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"Too Close For Comfort's" Lydia Cornell Is Back in Primetime on HBO's "Curb Your Enthusiasm"
Lydia Cornell, Best Actress nominee at
Method Fest for the independent film "Miss Supreme Queen," and star of the
long-running hit show "Too Close For Comfort," guest stars this month on
the groundbreaking HBO series, "Curb Your Enthusiasm."
Lydia plays opposite Larry David as the helpful Victoria's Secret salesgirl
in the October 9th episode of "Curb." "I love improv -- playing off another
actor with no script, no preparation, no rehearsal. With Larry it was
magic. Of course 'Curb' is the best show for writers who act -- or actors
who like to live on the edge and make fools of themselves," says Cornell.
Ms. Cornell is also a political writer and humorist who has been described
as a "female Dave Sedaris." Her current project is an explosive and
controversial book tentatively titled "Serpentine: Tales of a Recovering
Bimbo" about her own humiliating journey from the heights of fame to the
devastation of alcoholism to miraculous renewal, including motherhood then
marriage. Cornell now has three boys and two dogs, including her husband.
Cornell says, "Everyone is going through puberty in our house. We are
constantly regressing. I now have the most hilarious, incredible life I
ever dreamed possible -- but it was a very screwy route to spiritual
growth. Lots of raw, ugly, embarrassing celebrity moments." Including being
dumped by various icons -- and being locked in a bank vault above Harrods's
by Dodi Fayed, Princess Diana's ill-fated partner. Lydia describes her
Hollywood experience as a crash-and-burn, then a "catastrophic" spiritual
awakening that was almost supernatural.
In "Serpentine," with chapters such as "How to Talk to Ann Coulter, If You
Must," and "Falling Up," Lydia chronicles her tragic-comic journey as a
female in the 21st century, and explores being an American in this bizarre
new millennium where 'peace' seems to be a dirty word.
Cornell went to Beirut, Lebanon in the first USO visit to a Mideast war
zone for the International Peacekeeping forces. She left right before the
first suicide truck bomb killed over 200 Marines of the 24th MAU. US
Magazine published her "Beirut Diary."
Her Soviet novel, "The Sylvia Plan" is based on the true story of one of
Stalin's most complex assassins: the man who killed Trotsky. The book,
spanning the Spanish Civil War and World War II, had to be put on the back
burner while Cornell raised children. It is finally coming out in 2006 and
she has offers for the movie rights.
Cornell's frustration with materialism compelled her to write the film
"Venus Conspiracy." "I actually know nine-year old girls who worry about
wrinkles and dieting!" Cornell says. She teamed up with her former co-star
from "Too Close For Comfort," Deborah Van Valkenburgh. Ironically, both
actresses portray sisters in "Venus" as they did some twenty years prior.
"We got to have a great fight and we laughed until we cried," says
Cornell. This zany, poignant comedy-thriller in the vein of "Dr.
Strangelove" and "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" clearly sends a message to
all women, "Women have never achieved as much as men because they spend too
much time putting on makeup!" EXTRA recently profiled Cornell and Van
Valkenburgh, showing clips from "Venus."
Cornell comes from a family dedicated to the arts. Her great-great
grandmother was Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of "Uncle Tom's Cabin." A
feminist and children's advocate, she is passionate about helping orphans
and underprivileged children. Profits from her ventures go to various
children's charities, including Give Kids a Break, Girls Inc. and Feed the
Children and right now, hurricane relief/missing kids as well.
Rhino continues their highly successful DVD release of "Too Close For
Comfort," Seasons I and II, which follows the everyday exploits of a couple
whose grown daughters live directly downstairs. "Too Close For Comfort"
marked the triumphant return of "The Mary Tyler Moore Show's" Ted Knight as
San Francisco cartoonist Henry Rush. The popular series also stars Nancy
Dussault, Deborah Van Valkenburgh, JM J. Bullock, and the legendary Audrey
Meadows -- who played Jackie Gleason's wife on "The Honeymooners." Please
go to www.rhino.com for further information.
Distributed by Market Wire
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Daily News
Tags: ,Media and Entertainment:BooksandPublishing, MediaandEntertainment:Television, ,CA,LOS ANGELES, CA
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