
She received much more attention with her humble, deeply stirring performance as Ernest Borgnine's Italian wife in the minor crime story
#A TANGLED WEB ALFRED HITCHCOCK HOUR TV#
Following occasional TV guest parts on such programs as "Ford Star Jubilee" and "Decoy," Zohra made a minor film debut in Odds Against Tomorrow (1959). A one-time member of Chicago's Second City comedy troupe, she had a stint with the Lincoln Center Repertory Theatre before turning to Broadway and making her 1958 debut in the play "Maybe Tuesday." She was quickly nominated for two consecutive Tony awards for her superb work in "Look: We've Come Through" (1961) and "Mother Courage and Her Children" (1963), then continued with poignant performances in such productions as "After the Fall" (1964), "Lovers and Other Strangers" (1968) and "The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window" (1972). She attended Manhattan's High School of Music and Art and later graduated from the University of Chicago. Born in New York City on May 13, 1937, Zohra was the daughter of Russian-born hardware store owners. Genuinely affecting performances, particularly on TV. With soft, vulnerable features managed to contribute a number of

Understated quality to her talent that should have gone further in theįilm business than it did.


We are going to make Donald Trump’s life a living nightmare, and I for one take immense pleasure from that.Solemn-looking Middle Eastern-looking Zohra Lampert, with the prominent cheek bones and soothing voicer, had a touching, I know this isn’t much against the fear of what’s going to happen, but friends, hear me. And he’ll have no one to blame but himself. He’ll go down as the worst president in history. But now he’s going to have to actually WORK, he’s going to be forced to deal with RESPONSIBILITIES, while surrounded by people who hate him and don’t respect him, people vastly more intelligent and competent than him, and he will be exposed as a loser. He’ll be humiliated at every turn, and leave office with the lowest approval rating ever, and he’ll be universally despised.īecause if he’d lost to Hillary, he would have played the martyr forever, called everything rigged, and had a cushy gig on Fox News complaining every day about how he would have done it better. They’re gonna start blaming him for everything, and those crowds that cheered for him are going to start booing. Minute.Īnd then, when he doesn’t deliver on his promises, when he doesn’t build the wall or create jobs or make people rich, when it becomes clear how incompetent and buffoonish he is, the country and all his supporters will turn on him. He’s going to have to sit through SO many meetings, be forced to read SO many briefings, get shoehorned into serious business all day every day, without crowds to perform for, and he’s going to hate Every. He wants to be on TV and in front of crowds, not actually working a difficult, grueling, stressful job he can’t opt out of. He’s an entertainer and an attention whore, not a public servant.

I do take some small, cold, bitter satisfaction in one thing, and that’s the fact that Trump is going to be absolutely fucking miserable for the next four years.
