in the Family. After a single taping session, it was obvious that Thompson and producer Norman Lear would never see eye to eye, and she was replaced by Betty Garrett (one unnamed source close to both sides of the argument later claimed that "Sada had too much genuine class and didn't yell loud enough for a Norman Lear show"). While she continued appearing in television specials like Our Town and The Entertainer and miniseries like Sandburg's Lincoln, Thompson would not consider a weekly program until she was personally asked by producer Mike Nichols to play Kate Lawrence on his seriocomic series Family. She remained with Family until its cancellation in 1980, winning a 1978 Emmy Award in the process. In films since 1961, Sada Thompson has not made a theatrical feature for nearly a quarter of a century, but has continued to occasionally co-star in such made-for-TV films as 1985's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Thompson has been married to Donald E. Stewart since December 18, 1949. [1] They have three daughters, actresses Hilary Thompson and Victoria Thompson and costume designer Liza Stewart.