Jason Alexander honors his late TV mom, Estelle Harris: “Relishing her glorious laughter was a treat”
Alexander and Harris co-starred on Seinfeld together as George Costanza and Estelle Costanza respectively
Aux News Estelle HarrisIn a series of tweets, actor Jason Alexander remembered his Seinfeld co-star Estelle Harris following her death on April 2.
On the hit NBC series, Harris portrayed Estelle Costanza—the overbearing mother to Alexander’s George Costanza—in 27 episodes throughout the show’s run. She guest-starred frequently alongside Jerry Stiller, who played her husband and George’s father Frank Costanza.
“One of my favorite people has passed—my tv mama, Estelle Harris,” Alexander tweeted. “The joy of playing with her and relishing her glorious laughter was a treat. I adore you, Estelle. Love to your family. Serenity now and always. #RIPEstelleHarris.”
In another tweet, Alexander added, “Thanks to you all for your kind and sweet messages and remembrances of #EstelleHarris. She would be so touched. As am I. And as she would say, ‘WHY CAN’T YOU BE MORE LIKE LLOYD BRAUN!!??’”
Harris became an actor later in life after raising her three children, making her acting debut in the Linda Yellen movie Looking Up in 1977. After being a commercial spokesperson and appearing in guest roles in such series like Night Court, Married…With Children, Mad About You, and Law & Order, Harris would first appear on the Seinfeld episode, “The Contest.”
The late actor was also known for lending her voice to the Toy Story films’ Mrs. Potato Head. She would go on to build a strong resume as a voice actor, popping up in Futurama, Hercules, Family Guy and many others. Her final role was voicing Mrs. Potato Head in 2019's Toy Story 4.
The announcement of her death, which was a result of natural causes, came on Saturday from her son Glen Harris. He confirmed the news to Deadline.
“It is with the greatest remorse and sadness to announce that Estelle Harris has passed on this evening at 6:25pm,” said Harris. “Her kindness, passion, sensitivity, humor, empathy and love were practically unrivaled, and she will be terribly missed by all those who knew her.”
13 Comments
this was surprisingly moving.
DONT YOU TALK ABOUT HENNY!
Lloyd Braun would have been so proud of this article
May she live on as a doll who nags him about how fast he eats
Ha, that episode was on Comedy Central last night.“That guy really needs to be in a Sanitarium.”
I felt for George in his interactions with that woman (she was his mechanics daughter or a family friend IIRC)- I’ve had certain people especially at work who just see me at my weirdest moments and I never fail to sound like a crazy person or a moron around them.
in such series like Night Court —> in such series as Night Courtthe Seinfeld episode, “The Contest.” —> the Seinfeld episode “The Contest.”
You’re shoveling against the tide.
I’ll stop when the errors stop
It would be embarrassing, if they gave a shit.
The copy editing of GMedia is basically whatever version of spellcheck they are running.
When you use speech-to-text you can’t even see the little squigglies if they do come up