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Ruth Maleczech (January 8, 1939 – September 30, 2013) was an American avant-garde stage actress.[1] She won three Obie Awards for Best Actress in her career, for Hajj (1983), Through the Leaves, (1984) and Lear (1990) and an Obie Award for Design, shared with Julie Archer, for Vanishing Pictures (1980), which she also directed. Her performance as Lear was widely acclaimed: her King Lear was portrayed as an imperious Southern matriarch.[1]

Ruth Maleczech
Born
Ruth Sophia Reinprecht

(1939-01-08)January 8, 1939
Cleveland, Ohio, U.S
DiedSeptember 30, 2013(2013-09-30) (aged 74)
Brooklyn, New York, U.S
OccupationActress
SpouseLee Breuer (1978—2013; her death)
Children2

Life and career


Maleczech was born in Cleveland, Ohio as Ruth Sophia Reinprecht, to Frank Reinprecht (1912–1982) and Elizabeth (née Maletich, originally Maletić) Reinprecht (1914–1996), who emigrated from Yugoslavia. Her parents were a steel worker and seamstress, respectively. She had two siblings, Frank and Patricia, with whom she was raised in Phoenix, Arizona.[2]

Maleczech was the first in her family to attend college, beginning theater studies at UCLA at 16. From there she went to San Francisco to work, where she met Mabou Mines co-founder Lee Breuer. The two became a couple and, in 1964, they went to Paris and for six years earned money dubbing films, sufficient to fund their burgeoning theatrical experiments.

In France, Maleczech and JoAnne Akalaitis studied with the Polish director and drama theorist Jerzy Grotowski; Maleczech also spent a month in East Berlin studying, observing rehearsals and attending performances by Bertolt Brecht's storied Berliner Ensemble. Returning to the United States, Maleczech co-founded the experimental N.Y.C. theater company Mabou Mines, in 1970, along with Akalaitis, Breuer, Philip Glass and David Warrilow. Maleczech collaborated on nearly every piece Mabou Mines produced. She adopted a phonetic spelling of her mother's maiden name as her professional name (Maletich → Maleczech).

She directed/adapted several works: Wrong Guys, from the hard-boiled novel by Jim Strahs; Vanishing Pictures, based on Poe's Mystery of Marie Roget; Samuel Beckett's Imagination Dead Imagine (as a hologram); The Bribe by Terry O'Reilly; her own Sueños, inspired by the life of Sor Juana Inez de la Cruz; Belén: A Book of Hours, written by Catherine Sasanov; and Song For New York.

In addition to working together for a half century, she and Breuer had two children. They legally married in New York in 1978.[3]

Outside of Mabou Mines, Maleczech created Fire Works with Valeria Vasilevski and collaborated and worked with, among others, Peter Sellars, Frederick Wiseman and Martha Clarke. She appeared in numerous feature films, commercial and independent, and on television in Law & Order and ER.[4]


Death


Ruth Maleczech died at age 74 from breast cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease at her son's home in Brooklyn.[5] She is survived by her husband, son (Lute Breuer), daughter (Clove Galilee) and a granddaughter (Bella Breuer). She was also survived by two siblings, Frank A. Reinprecht and Mrs. Patricia Adams, and various nieces and nephews.[2]


Selected awards



Obie Awards



Villager Downtown Theater Awards



Other Awards



Filmography


Year Title Role Notes
1981Strong MedicineEleanor
1984C.H.U.D.Mrs. Monroe
1986Dead End Kids
1987AnnaWoman #1 / Woman Named Gloria
1991The Cabinet of Dr. RamirezCathy's Mother
1992In the SoupMrs. Rollo
1992MacBurgess
1993The Ballad of Little JoShopkeeper
1993Me and VeronicaPerson on Ferry
1995AngelaSleepwalker
1996SleepersWoman at Subway Station
1996The CrucibleGoody Osborne
1996Tales of Erotica(segment "The Dutch Master")
1997Mondo PlymptonVoice
2008Nick and Norah's Infinite PlaylistHomeless Caroline
2011Portraits in Dramatic TimeHerself(final film role)

References


  1. Review of Ruth Maleczech as Lear, University of Notre Dame; accessed October 6, 2013.
  2. Amateau, Albert (October 17, 2013). "Ruth Maleczech, 74, a founder of avant-garde troupe". The Villager. Archived from the original on September 26, 2014. Retrieved September 26, 2014.
  3. "Ancestry Library Edition". search.ancestrylibrary.com. Retrieved January 19, 2018.
  4. "Ruth Maleczech, 74, a founder of avant-garde troupe - The Villager Newspaper". thevillager.com. 17 October 2013.
  5. "Ruth Maleczech, Beacon of Stage Avant-Garde, Dies at 74". The New York Times. October 2, 2013. Retrieved October 6, 2013.





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