Icelandic, living in Italy for 40 years. Professional interpreter, passionate about languages, dialects & etymology. Lover of books, music, travel, good people.
@FoxNews He's authorized something that is totally out of his grasp, his statement is so ridiculous that it boggles the minds of us people of reasonable intelligence. The eternal shit show...💩💩
@FoxNews Watching Fox live, the ignorance is hallucinating. We do have A/C all over Southern Europe, we don't eat shitty food, we are multilingual & we sit enjoying our lives in town & city squares, having a drink, NOBODY carries a gun. Surrounded by history & beauty, true freedom !!!
I wouldn’t be where I am today without the love and support that @MichelleObama has poured into me over the years. Her story — from her South Side roots to the White House and beyond — is a central part of the Obama Presidential Center.
The Royal Opera Chorus stopped everyone in their tracks at Covent Garden today with an unannounced performance of Nessun Dorma to mark the start of the World Cup 2026
#london#londonmusic#football#worldcup#soccer
Her mother was 1 of the original Rockettes at Radio City Music Hall. Her father was a vaudeville comedian. She was dancing with professional ballet companies by age 14. She appeared in 9 Elvis Presley films as an uncredited dancer. She went to audition for a Mel Brooks movie and was told she could have the role if she could do a German accent. She borrowed the accent from Cher's wigmaker. And in 1974, she walked onto 1 of the greatest comedy film sets ever assembled and made everyone on it funnier just by being there.
This is Teri Garr. As Inga in Young Frankenstein.
And her story is the kind that Hollywood tells you cannot happen — the background dancer who becomes the heart of a classic, the uncredited chorus girl who earns an Academy Award nomination, the woman who spent 20 years quietly building a career that the industry kept trying to put in a box.
Terry Ann Garr was born on December 11, 1944, in Lakewood, Ohio. Her parents were working entertainers — not celebrities, not household names, but people who understood that performing was a craft, a discipline, and a life that required showing up and doing the work every single day.
Her father, Eddie Garr, was a well-known vaudeville comedian. His career faded as vaudeville itself faded — the form of entertainment that had dominated American stages for decades slowly dying as movies and then television took over. The family scraped through leaner years, living with relatives in the Midwest and East, before eventually settling in the San Fernando Valley in California.
Her mother, Phyllis Lind, had been 1 of the original high-kicking Rockettes at Radio City Music Hall in New York — 1 of the most precise, demanding, and glamorous dance troupes in American entertainment history.
Teri began taking dance lessons at 6 years old.
By 14, she was dancing with the San Francisco Ballet and the Los Angeles Ballet. Professional companies. Serious training. The kind of discipline that most adults would find punishing, absorbed into her body before she was a teenager.
At 16, she joined the road company of West Side Story in Los Angeles. She had actually been dropped from her first audition — then came back the following day in different clothes, auditioned again, and was accepted. The stubbornness of that moment is pure Teri Garr. When a door closes, try the window. If the window is locked, find a different outfit.
From West Side Story, she found steady work dancing in films. She appeared in 9 Elvis Presley movies — Viva Las Vegas, Roustabout, Clambake, and others — as part of the dancing chorus. Uncredited. Unacknowledged. A face in the background of scenes that millions of people watched without knowing her name.
She also appeared on television — Star Trek, Batman, Dr. Kildare. She was a featured dancer on Shindig — the influential music performance show of the 1960s. She became a semi-regular on The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour as Cher's friend Olivia.
All of it building. All of it practice. All of it completely invisible to the industry that would later claim to have discovered her.
By the early 1970s, Teri had shifted toward acting. The transition was not easy. Dancing had been her entry point — her credential — and Hollywood is not always generous about letting people out of the categories it puts them in.
Then 1974 arrived.
Francis Ford Coppola was making The Conversation — a tense, brilliant thriller about a surveillance expert starring Gene Hackman. He cast Teri Garr in a supporting role. The film received 3 Academy Award nominations including Best Picture. It is now considered 1 of the greatest American films of the decade.
That same year, Mel Brooks was making Young Frankenstein.
It was a black-and-white parody of the classic Universal monster films — Gene Wilder as the conflicted Dr. Frederick Frankenstein, Peter Boyle as the Monster, Marty Feldman as the hunchbacked Igor, Madeline Kahn as the fiancée Elizabeth, and Cloris Leachman as the terrifying Frau Blücher.
Brooks needed someone to play Inga — Dr. Frankenstein's devoted, warm, and irrepressibly cheerful German lab assistant. The role required comedy timing, physical expressiveness, warmth, and a convincing German accent.
He interviewed Teri Garr. He told her she could have the role if she could do the accent.
She had no German accent.
She went to the set of The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour, where Cher had a German wigmaker named Renata. Teri listened to Renata talk. She absorbed the sounds, the rhythms, the particular music of the accent. She went back to Mel Brooks.
She had the accent.
She got the role.
Young Frankenstein was released on December 15, 1974. It had been shot on the original Universal Studios set pieces used in the 1931 Frankenstein films — Brooks had tracked down the actual equipment, preserved in a warehouse. The film was shot in black and white to match the look and feel of the classic horror films it was lovingly sending up.
It grossed $86.2 million at the box office against a production budget of $2.78 million — a return of more than 30 times its cost. It received 2 Academy Award nominations. It was named by the American Film Institute as the 13th greatest comedy film ever made.
New Yorker film critic Pauline Kael — the most respected film critic in America — watched Teri Garr's performance and wrote that she was "the funniest neurotic dizzy dame on the screen."
From the background of 9 Elvis Presley films to the pages of The New Yorker in 1 year.
She kept building.
In 1977, Steven Spielberg cast her in Close Encounters of the Third Kind — the science fiction epic about ordinary people encountering extraordinary things. It grossed $303 million worldwide. In 1983, she played Michael Keaton's wife in Mr. Mom — another enormous commercial hit.
Then came Tootsie.
In 1982, director Sydney Pollack made 1 of the most beloved comedies in Hollywood history — Dustin Hoffman playing a struggling actor who disguises himself as a woman to get a role on a soap opera. Teri Garr played Sandy Lester — Hoffman's long-suffering, neurotic, deeply human girlfriend who does not know the truth about what he is doing.
The role required her to be funny and heartbreaking and completely real — sometimes in the same scene, sometimes in the same breath.
She was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress.
She was also nominated for a Golden Globe, a BAFTA, and a Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for the same performance.
She had gone from uncredited dancer to Oscar nominee.
And then, in the years that followed, something happened that the industry and the public did not fully understand.
Her health began to change.
She noticed things — small things at first. Fatigue that did not respond to rest. Coordination that felt slightly wrong. A body that was not entirely obeying her in the way a trained dancer's body was supposed to.
She was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1999. She kept the diagnosis private for 3 years.
In 2002, she announced it publicly. She said her reason was simple: she wanted other people with MS to know they were not alone. That there were ways to live with the disease. That it did not have to be the end.
She wrote a memoir in 2005 called Speedbumps: Flooring It Through Hollywood. She became an advocate for MS awareness and research. She appeared on talk shows and spoke at events with the same warmth and humor she had brought to every role across 40 years.
In 2006, she suffered a brain aneurysm. She survived it. She kept going.
Teri Garr died on October 29, 2024, in Los Angeles, from complications of multiple sclerosis. She was 79 years old. She was surrounded by family and friends.
Mel Brooks posted a tribute immediately. He wrote: "She was so talented and so funny. Her humor and lively spirit made the Young Frankenstein set a pleasure to work on. Her 'German' accent had us all in stitches. She will be greatly missed."
Tina Fey, who had cited Garr as a major influence on her own comedic style, paid tribute. Dozens of performers who had grown up watching her described what it had meant to see someone so funny, so warm, so completely herself on screen.
Look at this photograph one more time.
The Young Frankenstein set. Teri Garr as Inga — hair up, dress fitted, smile turned toward something just out of frame. She is 29 years old. She has spent 15 years doing the invisible work — the uncredited dancing, the background roles, the borrowed German accent — that this moment required.
She does not look like someone who is about to make history.
She looks like someone who knows exactly what she is doing.
Share this with someone who needs to be reminded — that the people who show up in the background long enough, do the work seriously enough, and refuse to be defined by the category the industry puts them in, are often the ones who end up impossible to forget.
BREAKING: HELL YES! Albania strikes a crushing blow against Jared Kushner's corrupt private island development by FREEZING the bank accounts of a major company tied to the project.
And it gets even better...
According to Albanian reporter Lindita Cela, the nation's anti-corruption prosecutors have frozen the accounts of a landholding company involved in Kushner's $4 billion luxury resort plans.
The move comes as massive protests sweep the country, with local residents incensed at the idea of Ivanka and Jared gobbling up coveted real estate to create a vacation spot for the Epstein Class. The slogan “Albania Is Not for Sale" has been spreading like wildfire and clashes between police and protestors are increasing in intensity.
The asset seizure was ordered by the Special Prosecution Against Corruption and Organized Crime and is part of a broader investigation into possibly fraudulent property titles.
Suspiciously, the company in question is owned by Qatari oligarchs Moutaz and Ramez Al-Khayyat. Kushner's ties to dirty Gulf money are well-established. They blossomed during his time in the first Trump administration, where he twisted American foreign policy to benefit specific actors in the region in return for massive investments and business advantages. This deal is rotten all the way to the core.
The Al-Khayyats have snatched up property along a protected stretch of coastline of the Adriatic Sea and it's here and on a nearby island that Kushner intends on erecting his resort for the top 1% of the top 1%. Given what we know about the Trump family, it's safe to presume that the development will serve as a paradise for pedophiles, war criminals, and human traffickers.
But this time, Jared bit off more than he can chew. Albanians are a proud, defiant people. They've survived centuries of larger regional powers seeking to divide their land, rewrite their history, and erase their culture. They're not going to let one greedy businessman defeat them now.
We stand with Albania!
Kushner out! Ivanka out!
Do you stand with the Albanian people?
Please ❤️ and share to demand more investigations into Kushner!
Happy #PrideMonth! 🌈
June is a time to celebrate the progress made in LGBTQIA+ rights around the world.
We must keep up the fight for gender equality all year round!✊
85 years of Charlie.
Our dear Charlie, husband, father, grandfather, friend, jazz lover, and the greatest drummer that ever was.
His music continues to bring joy and inspiration to people all over the world every single day.
Photograph by John Stoddart