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Shelley Plimpton
Shelley Plimpton
from Wikipedia

Shelley Plimpton (born February 27, 1947) is an American former actress and Broadway performer. She is perhaps best known for originating the role of Crissy in the off-Broadway production of Hair, a role she resumed when the production moved to Broadway in 1968. She is the mother of actress Martha Plimpton.[1]

Key Information

Early life

[edit]

Plimpton was born and raised in Roseburg, Oregon,[2] to an Episcopalian family.[3] Her father, William Sherman Plimpton, a native of Portland and graduate of the University of Washington, operated an auto parts store in Roseburg,[4] while her mother worked as a medical researcher.[3] She had one brother, Sherman Jr.[4] She is a "very distant" cousin of writer George Plimpton.[3] Her parents divorced when she was five years old,[3] and her father died of cancer, aged 50, when Plimpton was twelve years old.[5]

When Plimpton was fourteen, she relocated with her mother from Roseburg to New York City, where her mother took a job working as a researcher for a Manhattan fertility doctor.[3] She and her mother moved into an apartment in Greenwich Village, and Plimpton attended Washington Irving High School in Gramercy Park, Manhattan.[3] After graduating, she worked as a cashier in a nightclub.[3]

Career

[edit]

Plimpton's acting career spanned from the mid-1960s to the late-1980s. She created the role of "Crissy" in the original 1967 Off-Broadway production of Hair, and continued the role as a member of the original Broadway cast when the production moved to Broadway in 1968.[3][1]In both productions, she sang the song "Frank Mills". Plimpton took a leave of absence from Hair to appear in Arlo Guthrie's film Alice's Restaurant, playing a 14-year-old who offers herself to Arlo, saying that she has already "made it" with several other musicians and "you'll probably be an album some day." He gently rejects her advances, giving her his bandanna as a souvenir and saying simply, "I just don't want to catch your cold".[6] Plimpton also appeared in the 1969 Robert Downey Sr., film Putney Swope opposite Ronnie Dyson as one half of an interracial college couple ("It started last weekend at the Yale-Howard game") in a satire of a pimple cream TV spot.[3] In 1971, Plimpton appeared in Jim McBride's post-apocalyptic drama film, Glen and Randa, in which she portrays Randa, a young woman part of a group of scavengers who survived a nuclear apocalypse many years prior and sets off with her lover Glen (Steve Curry) to discover a ravaged world and to search for a city which Glen has seen in comic books. She worked with McBride once again when she was cast in the 1974 comedy film Hot Times. Her final film role was in the 1975 film Foreplay.

Plimpton made a brief return to acting in 1986 when she made a guest appearance on the short-lived television sitcom Throb, which starred Diana Canova, Paul Walker and Jane Leeves, after which she retired from acting.[7]

Personal life

[edit]

In 1970, Plimpton gave birth to Martha Plimpton (whose father is Keith Carradine)[1] in New York City, where she raised her in Manhattan's Upper West Side.[7] From 1970 to 1971, Plimpton was married to Steve Curry, the father of Susan Anspach's daughter.[8] From 1990 to 1997, she was married to theatre director Daniel J. Sullivan (who worked as an assistant director on Hair, and later directed the Seattle Repertory Theater).[7]

In 2002, it was reported that Plimpton was living in Seattle, Washington, working a day job at a gift center.[9] In September 2017, Vanity Fair reported that she resided in Oregon.[10]

Filmography

[edit]
Title Year Role Notes
1969
Face Off Girl
Directed by Robert Downey Sr.
1969
Reenie
Directed by Arthur Penn
Replay
1970
Unnamed role
Short film - directed by Robert Deubel
1971
Randa
Directed by Jim McBride
Hot Times
1974
Patsy
Directed by Jim McBride
Foreplay
1975
First Girl
Directed by John G. Avildsen, Bruce Malmuth, Robert McCarthy & Ralph Rosenblum
1986
Tammy
Season 1, Episode 3 – "Getting to Know You"

Stage credits

[edit]
Title Year Role Notes
Hair 1968–72 Crissy Broadway (The Biltmore Theatre)[11]

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Shelley Plimpton (born February 27, 1947) is a retired American actress and singer best known for originating the role of Crissy in the rock musical Hair. A native of Roseburg, Oregon, she began her career in theater during the late 1960s countercultural scene, performing in the off-Broadway production of Hair before transitioning to its Broadway run. Plimpton's brief film career included supporting roles in satirical comedies that captured the era's social upheavals, such as the title character's advertising pitchwoman in Robert Downey Sr.'s (1969) and a minor part in Arthur Penn's (1969). These appearances aligned with her stage work amid the protests and youth movements, though she largely withdrew from professional acting following the birth of her daughter, actress , with partner in 1970. Her marriages to actor Steve Curry (1970–1971) and director Daniel Sullivan (1990–1997) further marked personal transitions away from the spotlight.

Early Life

Family Background and Childhood

Shelley Plimpton was born on February 27, 1947, in Roseburg, Oregon. Her father operated an auto parts store in the town, where the family resided during her early years. She is a distant cousin of the writer George Plimpton. Her parents divorced when Plimpton was five years old. Her father died several years later, after which her mother remarried and relocated the family to New York City when Plimpton was fourteen. In New York, she attended the all-girls Washington Irving High School.

Move to New York and Initial Aspirations

Following the death of her father, Plimpton and her mother relocated from Roseburg, Oregon, to New York City in 1961, when Plimpton was 14 years old. Her mother, previously divorced from Plimpton's father since she was 5, had secured a position as a researcher, initially for a Manhattan fertility doctor. The family settled in a residential area of Greenwich Village on East 12th Street near Fifth Avenue, placing young Plimpton in proximity to the city's burgeoning countercultural and artistic hubs. Plimpton attended Washington Irving High School, an all-girls public school in Manhattan, graduating around 1965. Post-graduation, she sought entry into New York's nightlife and entertainment milieu by working as a cashier at the Night Owl Café, a Greenwich Village nightclub known for its association with folk music and emerging performers. This position exposed her to the creative undercurrents of the era, aligning with her nascent interest in performance; it was at the Night Owl that she caught the attention of Hair co-creators Gerome Ragni and James Rado, who tailored the role of Crissy for her based on her persona and presence. Though no prior formal training or auditions are documented, Plimpton's deliberate choice of employment in Village nightlife—rather than conventional paths—indicated early aspirations toward artistic involvement, capitalizing on New York's theater and music ecosystem as a launchpad for onstage opportunities. This serendipitous discovery propelled her professional debut in Hair's public preview runs in 1967, transitioning from observer in the scene to participant.

Acting Career

Broadway Breakthrough with Hair

Plimpton originated the role of Crissy, the naive and wistful hippie character, in the off-Broadway premiere of Hair at The Public Theater in late 1967, continuing in the part when the production transferred to Broadway at the Biltmore Theatre on April 29, 1968. As Crissy, she delivered the poignant solo "Frank Mills," recounting a chance encounter with a motorcycle-riding stranger, which showcased her ethereal stage presence and vocal fragility. The Hair Broadway production, directed by Tom O'Horgan with book and lyrics by Gerome Ragni and James Rado and music by Galt MacDermot, ran for 1,750 performances until July 1, 1972, amid controversy over its depictions of drug use, interracial coupling, flag desecration, and brief communal nudity in the "Where Do I Go?" finale. Plimpton, then 21 and weighing about 85 pounds, embodied the show's countercultural ethos as one of few original off-Broadway cast members retained through the transfer and much of the run, contributing to its raw authenticity. This role marked Plimpton's professional breakthrough, propelling her from regional theater and chorus work to national prominence in a musical that grossed over $80 million in its initial run and influenced subsequent productions worldwide. Her performance as , often highlighted for its vulnerability amid the ensemble's tribal , drew critical for capturing the era's youthful disillusionment without overt .

Film Appearances

Plimpton's film appearances were limited to five credits between 1969 and 1975, primarily in independent productions aligned with the countercultural milieu of her stage work in Hair. These roles often featured her in supporting or ensemble capacities, reflecting the era's experimental cinema. In 1969, she debuted on screen in Putney Swope, a satirical comedy directed by Robert Downey Sr. critiquing racism and corporate power, where she appeared as the Face Off Girl in a brief sequence. Later that year, Plimpton played Reenie in Alice's Restaurant, Arthur Penn's adaptation of Arlo Guthrie's Thanksgiving narrative, portraying a member of the hippie commune central to the film's anti-establishment themes. Her most substantial film role came in 1971 with Glen and Randa, Jim McBride's post-apocalyptic tale of societal collapse, in which she co-starred as Randa, a naive young woman scavenging with her partner in a devolved world; the film culminates in her character's death during childbirth. Plimpton collaborated again with McBride in 1974's Hot Times (released internationally as A Hard Day for Archie), a sex comedy, appearing as Patsy amid a road-trip plot involving youthful escapades. Her screen career concluded in 1975 with Foreplay, an anthology of three vignettes on sexual themes directed by a team including John G. Avildsen, in which she had a minor part as First Girl.

Television Roles

Plimpton's television acting credits were sparse, reflecting her primary focus on stage and film work during her active career. Her most notable scripted role came in 1986 with a guest appearance as Tammy on the ABC sitcom Throb, a short-lived series starring Diana Canova and Paul Lieber that ran for two seasons from September 1986 to May 1988. This appearance marked a brief return to performing after an extended hiatus following the birth of her daughter in 1970. She also made non-scripted television appearances, including as herself on talk shows such as The Mike Douglas Show (1961–1982) and The David Frost Show. These guest spots promoted her Broadway work in Hair but did not involve character portrayals. No further regular or recurring television roles are documented in her career.

Post-Hair Professional Trajectory and Retirement

Following the success of Hair, Plimpton secured roles in films including Putney Swope (1969) and Alice's Restaurant (1969), alongside continued stage work such as The Me Nobody Knows (1970). By the mid-1970s, however, she experienced typecasting limitations, later describing herself as limited to "an angelic-looking hippie who can take off her bra." This contributed to her decision to largely exit theater, with her final production likely an experimental piece directed by Tom O'Horgan at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club, centered on Greek myths—though she could not recall its exact title in later reflections. Plimpton shifted focus to family responsibilities after the birth of her daughter, Martha, on November 16, 1970, amid personal transitions including the end of her relationship with Hair castmate Steve Curry. Relocating to Seattle, she embraced a domestic role as a housewife in her second marriage, supplemented by part-time volunteering three days a week in a Goodwill literacy program. In 1986, she briefly reentered acting with a guest appearance as Tammy on the sitcom Throb. Thereafter, Plimpton retired from , maintaining a private life without pursuing further opportunities. In a reflecting on Hair's 25th , she expressed no regrets, stating, "It seems right to me that I was in 'Hair'" and affirming contentment with her singular contribution to cultural history over sustained fame.

Personal Life

Romantic Relationships

Shelley Plimpton's first marriage was to fellow Hair cast member Steve Curry, with whom she performed a self-conducted ceremony in their apartment in February 1969, though the legal union is recorded from 1970 until their divorce in 1971. The marriage was brief and occurred amid the countercultural milieu of the Broadway production, where Curry also appeared as an actor. During her separation from Curry but while still legally married, Plimpton began a relationship with actor Keith Carradine, whom she met while co-starring in Hair in 1968; their romance, described as "fast and wonderful," lasted from 1969 to 1970 and resulted in the birth of their daughter, Martha Plimpton, on November 16, 1970. Plimpton and Carradine did not marry, though some accounts erroneously list her as his first wife; the relationship ended shortly after Martha's birth, with Carradine pursuing other partnerships thereafter. Plimpton's second marriage was to theater director Daniel J. Sullivan, from January 6, 1990, to August 20, 1997, when they divorced; Sullivan, known for directing Broadway productions, had no children with Plimpton. No further significant romantic relationships are publicly documented beyond these.

Motherhood and Family Dynamics

Shelley Plimpton gave birth to her only child, daughter Martha Plimpton, on November 16, 1970, in New York City; the father was actor Keith Carradine, with whom she had a brief romance while both performed in the original Broadway production of Hair. At the time of conception, Plimpton was separated from her then-husband, fellow Hair cast member Steve Curry, though their marriage continued briefly post-pregnancy before ending in divorce. Carradine, early in his career and based in California after leaving the show, expressed reservations about parenthood and did not initially assume a custodial role, leaving Plimpton to raise Martha primarily on her own in Manhattan's Upper West Side. Plimpton was five months pregnant when she concluded her run in Hair on September 13, 1970, balancing the demands of late-stage pregnancy with professional commitments in the countercultural production. In a contemporary profile, she described her household dynamics with Curry as conventionally domestic, with herself handling most cooking and cleaning, though this arrangement predated the full transition to single motherhood following Martha's birth and the marriage's dissolution. She later married theater director Daniel J. Sullivan, but no additional children resulted from this union, which also ended in divorce. Martha Plimpton has described a close, formative bond with her mother, identifying as "her mother's daughter" and attributing her own career focus and resilience—amid early modeling and acting opportunities—to Shelley's guidance and emphasis on personal priorities over fleeting fame. This maternal influence persisted despite Carradine's eventual involvement in Martha's life, including their professional reconciliation and co-starring roles decades later, such as in the 2016 film A Complete Unknown. Plimpton's approach to parenting reflected a deliberate shift toward family stability amid the instability of theater life, prioritizing her daughter's upbringing over sustained acting pursuits.

Cultural and Familial Legacy

Impact of Hair Role and Counterculture Context

Plimpton originated the role of , the youngest and most innocent member of the nomadic hippie "tribe" in Hair, during its off-Broadway premiere at on October 29, 1967, a character tailored to her long-haired, waif-like appearance and embodying the optimistic naivety of 1960s through the solo "," which recounts a fleeting interracial romance with a beatnik poet. Her portrayal contributed to the musical's authentic depiction of bohemian communal life in New York City's East Village, where the tribe rejects materialism and authority in favor of free love, draft resistance, and spiritual exploration, reflecting the broader hippie movement's ideals of personal liberation amid the Vietnam War era. The production's integration of full-frontal nudity, onstage drug references, and interracial interactions shocked audiences and censors, positioning Hair as a vanguard of the sexual revolution and anti-war activism, with Plimpton's sustained performance—spanning from the off-Broadway run through nearly 1,750 Broadway shows until the early 1970s—immersing her in this milieu, where the cast functioned as a real-life tribe participating in protests, be-ins, and experimental lifestyles. Plimpton later recalled the era's transformative energy, noting the cast's close-knit dynamics fostered body positivity and communal support, as evidenced by colleagues aiding in raising her daughter Martha backstage during her pregnancy portrayal of the similarly expectant Jeanie. This context amplified the role's impact, enabling Plimpton to internalize countercultural rejection of conventional norms, such as abandoning undergarments, while the show's 1,874-performance run popularized anthems like "Aquarius" that mainstreamed hippie ethos. Critics and participants, including Plimpton in a , attributed Hair's cultural resonance to its unfiltered confrontation of societal hypocrisies, though some viewed its provocations as emblematic of youthful excess rather than substantive reform; nonetheless, her —a symbol of unjaded hope amid tribal chaos—helped humanize the counterculture's appeal, drawing mainstream audiences into its critique of and without diluting the era's raw experimentation. The musical's legacy endures as a catalyst for theatrical boundary-pushing, with Plimpton's involvement underscoring how individual roles within it bridged performative rebellion and lived countercultural immersion.

Influence via Daughter Martha Plimpton

Shelley Plimpton exerted significant influence on her daughter Martha Plimpton's career trajectory through early immersion in the theater world and guidance emphasizing artistic integrity over commercial expediency. Born on November 16, 1970, during the original Broadway run of Hair—in which her parents met—Martha was raised primarily by Shelley in Manhattan's Upper West Side, spending her infancy in dressing rooms after Shelley left the production when Martha was three months old. Backstage environments became a formative "home" for Martha, who made her stage debut at age eight. As a struggling actress unable to afford babysitters, Shelley frequently brought young Martha to rehearsals and performances, such as the Nightclub Cantata at the Village Gate, exposing her to professional theater from an early age without the insulating effects of Hollywood machinery. This bohemian upbringing in New York, marked by modest means—such as living in adjoining motel rooms during Martha's filming of The River Rat at age 11—instilled a grounded perspective on acting as a craft rather than a path to instant wealth. Martha later reflected that growing up as a child actor in this setting allowed her to avoid early pitfalls of fame. Shelley actively steered away from undervaluing her potential, warning against "selling herself short" in her teens and prioritizing long-term fulfillment over short-lived . As noted in 2002, her recognized that "I was going to have a long of 13" and urged focus on sustainable artistic choices, influencing Martha's pivot toward acclaimed stage work with ensembles like rather than sustained . This maternal aligned with Shelley's own post-Hair of selective roles and eventual to , extending her countercultural emphasis on authenticity into Martha's respected, theater-centric career.

Reflections on Career Choices and Life Priorities

Plimpton left the Broadway production of Hair for the sixth time in September 1970, at seven months pregnant with her daughter Martha, prioritizing impending motherhood over continued performance in the show ahead of its 1,000th milestone. Post-birth, she expressed ambition to resume Broadway work but noted that Hair's unique communal energy had set an unattainable standard, leading her and then-husband Steve Curry to pivot toward film opportunities instead. This shift reflected an early recognition that sustained theater demands conflicted with family responsibilities, as she weighed the role's fun against emerging parental duties. By the mid-1970s, Plimpton had largely withdrawn from professional acting, citing frustration with repetitive typecasting offers limited to "angelic-looking hippie" characters requiring onstage nudity, which she viewed as diminishing her range. In a 1993 reflection, she described embracing a "housewife" identity, emphasizing middle-class domesticity in Seattle—gardening, driving a practical Honda Wagovan, and teaching literacy three days weekly at Goodwill—as aligning with her evolved priorities. Her daughter Martha, born November 16, 1970, during Hair's run from a relationship with co-star Keith Carradine, became "the inspiration of my life," underscoring motherhood as the central pivot away from industry pursuits. Plimpton articulated no regrets over forgoing a prolonged career, stating that her Hair involvement "seems right" as a meaningful contribution without necessitating ongoing fame or reflection like "My God, I was in 'Hair.'" Her post-acting life maintained indirect theater ties through Martha's career and past collaborators, but she affirmed contentment in family-centered stability over the uncertainties of performance work. This choice contrasted with peers who extended counterculture roles into broader fame, highlighting her preference for personal fulfillment via parenting and community service amid typecasting barriers.
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