Thelma Leeds
Thelma Leeds (née Goodman; December 18, 1910[1] – May 27, 2006) was an American actress. Life and careerLeeds was born Thelma Goodman in New York City,[2] to Katie and Joseph Goodman, Russian-Jewish immigrants. She was the mother of actor/director Albert Brooks, Bob Einstein (TV's "Super Dave Osborne"), and Clifford Einstein,[2] chairman of Dailey & Associates Advertising in West Hollywood, California and chairman of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. In the early 1930s, Leeds sang light opera on the radio.[2] She also performed in New York City nightclubs as Thelma Goodman, her birth name. One night in the mid-1930s a RKO talent scout caught her nightclub act. The studio signed her to a contract and gave her the name Thelma Leeds. She had an uncredited role in the 1936 Fred Astaire/Ginger Rogers musical Follow the Fleet. She later had supporting roles in The Toast of New York (1937) and New Faces of 1937.[2] She met her husband Harry "Parkyakarkus" Einstein, a dialect comedian, while filming New Faces of 1937.[3] Leeds retired from show business after marrying Einstein in 1937. Two years after Einstein's death in 1958, she married Irving "Bernie" Bernstein; he died in 1983.[2] In 1981, Leeds played Brooks' mother in Modern Romance. She reportedly was the inspiration for Brooks' 1996 comedy Mother, which starred Debbie Reynolds.[2] Clifford Einstein told the Los Angeles Times:[2]
DeathLeeds died at her home in Beverly Hills, California of natural causes, aged 95.[2] She was entombed at Home of Peace Cemetery. References
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