[On Rick On Theater, I’ve said of actress Lois Smith
(b. 1930), whom I’ve seen on stage a
number of times in different kinds of roles (not to mention several TV and film
performances), that she’s “truly one of this country’s top performers” and that
her “prominence . . . comes from her absolute command of any role she plays,
irrespective of the quality of the rest of the production.” In a 2011 report on this blog, I made the definitive
statement, “I don’t think Smith can deliver anything less than a credible and
warm performance.” I’m doubling down on
that assessment.
[I met Smith briefly after a performance—playing opposite her was David Margulies, a former teacher of mine, so I waited by the stage door to say hello to him—and I got to tell Smith how much I liked her work. Something else I wrote in a ROT report: “I think Lois Smith is an honest-to-God living national treasure.”
[Posts on ROT that feature commentary on Lois Smith are: “The Illusion” (1 July 2011), “Heartless” (10 September 2012), “The Trip to Bountiful (2005)” (25 May 2013), and “John” (1 September 2015).]
“LOIS SMITH AND
THE WORK THAT ENDURES”
by Lyndsey Bourne
[The following transcript was slugged “Interview” and was posted on the American Theatre website on 23 December 2025; it didn’t appear in the magazine’s print edition.]
The 95-year-old actor reflects on her rich and rewarding stage career, and the life it drew from and made for her.
For more than 70 years, Lois Smith has been delivering performances that have the power to remind an audience what a night at the theatre is for, and what a play can do. Across stage and screen, Smith has built a body of work remarkable not just for its longevity but for its consistency of purpose. She gravitates toward writing that unsettles and deepens, that asks something of her, and of her audiences. She has consistently met that demand with a blend of rigor and curiosity that has made her a touchstone for several generations of artists.
In September, I was invited to an early screening of the
upcoming film The Steel Harp [upcoming independent comedy directed by
Alex Thompson and Kelly O’Sullivan and written by O’Sullivan;
Ley Line Entertainment, Fusion Entertainment, release date to be announced], in which Smith stars. She anchors the film with steadiness and grace, with the same searching, steely gaze and emotional precision that has defined her stage work for more than seven decades.
When we spoke a few weeks after her 95th birthday [3 November 2025], our conversation moved from her earliest days on Broadway [Time Out for Ginger (1952) by Ronald Alexander, The Wisteria Trees (1955) by Joshua Logan, The Young and Beautiful (1955) by Sally Benson] through the landmark productions that shaped her career, to the rhythms of her life now. In person she is warm and generous—as well as very tough, practical, and discerning. She brings to every exchange a level of care, thought, and attention that feels increasingly rare for a person of any age. At 95, she’s reflective without nostalgia, clear-eyed about the industry’s changes, and devoted to the communal spark that makes theatre worth returning to.
In the time since we spoke, it is the reverence for her craft, the integrity she exudes, that has stayed with me most. That and the indelible sound of her deep, endearing laugh.
The following is an edited transcript of our conversation.
LYNDSEY BOURNE: I’ve been having so much fun revisiting some of your work. I watched an archival recording of Buried Child [Broadway, 1996; by Sam Shepard; Nominee for 1996 Tony for Best Featured Actress in a Play] earlier this week, and The Trip to Bountiful [Off-Broadway, 2005; by Horton Foote; 2006 Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Lead Actress, 2006 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actress in a Play, 2006 Obie Award for Best Performance, 2006 Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Actress in a Play, and Nominee for 2006 Drama League Award for Distinguished Performance].
LOIS SMITH: I think those are two of my best works.
In Buried Child, especially, the final reveal in the third act—when we learn about the baby as you’re going up the stairs, gripping the side of the banister with both hands and your back to the audience—it’s devastating. It’s rare to be so moved by back acting.
Discovering that was very specific and very real. Gary Sinise [b. 1955], who directed it, was so fierce, holding everybody so tight, we’d go crazy. [The production transferred from Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theatre Company.] Afterwards, I felt if he hadn’t done that, we never would have gotten to where we got. I felt free because we were so grounded. And he was delighted at the things that came forth.
The Trip to Bountiful too. Carrie Watts is such a physically and emotionally demanding role. I kept thinking, for an old play, it feels very contemporary.
Oh gosh, yes. What a beautiful play. Horton [Foote; 1916-2009] was with us all the time, and he loves actors—he was a delight. He’d been working on that play for 50 years. In ’53 it was on television and Broadway the same year. Then, of course, he adapted it for the film [1986]. The original had something like five huge sets and three acts. In 2005, when we did it at the Signature, Harris Yulin [1937-2025], the director, proposed we cut it down. We did it in 90 minutes without stopping. Horton was all for it—he made it happen. It was so exciting.
I’d love to go back to the very beginning of your career. You moved to New York in 1952, is that right? Were you scared, coming here on your own, all the way across the country for those first few months? [Smith was born in Topeka, Kansas, but her family had moved to Seattle, Washington, around 1941.]
No, I wasn’t scared. I was excited.
You were ready to start your life.
New York seemed like the place for me. I was at the University of Washington in the Drama Department. There were two theatres on campus performing plays year-round with student casts. Every play ran for six-week runs, six nights a week, to a paid audience. It was like being in a stock company or something—a kind of theatre training that was beyond classwork.
We drove from Seattle to New York in a little old Ford that boiled over during the day, so we drove at night. It was really crazy.
What were you hoping for when you moved here? Were you thinking long-term about your career, about the kind of life you wanted to build?
I don’t think I had that kind of thought. I wanted to work—and I was lucky. When my husband and I first came, he was going to Harvard. We stayed a month in a little rented room. I worked all night sorting checks in a bank on Wall Street; he had a filing job. I looked for acting work during the day.
That summer, I got my first job, a play on Broadway called Time Out for Ginger; Melvyn Douglas [1901-81] played my father. Suddenly I had a Broadway salary. In those days it was nothing like what it is now, of course, but it was more money than I’d ever made in one day. I came here hoping to work and I lucked out. There was a lot of theatre going on then. Off-Broadway didn’t yet exist, but there were a lot of plays on Broadway, there were showcases, television dramas—I don’t mean series but plays filmed live for television. That’s how I got started in television.
[For some comments on theater on television, see my post “Cinderella: Impossible Things Are Happening (CBS-TV, 31 March 1957)” (25 April 2013).
[Off-Broadway was just getting started at the beginning of the 1950s. It’s first real success was the 1952 revival of Tennessee Williams’s (1911-83) Summer and Smoke directed by José Quintero (1924-99) at the Circle in the Square Theater in Greenwich Village. The play had failed on Broadway in 1948, but ran in the Village for over 100 performances—and audiences and the press took notice, helping establish Off-Broadway and a legitimate New York theater venue.
[Summer and Smoke’s success was followed by the first musical success of Off-Broadway, the 95-performance run of Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956) and Kurt Weill’s (1900-50) Threepenny Opera (which had also flopped on Broadway) in 1954, the same year that the Village Voice inaugurated the Obie Awards to recognize excellence in the new theatrical venue.]
I don’t want to presume, but it must have been difficult in the 1950s to be a woman and an actor, and then also a mother. [Smith and her husband, Wesley, had a daughter in 1958.] What was it like for you?
Well, you know, it’s me, all those years, all those 70 years. So it’s hard to say. I was lucky in that there was a lot of work. And sometimes, like right now, there isn’t. By the time I’d been here, I think, two years, I had done some television work and a film, which meant I could make a living—which you can’t do in the theatre, or almost can’t.
Was it steady work?
Oh, never. It’s not steady.
Are there roles you feel most connected to? Which plays still stick with you the most?
It’s interesting, you immediately picked two of them: The Trip to Bountiful, Buried Child. Also The Grapes of Wrath [Broadway, 1990; Book adapted by Frank Galati from the novel by John Steinbeck; from Steppenwolf; 1990 Tony Nominee for Best Featured Actress in a Play]. I think they were my best work. They were examples of what it is when it’s good—when it’s the real thing. When people are working together with skill and trust and love. So many things have to come together. And in those cases, they did. You can’t do it alone. Though as a playwright, you probably feel more than others that you are alone, at least for a good part of the process.
Just the first half, really. I love being in rehearsal. I’m just a playwright so I can get to the rehearsal room, you know?
It’s the best place.
Do you feel your approach to a rehearsal process changes with each role, with every play, whether it’s a new play or a classic?
It’s always different. I mean, I’m speaking now ideally and about my best experiences. Of course, it’s not always wonderful. It’s very hard. And it hasn’t always worked beautifully, which has to do with everything: the play, the actors, the director. This is a slightly different subject, but when Glynis Johns [1923-2024; British actress and singer] died this year, I read an obituary where she said, “I think my best thinking is in the theatre.” That’s exactly how I feel.
[Smith was probably referring to Johns’s remark quoted in her New York Times obituary of 6 January 2024 (Johns died the year before Smith’s interview for AT): “Acting is my highest form of intelligence, the time when I use the best part of my brain” (Anita Gates, “Glynis Johns, 100, Dies; ‘Mary Poppins’ Actress And Tony Award Winner”; online, the notice was entitled “Glynis Johns, Tony Winner for ‘A Little Night Music,’ Dies at 100,” posted on 4 January, the day of the actress’s death.)
Looking back, was there a decade in theatre that feels most meaningful to you?
My first decade. That excitement—everything was new. The fact that I got work quickly and in all three mediums meant that I could keep working. In ’55 I did a Broadway play, The Young and Beautiful; Sally Benson [1897-1972] wrote it based on F. Scott Fitzgerald [1896-1940] stories. That was very early in my career—fun. By then we were living in Princeton [New Jersey]; my husband was a classicist and taught at Princeton. My daughter was born there in ’58. I had various jobs during that time, Broadway plays. Sometimes they would close quickly.
[In addition to the stage work Smith did in the ’50s, she did many TV shows, a number of them episodes of anthology series, a popular format of the era in which each episode presents a different story and a different set of characters (Kraft Television Theatre [1953], Studio One [1954], Modern Romances [1955]). She also made her film début in East of Eden in 1955 (see a brief anecdote about Smith and this film in my report on Heartless (referenced in the introduction above).]
Did your daughter come with you when you worked, when you traveled for jobs?
When she was a little baby, I remember a job when I was carrying her in a handbag practically, and my mother from Seattle came down to L.A. and babysat while I was doing a television show there. That happened more than once. Then in the ’60s, we lived in Philadelphia; my husband’s next job was at Penn [University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia]. I worked for Theatre of the Living Arts. André Gregory [b. 1934] was artistic director.
You’ve mentioned a few directors already—Gary Sinise, Harris Yulin—and how much their approaches shaped those productions. Are there other directors or collaborators you’ve especially loved working with—people who really understood you or lifted you up in the work?
Frank Galati [1943-2023], certainly. I first worked with him in The Grapes of Wrath at Steppenwolf. I think we did three more things together.
[Smith was also directed by Galati in The Royal Family by George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber (1990) and Bertolt Brecht’s Mother Courage and Her Children (2001); in 2009, Smith performed in William Shakespeare’s (1564-1616) The Tempest in a cast that also included Galati, under the direction of Tina Landau (b. 1962). All three of these productions were performed at Steppenwolf in Chicago; none traveled to New York City as The Grapes of Wrath and Buried Child did.]
What was it about him?
His presence. His manner of working. Who he was. I remember when we did The Grapes of Wrath in ’88, he hadn’t been a member of the company very long. He was a phenomenon in Chicago, and they were very pleased that they lured him to come and be a member at Steppenwolf. This was a great big cast; everyone was working at the top of their game. They had gotten my name from asking around because they didn’t have a Ma Joad in the company. Anyway, it was a huge production. Everybody felt a lot of agency; nobody was shy. It was my first experience with him and with the company. It was really falling in love.
I’m also thinking about how important and meaningful working with Irene Lewis [b. 1945] has been to me.
Tell me about her.
She was artistic director at Baltimore Center Stage [1991-2011]. I first met her when she cast me in Escape From Happiness by George Walker (1993). Then she asked what I’d like to do. I mentioned [George Bernard] Shaw [1856-1950] and The Cherry Orchard [Anton Chekhov (1860-1904)]. She directed me in Mrs. Warren’s Profession [1999] and then as Ranevskaya [1994].
She used all of the allotted rehearsal time—and used it well. I find this less and less the norm. There is no substitute for what happens during rehearsal. There is no substitute for the experience and growth of the production of a play during the rehearsal hours together. She exemplified an understanding and practice of the art of rehearsal. My times of working with her were probably in the 1990s.
At what point did you move back to New York?
It was the beginning of the ’70s, when we were living in Philadelphia, and my daughter and I moved back to New York. That was really kind of scary.
You were a single mom, is that right? How did you manage that?
One of the first things I did coming back to New York was a Joyce Carol Oates [b. 1938] play, Sunday Dinner [1970]. Curt Dempster [1935-2007] directed it; this was right around the time he started EST [Ensemble Studio Theatre, Dempster’s repertory and developmental company]. Then, fairly early on, I got a job in a soap opera. And then another. [Among others, Smith appeared in 708 episodes of Somerset in 1972-74 and 247 episodes of The Doctors in 1977-79.] For a long time, I had several running jobs in soap operas—hardly what I would most love to do—but my goodness, Monday to Friday, daytime hours! Amazing. That was a real break, you know? Not in my sense of myself as an actor, but as an actor who was working, which was very important. I was making enough money to comfortably live on. That was how I managed as a single mom in those early years, in her school years.
How important have your friendships in the theatre been—to sustaining your career, your resilience, to moving through all these decades?
Amazingly important. Harold Clurman [1901-80] was another director I loved and a very good friend. I first worked with him in Tennessee Williams’s Orpheus Descending [Broadway, 1957], probably. Harold introduced me to Stella Adler [1901-92; actress and acting teacher] and her daughter, Ellen, who he had really raised with Stella from the time she was with the Group Theatre through all its years. Ellen and I both had daughters, born, I think, a day apart.
[Stella Adler, aside from being a renowned actor in her own right—she was a founding member of the famous Group Theatre with Clurman, Lee Strasburg, and Cheryl Crawford---was one of the United States’ most esteemed acting teachers and interpreters of Method acting and the system of actor training conceived by Konstantin Stanislavsky (1863-1938), in whose theories the Method was based (see “The Method – a Review” [12 March 2022] and “Bombast to Beckett” [13 January 2025], both by Kirk Woodward).
[Adler was born into an acting family, founded by her father, Jacob Adler (1855-1926), a star of the Yiddish theater (see my post “National Yiddish Theatre – Folksbiene” (23 and 26 August 2012). Her mother, Sara (1858-1953), was also a Yiddish theater actor, and so was her brother, Luther (1903-84), who became a prominent figure in films and the English-speaking stage.
[Stella Adler was married to Clurman, author of one of the most influential books about directing, On Directing (1974), from 1942-59, which includes the period when Smith was starting her career in New York. Adler’s daughter, known as Ellen Adler (1927-2019), though her father was Stella’s first husband, Horace Eliascheff (1896-1944) and Ellen was married to clarinetist David Oppenheim (1922-2007). Ellen Adler was a painter, musical artist, and guardian of the Adler family name and legacy.]
What was your daughter’s relationship to you being a working actor? Did she ever talk about it with you? Was she thrilled by your job or was it just what Mom did?
I think she was interested. I remember when I was in the Theater of the Living Arts, she was in grade school, and it was the first time that my husband had brought her to see a play all the way through—a modern-day version of The Misanthrope [Molière (French; 1622-73)]. I must have been about 35, I’m guessing, something like that. [The production was staged in mid-1965, so Smith would have been just under 35 and her daughter would have been just over 7.] Afterwards she said, “Here you are, getting your gray hair, and you were so bouncy.” So that was my first review from my daughter.
That’s so good—that’s my favorite review I’ve ever heard.
Isn’t that wonderful?
When you’re on a stage, what’s your favorite sound to hear from an audience?
Oh, gosh. You know, it could be silence. It could be laughter. As long as they’re listening.
I can think of a time an audience just went crazy for you: In Annie Baker’s [b. 1981] John [2015; see my report, referenced above on the introduction], when you came out to do that speech at the start of the second intermission.
Wasn’t that fun?
Amazing. Everyone’s just leaving and then you come out from behind that big red curtain and you start talking.
There were people afterwards, who were so mad they missed it. They didn’t know it was going to happen; they were already gone.
I almost missed it. And then I heard your voice and ran back inside. That year, 2015, you also had Marjorie Prime [Jordan Harrison (b. 1977)].
It was a crazy year. We did Marjorie Prime at the Taper [Mark Taper Forum, Los Angeles, 2014; Playwrights Horizons, 2015] and then, not long after that, I did a play at Steppenwolf, which Frank Galati directed, called The Herd [by Rory Kinnear (b. 1978), 2015]. Then I came back to New York. I think that’s when I first read Lily Thorn[e]’s play, Peace for Mary Frances [2018], and then I went straight into John and then straight into the movie of Marjorie Prime [BB Film Productions, 2017], and then straight—truly, the next day after we finished shooting—right into the Playwrights Horizons production of Marjorie Prime. I don’t think I’d ever had so much good, interesting, exciting work pile up on top of each other. But it was horrible because my beloved, David Margulies [1937-2016], was sick and getting sicker and sicker. He died during all of that; it was awful. I didn’t even understand for a while afterwards how much in shock I was through parts of that year. It was . . . It was really awful. It was wonderful, but it was awful. It was just one of those . . . one of those things.
It must have been overwhelming. And to have so much attention on you at that time, in your career . . . It really was a huge year for you.
Yeah, it was a huge year.
I think Marjorie Prime and John are two of the most important plays of the last 25 years. Certainly, two of the most memorable nights I’ve spent in the theatre. Do you still see a lot of theatre? I know I’ve spotted you in quite a few audiences.
After the pandemic, I sort of made a point of it. It’s one of the most important things I do.
What do you look for in a play when you’re a member of the audience? What do you hope for when you go to the theatre?
I don’t know if I go with a hope; I think I go with a habit. Still, there’s that little happy feeling, a hopeful feeling, at the beginning, right before a play starts, being there together. What do you hope for?
I think I hope I’ll be surprised.
Yes, surprise is one of the best things, isn’t it? I agree. We need it.
What are you thinking about these days? How do you like to spend your time?
I love to read novels. That hasn’t been as true lately. When The Steel Harp became a reality, I kind of stopped reading. I just spent all my time on that script. I don’t think I’ve ever been a hasty person, but I’ve become much more of a slow mover than I used to be. Everything is slower, I think. I take too long to read the Times in the morning.
But what’s too long?
No, you’re right. It’s a morning ritual. David and I always used to read the Times together in the morning; I think that’s part of why I continue doing it. That’s how my day begins.
Now I’m organized around social dates, theatregoing dates: dinner with friends, theatre with friends. I’m 95. Many things are different. I’m not as strong. But I can still work, and with pleasure, thank God. I just had a television job that dropped in for a couple of days. There were things I couldn’t do physically, but it turned out to be okay. I love working. I really do.
What do you hope for the future of the theatre?
I haven’t thought a lot about that. It’s hard to think about the future of theatre without thinking about what kind of world it will exist in. I guess I would say that the things most precious to me—the interconnectedness of people and experience, thought and concern—that they be present in the work. I don’t think I have a clear vision or hope for the future, except that it be . . . rooted.
[Lyndsey Bourne (b. ca.
1992) is a Canadian writer, teacher, and doula (a woman who assists mothers
during labor and after childbirth) working with The Doula
Project. She’s currently
based in Brooklyn, New York. Her plays
include The Second Body (workshopped at La MaMa E.T.C., New York
City, in 2020Mabel’s Mine (still in workshop; reading in July 2025),
and I Was Unbecoming Then (Canadian première: 2024 ). She teaches playwriting at Playwrights
Horizons Theater School (New York University Tisch School of the Arts).]