Madeline Kahn Movies
Hofstra graduate
Madeline Kahn was trained for an operatic career, but found her most gainful employment in musical comedy and revue work. While reducing audiences to tears of laughter as a member of New York's Upstairs at the Downstairs satirical troupe, Kahn made her first appearance in the short-subject
Bergman lampoon
The Dove (1968). She was "officially" discovered for films by director
Peter Bogdanovich, who cast her as
Ryan O'Neal's frowsy fiancee in What's Up Doc (1972). Kahn was nominated for Academy Awards for her portrayals of Southern doxy Trixie Delight in Bogdanovich's
Paper Moon (1973) and
Dietrich-like chanteuse Lilly Von Schtupp ("Oh, it's twue, it's twue, it's twue!") in
Mel Brooks'
Blazing Saddles (1974). Kahn went on to co-star in Brooks'
Young Frankenstein (1974) and
High Anxiety (1975), and made a return trip to the Bogdanovich fold in the disastrous
At Long Last Love (1976) Her manic comedy style could be appealing, but, to paraphrase the late film encyclopedist Leslie Haliwell, it became a quickly overplayed hand. On Broadway, Kahn co-starred with
Danny Kaye in Two by Two and was starred in the musical version of
Twentieth Century, a grueling experience that all but destroyed her singing voice. She won a Tony award for her non-musical performance in
Wendy Wasserstein's The Sisters Rosenzweig in 1992. Kahn's TV projects include the 1983 sitcom Oh, Madeline (based on the British series
Pig in the Middle), a single season as
George C. Scott's virago sister-in-law in
Mister President (1987) and Cosby, the most recent project of comedian
Bill Cosby, a sitcom that premiered in 1996. In 1995,
Madeline Kahn was superbly cast as Martha Mitchell in
Oliver Stone's
Nixon and as a vituperative gossip columnist on the TV series
New York News. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide