R.I.P. Suzanne Shepherd, actor from The Sopranos and Goodfellas

Shepherd also had a decades-long career as an acting coach

Aux News Suzanne Shepherd
R.I.P. Suzanne Shepherd, actor from The Sopranos and Goodfellas
Shepherd in 2004 Photo: Peter Kramer

Suzanne Shepherd, an actor, theatrical director, and acting coach best known for memorable roles in a pair of iconic mob-themed stories (Goodfellas and The Sopranos), has died. A cause of death was not given publicly, but Variety says that her agent confirmed that she died on Friday morning at her home in New York. Shepherd was 89.

Born in 1934, Shepherd’s first movie appearance was in 1988’s Mystic Pizza, followed by similarly beloved ‘80s movies Working Girl and Uncle Buck. In 1990, she appeared in Martin Scorsese’s Goodfellas as the mother of Lorraine Bracco’s Karen Hill, a role that she paid homage to with a recurring appearance on HBO’s The Sopranos as Mary DeAngelis, the mother of Edie Falco’s Carmela Soprano (which also happened to be pretty pitch-perfect casting, not to mention Shepherd’s very dialed-in performance when viewed alongside her TV daugher).

The Sopranos: Hugh’s birthday talk

In between those roles, she appeared on Law & Order and in Palookaville, Trees Lounge, Adrian Lyne’s 1997 Lolita adaptation, and Requiem For A Dream. She was also featured in Ed, A Dirty Shame, Choke, suicide comedy series Gravity, and in a recurring role on Blue Bloods as the mother of Sopranos co-star Steve Schirripa character. Sopranos co-star Ray Abruzzo remembered Shepherd on Instagram, saying he was sad to hear of her death and calling her a “force of nature.”

Variety notes that she also worked as a theatrical director throughout the United States and had her own acting studio in New York for “over four decades.” A documentary about her life and her work as an acting teacher, called A Gift Of Fire, is apparently in the works as well. Shepherd is survived by her daughter, artist Kate Shepherd.

6 Comments

  • daveassist-av says:

    I can’t say much about the age of departure here, but it’s quite a nice thing to leave behind a body of work that those who knew of you can treasure as they are reminded of your existence.   It sounds as though she achieved this.

  • kinjacaffeinespider-av says:

    DIRTY SH

  • cinecraf-av says:

    She reportedly hadn’t been able to digest a decent meal in six weeks.  

  • uselessbeauty1987-av says:

    I’ve always loved that Sopranos scene that is linked in the article. It’s so well-acted and Carmella’s unending hatred for Uncle Junior is always fun. 

  • paezdishpencer-av says:

    I remember a story about John Water’s A Dirty Shame was that Suzanne had not been familiar with John’s work before the signed on to play Big Ethel and when they first sat down to read the script was so horrified at it, she almost began to cry. She was about to quit but the rest of the cast persuaded her to stay….and good thing too, she was hilarious in it.

  • ImNotaHeather-av says:

    RIP to the Minister of Propaganda.  May she and her Pear Grappa Poundcake live in our hearts eternally.

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