Actress and soprano Marin Mazzie, a three-time Tony Award nominee known for powerhouse Broadway performances in Ragtime, Passion and Kiss Me, Kate, has died following a three-year battle with ovarian cancer. She was 57.
Mazzie died Thursday at her Manhattan home surrounded by close friends and family, said her husband, actor Jason Danieley. Her death was confirmed by her publicist, Kim Correro.
Tributes came from all across Broadway, including Harvey Fierstein, who wrote, โBeautiful, brave and inspiring. A glorious voice and an even better human beingโ and Michael Urie, who called Mazzie โluminous.โ Actor Daniel Dae Kim wrote: โThe lights of Broadway all shine a little dimmer tonight.โ
Mazzieโs broad career went from screwball comedy โ in Kiss Me, Kate and Monty Pythonโs Spamalot on Broadway and the West End โ to riveting, dysfunctional moms in Next to Normal and Carrie. She earned other Broadway roles in Man of La Mancha, Bullets Over Broadway, Enron and Into the Woods.
She found out about her cancer diagnosis on the opening day of a concert production of Zorba! in May 2015 and refused to pull out. In one song, she sang: โLife is what you do while youโre waiting to die.โ
Mazzie later underwent a hysterectomy, a bowel resection because the cancer had spread and weeks of chemotherapy. She returned to Broadway a year later, replacing Kelli OโHara in The King and I.
โItโs very emotional for me,โ she told the Associated Press in 2016. โIโm so anxious and excited and thrilled to be able to bring, in essence, a new me back to the stage with whatโs gone on in my life.โ
The New York Times said Mazzie brought โa touch of brassโ to the role of English schoolteacher Anna Leonowens. It praised her for a โhusky quietness, and you hear the fragile heart beating beneath the stalwartly corseted form.โ
Mazzie was born and raised in Rockford, Ill., in a home often filled with show tunes and original cast recordings. She attended Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo to study theater, and her first job was in a musical at a dinner theater in her hometown.
A key moment in her life happened when she was 8 years old and saw a touring company of Carousel starring John Raitt. In the second act, Rockford was plunged into a blackout and the actors needed flashlights to finish the show.
After it ended, Raitt came out and sang for the audience until it was deemed safe for everyone to go home. He sang for 45 minutes. โI will never forget that moment,โ Mazzie recounted in Making It on Broadway, a book of Broadway stories. โTo me, that was the magic of theater. Every night is different. Every audience is different. I just love the magic.โ
Mazzie made her New York stage debut in the 1983 revival of Frank Loesserโs musical, Whereโs Charley? Her big break came playing Beth in Merrily We Roll Along at the La Jolla Playhouse in California in 1985, the first production outside New York. La Jolla artistic director Des McAnuff later put her into Big River on Broadway, marking her debut on the Great White Way.
She would work three times on Broadway with Brian Stokes Mitchell โ Ragtime, Kiss Me, Kate and Man of La Mancha. (They would also work off-Broadway in a concert version of Kismet.) One of her proudest accomplishments was originating a Stephen Sondheim role โ Clara in 1994โs Passion.
