
Suzanne Rand, half of a once-popular comedy team, dies at 75
They built sketches around suggestions from the audience -- settings, pet peeves, objects, occupations, film and television genres -- and performed scripted material.
Advertisement
Their male-female partnership and their quick repartee led to comparisons to Nichols and May, who met in the 1950s and whose collection of wry, savvy, and satirical improvisations, 'An Evening With Mike Nichols and Elaine May,' reached Broadway in October 1960 and ran for 306 performances.
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.
Enter Email
Sign Up
Ms. Rand and Monteith were thrilled that critics and audiences saw something of Nichols and May in their work. But they themselves saw some differences.
'Nichols and May came across more like neurotics trying to deal with the world,' Ms. Rand told The Plain Dealer of Cleveland in 1984, 'while I feel that we view ourselves as two people dealing with a neurotic world.'
In 1978, Monteith and Ms. Rand were warmly welcomed at Manhattan clubs such as Reno Sweeney and The Bottom Line, and at the off-off-Broadway Theater East.
Advertisement
'To be sure, some of their material is likely to stick in the mind more than others,' Thomas Lask wrote in a review of their Theater East show in The New York Times. 'My own favorite is Miss Rand's solo encounter with a marijuana-smoking bee, never seen but aurally very visible.'
That September, they got the call that all comedians coveted: Johnny Carson wanted them on 'The Tonight Show.' They performed Oct. 5, the first of their two appearances on the show.
Their success at Theater East led James Lipton, the future host of 'Inside the Actors Studio,' who was then a producer, to take them to a higher theatrical realm.
'He took us to Elaine's and said, 'I'm moving them to Broadway,'' said Bill Russell, who helped put Monteith and Ms. Rand together and for many years was their assistant, working on their sound and lighting.
The show opened in January 1979. The reviews were good, but it was not a hit: It closed after 79 performances.
They reprised their act for a Showtime cable special that year and for three public television shows in 1985.
One of their fans was conductor Leonard Bernstein, whose son, Alexander, said he invited them to his apartment at The Dakota in Manhattan.
'He was sure they were about to collaborate on something,' Alexander Bernstein said in an email. But they never did.
Suzanne Lorraine Eckmann was born Sept. 8, 1949, in Chicago and grew up in nearby Highland Park with her mother, Flora, and her father, William, who worked at companies that produced films for television and later worked for the state of Illinois.
Advertisement
Suzanne made her acting debut at age 4 as Queen Esther in a nursery school Purim show. As a teenager, she sang in nightclubs and at charity events. She attended Stephens College in Columbia, Mo., and graduated with a bachelor of fine arts in theater in 1971.
She was hired at The Second City, the celebrated improvisational theater in Chicago, but she did not enjoy her short stay there.
'I had a miserable time,' she told the Times in 1978, adding, 'It's a wonderful place if you have a background, but you can't learn there.'
In 1972, she moved to another improvisational company, The Proposition, in Cambridge, where she met Monteith. They joined forces and, in 1976, were the warmup act for singers Janet Hood and Linda Langford, who performed as Jade & Sarsaparilla. Eventually, Monteith and Ms. Rand became headliners.
They broke up in the early 1990s, Russell said, although he added in an interview: 'I'm not sure what happened. I think the gigs just dried up.'
In addition to her stepson, from her relationship with Lanny Rand, a restaurant manager who died in 2020, Ms. Rand leaves a brother, William Eckmann.
Ms. Rand's work fell off after she split with Monteith, who taught improvisation at the HB Studio in Manhattan for 25 years and died in 2018. She did voice-over work for advertisers and worked with Summer Salt, a group of writers and improvisers who meet every summer in Chatham, on the Cape, helping them tinker with scenes for new plays, screenplays, TV scripts, and sketches.
Jeffrey Sweet, director of Summer Salt's Improv to Script program, recalled how Ms. Rand once displayed her quick wit by resolving a problem in a proposed play. When a bride falls off a mountain and dies on the Friday before her wedding, the groom matter-of-factly tells their immediate families that he's going to hold a celebration of life for her instead -- without informing the guests flying in from all over about her death.
Advertisement
'The family around him is appalled,' Sweet said in an interview. 'Somebody says, 'When people show up, what on earth will we say to them?'
'And Suzanne said, 'Chicken or fish?''
This article originally appeared in
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Jimmy Fallon says he wasn't prepared for people not liking him: 'It's the absolute worst'
The thing that Jimmy Fallon wasn't prepared for when he became famous after joining Saturday Night Live in 1998 was that some people would always dislike him. "It's the worst," Fallon said Monday on The Diary of a CEO podcast. "Yes, it is the absolute worst. I hate it. I want everyone to like me. I can't stand it. I go, 'Oh, my gosh. What can I do to make you like me?' I think the answer is you can't. You can't make everyone like you. You just have to do what you do. And do the best that you can at what you do. And be happy with yourself." Other bummers he hadn't known about: "Getting rejection. Getting your sketches cut. Being told you're not funny." He was grateful that it was before Twitter was around to capture the hatred. "You think that it's just going to be, 'Oh, this is cool. Everyone will be great.' But then not everyone's rooting for you," Fallon said. "Some people want you to fail. People's jobs are to take me down and to put bad press out and stuff. That's their job, and you're just like, 'Ooh.' I don't live in that world. I don't believe that it's real, but it kind of is real and you go, 'Oh, people are just kind of being mean.'" The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon host explained that his way of dealing with the hate was to do his best to ignore it. "You gotta, again, just toughen up and get through it and just keep your head down and keep being funny," he said. "And just keep doing things and keep being creative. If you move that out, you realize it's not even real. It's real, but it's noise and it doesn't affect you. You can only believe in yourself and know that you have to keep going and, if you keep scoring, that will show. Your work will show. That stuff I wasn't prepared for, of overcoming that. Overcoming hating on you or saying you're not good or something. You don't think that's going to happen. But it will if you're successful, because someone's not going to like you, no matter what."Fallon said he relied on the wise words of the Beastie Boys to get him through. "I loved the Beastie Boys growing up, and there's that one line Mike D says: 'Be true to yourself, and you will never fall. It kind of is the move. Just be true to yourself. Then everyone can say whatever they want, [but] it's like, 'That's who I am.'" Watch their full conversation above. Read the original article on Entertainment Weekly

Associated Press
2 hours ago
- Associated Press
National Recording Artist Justine Skye Announced as Keynote Speaker for the 2025 Active Minds Mental Health Conference
With over 130 million streams globally, Skye uses her powerful voice to champion mental health awareness, encouraging young people to make their well-being a priority. WASHINGTON, June 4, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, Active Minds, the nation's leading nonprofit organization committed to transforming mental health norms among 14 to 25 year-olds, announced that singer, actress, and mental health advocate Justine Skye will serve as the keynote speaker at the 2025 Active Minds Mental Health Conference. The Active Minds Mental Health Conference is the largest national event focused on youth mental health advocacy. Aimed primarily at individuals aged 18–25, the conference includes keynote presentations, breakout sessions, and interactive programming led by experts in mental health, higher education, and student leadership. It serves as a platform for participants to learn about the most effective strategies for promoting mental well-being and reducing stigma in their communities. 'Our attendees consistently tell us they're looking for real voices and relatable stories,' said Alison Malmon, Founder and Executive Director of Active Minds. 'Justine's journey and advocacy are powerful reminders that healing is not only possible—it's necessary, and it begins with courageous conversations. We are thrilled to welcome her to the Active Minds stage.' Skye, the Brooklyn-born artist who began her music career at just 17, has rapidly ascended in the industry with hundreds of millions of streams. Following her artistic reintroduction in 2021 with the album Space & Time, Skye has showcased her multifaceted talent, including her late-night television debut on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon and a prominent role on the hit series Grown-ish. Her single 'Collide' became a viral sensation on TikTok, accumulating 130M streams worldwide, proving her enduring appeal in the ever-evolving music landscape. Now, Justine Skye is stepping into the glow of a new era with the release of 'Oh Lala"—her first official dance single and Warner Records debut. 'Speaking up about mental health isn't a weakness—it's a strength,' said Justine Skye. 'I'm honored to be the keynote speaker at this year's Active Minds Mental Health Conference and connect with a generation that's championing a new era of mental health. This year's theme, Stories That Move, is a powerful reminder that when we open up, we not only heal ourselves—we inspire others to do the same.' More information about the upcoming conference, including session details and registration, can be found at About Active Minds Active Minds is the largest nonprofit in the United States mobilizing youth and young adults to transform mental health norms across society. For more than 20 years, we have equipped the next generation of peer mental health advocates through a variety of programs, including the Active Minds Chapter Network, A.S.K., and Send Silence Packing. Our advocacy, initiatives, and campaigns foster lasting change in how youth view and discuss mental health, encouraging them to use their voices to influence broader conversations and inform mental health supports within their communities. Together, we are building a diverse movement of champions committed to improving mental health for all. To learn more about Active Minds, visit MEDIA CONTACTS Dante Worth ( [email protected] ) Nick Dierl ( [email protected] ) View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Active Minds, Inc.


UPI
2 hours ago
- UPI
Watch: Owen Cooper says Leonardo DiCaprio praised his show 'Adolescence'
1 of 3 | Leonardo DiCaprio praised "Adolescence" star Owen Cooper for his performance in the show. File Photo by Chris Chew/UPI | License Photo June 4 (UPI) -- Adolescence star Owen Cooper discussed what it was like receiving praise from Leonardo DiCaprio when he stopped by The Tonight Show starring Jimmy Fallon on Tuesday. The actor, 15, portrays Jamie Miller, a 13-year-old accused of stabbing and killing a girl in his class, in the four-episode series. The show, which premiered in March, is currently the second most popular English-language series on Netflix with over 141 million views. "He was saying, 'Hey, Owen, I'm such a massive fan of Adolescence,'" Cooper said, describing DiCaprio's praise. "And I was like 'What?!'" Fallon then brought up how people are comparing the actor to DiCaprio and Robert De Niro. "It's weird to be honest," Cooper said. "I think, to me, just a normal kid from Warrington, to even be in the same conversation as Robert De Niro is crazy."