Adrienne Barbeau

About Adrienne Barbeau

While the role provided high visibility, Barbeau had little to do on the series. It, however, opened the door to a slew of TV-movies, specials, and guest spots beginning in the mid-1970s and continuing through the 90s. Barbeau has also had a modest feature career, generally in fairly savvy and thrifty genre fare.

Barbeau first gained notice on the Broadway stage in an early 1970s revival of "Fiddler on the Roof" and garnered a Tony nomination and Theater World Award for her performance as Rizzo in "Grease" (1971). The success of "Maude" led to such TV-movie credits as co-starring with Desi Arnaz, Jr. in the medical drama "Having Babies" (her TV-movie debut, 1976), and "Someone's Watching Me" (1978), a nifty thriller (the first of several collaborations) helmed by John Carpenter (whom she married in 1979 and later divorced), Barbeau gradually evolved from playing ingenues to mothers and worldly older woman in later TV movies including the western "Blood River" (1991) starring Rick Schroeder and written by Carpenter, and the remake of "Jailbreakers" (1994), part of Showtime's "Rebel Highway" series.

Barbeau has done her most enjoyable feature work in collaboration with Carpenter ("The Fog" 1980; "Escape From New York" 1981) and horror auteur George Romero ("Creepshow" 1982; "Two Evil Eyes" 1990). Whereas Carpenter envisioned her as a hard-boiled leading lady who comfortably packs a rod, Romero got much mileage from her campy turns playing hard-eyed harpies.

Partners

Ex-Husband

John Carpenter. Met on the set of his 1978 TV movie, "Someone's Watching Me!"; married from 1979-1984

Husband

Billy Van Zandt. Married Dec. 31, 1992; brother of musician/actor Steven Van Zandt

Education

Del Mar High School, San Jose , California

Career Milestones

Appeared Off-Broadway in "Stag Movie"

Made Broadway debut as Tevye's daughter, Hodel in a revival of "Fiddler on the Roof"

Moved to New York City and worked as a go-go dancer

1972

Made TV debut as the daughter of Bea Arthur's title character on the comedy series "Maude" (CBS)

1972

Received a Tony Award nomination playing tough-girl Rizzo in the Broadway production of "Grease"

1976

TV-movie debut, "Having Babies"

1980

Made feature film debut in her then-husband, director John Carpenter's horror film, "The Fog"

1981

Again teamed with then-husband John Carpenter for "Escape from New York"

1981

Featured in the campy, slapstick comedy "The Cannonball Run"

1982

Played Hal Holbrook's emotionally abusive wife in one of five short stories in the anthology horror movie "Creepshow"; written by Stephen King and directed by George A. Romero

1982

Starred in the horror film "Swamp Thing"; written and directed by Wes Craven

1986

Cast in a small role as Rodney Dangerfield's wife in the comedy "Back to School"

1989

Starred in low-budget spoof "Cannibal Women in the Avocado Jungle of Death"; co-starred Bill Maher

1992

Lent her voice to Catwoman on "Batman: The Animated Series" (FOX)

1998

Played Oswald's mother on the ABC comedy "The Drew Carey Show"

1998

Released her debut album as a folk singer, the self-titled Adrienne Barbeau

2002

Voiced the villieness Helga Von Guggen in the cartoon series "Totally Spies!"

2003

Cast as Ruthie on the HBO series "Carnivàle"

2006

Published autobiography There Are Worse Things I Could Do

2006

Starred as Judy Garland in the Off-Broadway play "The Property Known as Garland"

2008

Published first novel, Vampyres of Hollywood; co-written by Michael Scott

2008

Voiced Scooters Mom in the animated feature "Fly Me to the Moon"