Susan Anspach


Actor
Susan Anspach

About

Birth Place
New York City, New York, USA
Born
November 23, 1942

Biography

Susan Anspach was an American film actress who drew praise from critics for her bold performances in the acclaimed 70s films "Five Easy Pieces" (1970), "Play It Again, Sam" (1972), and "Blume in Love" (1973). Born and raised in Queens, New York, Anspach left home at the age of 15 to escape her physically abusing parents. She stayed with a family in Harlem in the ensuing years, and by the...

Family & Companions

Jack Nicholson
Companion
Actor. Met c. 1969; no longer together.
Mark Goddard
Husband
Actor. Appeared on "Lost in Space"; married in 1970; divorced in 1977.

Biography

Susan Anspach was an American film actress who drew praise from critics for her bold performances in the acclaimed 70s films "Five Easy Pieces" (1970), "Play It Again, Sam" (1972), and "Blume in Love" (1973). Born and raised in Queens, New York, Anspach left home at the age of 15 to escape her physically abusing parents. She stayed with a family in Harlem in the ensuing years, and by the age of 18 had earned a scholarship to attend Catholic University of America. She studied music and drama at the university, and before long had fallen in love with acting. By the mid-1960s Anspach was living in New York as a struggling theater actress. Her friends and contemporaries during this period were the then-unknown New York stage actors Dustin Hoffman, Jon Voight and Robert Duvall. Her first big stage acting break came in 1967 when she was cast as the lead in the original Off-Broadway version of the musical "Hair." The show was a big success and would eventually have its Broadway debut in 1968. A different actress, however, was cast as the female lead. Undeterred, by the late 60s and early 70s Anspach had begun making a name for herself as a film actress. In 1970 she appeared in Hal Ashby's "The Landlord," as well as alongside Jack Nicholson in the Oscar-nominated drama "Five Easy Pieces." Her role in the latter, as a new age pianist who makes love with Jack Nicholson's character, would go on to become Anspach's most memorable film performance. Anspach continued appearing in various well-regarded films throughout the 70s and 80s, including Woody Allen's romantic comedy "Play It Again, Sam," "Blume In Love," "Montenegro" (1981), and "Misunderstood" (1984). Her on-screen roles dwindled by the early 90s with just a few sporadic film and TV appearances in the ensuing years. Her last credited role was in the 2010 thriller "Inversion." After a noteworthy career spanning several decades and numerous memorable roles, Susan Anspach died in Los Angeles from heart failure on April 2, 2018. She was 75.

Life Events

1967

Made off-Broadway debut as the female lead in "Hair"

1970

Had breakthrough screen role in "Five Easy Pieces"

1970

Made screen-acting debut in "The Landlord"

1972

Played Nancy in "Play It Again, Sam"

1973

Had one of the leads in Paul Mazursky's "Blume in Love"

1976

TV-movie debut, "I Want to Keep My Baby" (CBS)

1981

Cast as Marilyn Jordan in "Montenegro"

1983

TV series debut as regular, "The Yellow Rose" (NBC)

1985

Appeared in the West Coast production of "A Coupla White Chicks Sitting Around Talking"

1985

Co-starred in the CBS miniseries "James A. Michener's 'Space'"

1987

Had regular role on the ABC dramedy "The 'Slap' Maxwell Story"

1994

Played a supporting role in the CBS TV-movie "Cagney and Lacey: The Return"

2002

Appeared in the TV movie "Dancing at the Harvest Moon"

2009

Made her feature return in "Wild About Harry"

2010

Appeared in her final screen role as Edna Boswell in the thriller "Inversion"

Videos

Movie Clip

Landlord, The (1970) -- (Movie Clip) Great Costume! The bustling costume-party scene from Hal Ashby's The Landlord, 1970, featuring Lee Grant, Beau Bridges, Marki Bey, Susan Anspach, Robert Klein (in black-face!) and Walter Brooke, photographed by Gordon Willis.
Blume In Love (1973) -- (Movie Clip) I Hope The Plane Crashes! Susan Anspach as Nina, wife of the divorce-lawyer title character (George Segal), in her job at the California welfare office, in writer-director Paul Mazursky’s non-linear narrative, meeting Kris Kristofferson as Elmo, then a clever edit to Shelley Winters as an aggrieved client, early in Blume In Love, 1973.
Blume In Love (1973) -- (Movie Clip) Venice Brings Out The Love Writer-director Paul Mazursky’s opening, with the familiar tune by the Milanese composer Ponchielli, with George Segal the title character, narrating his thoughts over shots of Venice’s Piazza San Maro, Susan Anspach as his ex-wife introduced near the end, in Blume In Love, 1973, co-starring Kris Kristofferson and Marsha Mason.
Blume In Love (1973) -- (Movie Clip) Do You Know What You Are To Me? Writer-director Paul Mazursky as Kurt, L-A divorce-law partner of the title character George Segal, suddenly facing his own divorce after being caught in an affair with his secretary Gloria (Annazette Chase), in his acclaimed comic-drama Blume In Love, also starring Susan Anspach and Kris Kristofferson.
Five Easy Pieces (1970) -- (Movie Clip) Chopin Prelude To Opus 28 Home from his low-rent wanderings due to family illness, trained pianist Robert (Jack Nicholson) plays Chopin's Prelude to Opus 28 in E Minor #4 for Catherine (Susan Anspach), his brother's fianceè, with a famous camera move, in director Bob Rafelson's Five Easy Pieces, 1970.

Trailer

Family

Catherine
Daughter
Writer. Born c. 1969.
Caleb Goddard
Son
Writer, TV news producer. Born September 26, 1970; Anspaugh alleges that his father is Jack Nicholson; she has claimed that Nicholson has privately acknowledged Caleb as his son.

Companions

Jack Nicholson
Companion
Actor. Met c. 1969; no longer together.
Mark Goddard
Husband
Actor. Appeared on "Lost in Space"; married in 1970; divorced in 1977.

Bibliography