Brandis Kemp, character actress and 'Fridays' original, dies at 76

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Tuesday, April 16, 2024


Brandis Kemp, character actress and 'Fridays' original, dies at 76
Kemp was the fashionably frizzy redhead in the sketch-comedy ensemble of “Fridays” (1980-82).

by Anita Gates



NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- If you were looking for insight into the future in the 1980s, you probably wouldn’t want to pay $75 for a Creative Palm Reading.

In that recurring sketch on the late-night show “Fridays,” a chain-smoking, sometimes deranged psychic played by Brandis Kemp was sure to take one look at your palm and announce: “Things don’t look good, man. Not at all. Man, am I bummed!”

Kemp was the fashionably frizzy redhead in the sketch-comedy ensemble of “Fridays” (1980-82), ABC’s answer to “Saturday Night Live,” which also included Larry David, Michael Richards, Melanie Chartoff and Kemp’s husband, Mark Blankfield.

One season later, viewers of “AfterMASH” (1983-85), CBS’ “M*A*S*H” sequel, loved to hate her as Alma Cox, the bossy secretary at Colonel Potter and Corporal Klinger’s new hospital.

Kemp, known in private life as Sally Blankfield, died at her home in Los Angeles on July 4. She was 76. The cause was a brain tumor and complications of COVID-19, according to a statement released by her niece and two nephews.

The statement noted that Kemp died on Independence Day, when the full moon was in eclipse and fireworks were exploding. She “always knew how to make an exit,” it said.

Vivian Sally Kemp was born Feb. 1, 1944, in Palo Alto, California, one of three children of John Lloyd Kemp, a World War I Marine Corps veteran who died when she was 10, and Vida (Kernohan) Kemp, a hairdresser, who raised the children alone.




After high school, Sally, as she was known, attended San Jose State College, Stanford University (where she received an MFA in theater and literature) and the American Conservatory Theater acting school in San Francisco.

One early job was teaching speech classes for police officers and firefighters at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York. By the time she moved to Los Angeles, she was a member of Low Moan Spectacular, a comedy troupe, and doing theater nationwide. She adopted the name Brandis because there was already a Sally Kemp in Actors Equity.

In the play “Bullshot Crummond” (1978), she played “the mistress and sometime daughter of the second-most-dangerous man in Europe,” as actor turned writer Gardner McKay explained in a review for The Los Angeles Herald Examiner. “You might leave the theater,” he suggested, “humming Brandis Kemp’s hideous, mocking laugh.”

Kemp spent two decades as a busy supporting actress (her character names included Bob’s Mother, Miss Reba and A.A. Woman No. 3). She made guest appearances on hit series including “The Golden Girls,” “E.R.,” “The Wonder Years,” “Designing Women” and “Perfect Strangers.”

Her films included “Surf II” (1984), a comedy about mutant zombies; “When a Man Loves a Woman” (1994), about love and alcoholism; and “Clifford” (1994), in which Martin Short played a 10-year-old. Her character was an annoyed airline passenger.

Her final screen role was in the 2006 television movie “The Theory of Everything” (not to be confused with the later film of the same name about Stephen Hawking).

She met Blankfield at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. They married in 1972 and divorced in 1987.

She was always hands-on, actress Myra Turley, a longtime friend, recalled. Last year, when the stucco on her house needed to be redone, Kemp simply “taught herself how to stucco, got on a ladder and did it herself.”

© 2020 The New York Times Company










Today's News

July 19, 2020

Complaint faults museum director for hanging his in-law's El Greco

It wasn't the sex: bloodletting fatal for Raphael, study claims

Exhibition explores the modernist approach and formal experimentation of Harry Callahan and Alexander Calder

Cuomo says NYC museums won't reopen next week

As galleries reopen, two critics find rewards eclipse the angst

Perrotin New York opens a solo exhibition by New Delhi based artist Bharti Kher.

Fire damages French cathedral, arson probe launched

Greek National Opera finds post-lockdown voice

Attempted sale of fake $300,000 antique gold coin

Kunsthaus Zürich presents masterpieces of landscape painting

11th Berlin Biennale announces participants

Exhibition of works from the María Josefa Huarte Collection on view in Bilbao

Jane Walentas, who planted a carousel in Dumbo, dies at 76

Benefit Shop Foundation announces focused auction of Estelle Goodman's art

Hamptons Virtual Art Fair announces 2020 VIP exhibitors list and programming

Nick Gentry creates new series of portraits of the frontline NHS staff with vintage computer punch cards

Brandis Kemp, character actress and 'Fridays' original, dies at 76

Sweden seizes book by Jewish comedian criticising war-time collaboration

Black artists on how to change classical music

Tang Teaching Museum announces online book launch of 'Liz Collins: Energy Field'

2020 Art Quadriennale to propose a new image of Italian contemporary art

New artworks by Jenny Holzer, Mel Chin and Xaviera Simmons join ongoing citywide campaign

FOTOHOF opens an exhibition of the photographic work of Wolfgang Suschitzky

111-year-old Renault with echoes of Downton Abbey for sale with H&H Classics

What is Airbrushing and how to create art with it?

The Art of Staying Motivated All Day Long




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful