Sunday, January 11, 2026

Newsmax: Greg Kelly does a background check on the woman shot by ICE

Landman Season 2 Episode 9

 


Landman Season 2 Episode 9 will premiere on Sunday, January 11, 2026, exclusively on Paramount+. The episode becomes available at 3:00 a.m. ET, aligning with the platform’s standard global release window. Viewers can stream it directly via the Paramount+ app or website. Subscribers can also access the episode through Amazon Prime Video Channels, Apple TV, and Roku, provided Paramount+ is linked to their account.

The series continues its weekly release model, a pacing choice that lets tension mature rather than evaporate overnight.

Global Release Schedule

RegionRelease TimeRelease Date
United States3:00 a.m. ETJan. 11, 2026
Canada3:00 a.m. ETJan. 11, 2026
United Kingdom8:00 a.m. GMTJan. 11, 2026
Central Europe9:00 a.m. CETJan. 11, 2026
Australia7:00 p.m. AEDTJan. 11, 2026
New Zealand9:00 p.m. NZDTJan. 11, 2026
Philippines3:00 p.m. PHTJan. 11, 2026
Japan4:00 p.m. JSTJan. 11, 2026
India 1:30 pm ISTJan. 11, 2026

With Season 2 capped at ten episodes, Episode 9 stands as the penultimate chapter, designed to tighten the screws before the finale delivers resolution or regret.

 

Saturday, January 10, 2026

Ashleigh Banfield: Shocking Arrest: Surgeon Ex-Husband Charged in Brutal Ohio Dentist Murders | Dr. Michael McKee

LON.TV: CES 2026 Bonus Dispatch! More Tech, My Gear and More!

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Tousi TV: Pahlavi Announces Plan To Return To Iran - Declares Final Battle

Grizzly True Crime: Monique Tepe's Ex-Husband in Custody

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Caught Stealing (2025)


Caught Stealing is a 2025 American black comedy crime thriller film[4] directed by Darren Aronofsky and starring Austin Butler as a former star baseball player-turned-bartender who unwittingly runs afoul of New York City's criminal underbelly while pet sitting for his neighbor. Regina King, Zoë Kravitz, Matt Smith, Liev Schreiber, Vincent D'Onofrio, Benito Martínez Ocasio, Griffin Dunne, and Carol Kane appear in supporting roles. The film is based on a 2004 novel of the same name by Charlie Huston, who adapted it for the screenplay. The film's score was written by Rob Simonsen and recorded by the British post-punk band Idles.[5]

Produced by Columbia Pictures in association with Protozoa Pictures, Caught Stealing was released in the United States by Sony Pictures Releasing on August 29, 2025. The film has received generally positive reviews from critics, with particular praise for Butler's performance and Aronofsky's direction. The film was a box-office bomb, grossing only $32.5 million against a $40-65 million budget.

Plot

In 1998, Henry "Hank" Thompson is a bartender living on the Lower East Side. He calls his mother in Patterson, California, every day, especially to discuss their shared love of the San Francisco Giants. Hank is haunted by a drunken car crash that killed his friend and ended his major league baseball ambitions and left him with a dependency on alcohol.

Hank's neighbor Russ Miner is returning to London to see his ailing father, tasking Hank to care for his cat, Bud. Two Russian mobsters, Aleksei and Pavel, later arrive in search of Russ and viciously beat Hank to the point that he needs emergency surgery to remove his ruptured kidney. After the Russians break into Russ's apartment, narcotics detective Elise Roman questions Hank and reveals Russ is a drug dealer connected to the notorious Hasidic Drucker brothers. Finding a key hidden in Bud's litter box, Hank notifies Roman when the Druckers search Russ's apartment.

After getting drunk at Paul's Bar, Hank leaves his clothes outside his building. Interrogated by the Russians and their Puerto Rican associate Colorado, Hank cannot remember what happened to the key. Hank leaves the injured Bud with his girlfriend Yvonne and remembers taking the key to the bar. Chased by the Druckers, he informs Colorado, who mentions Yvonne. Suddenly realizing she is in danger, he races back to her apartment only to find she has been killed.

A guilt-stricken Hank confides in Roman, who tells him of her dreams of retiring to Tulum before revealing herself to be in league with Colorado and the Russians. Roman claims that her gang are not the group responsible for Yvonne's murder. Hank is brought to Paul's Bar, where an altercation results in the killings of Amtrak and Colorado. Lying that the key is in the basement strongroom's safe, Paul retrieves a shotgun but is killed in the ensuing chaos. Hank locks himself in the strongroom, forcing the others to leave empty-handed.

Hank recovers the key from the homeless Jason, left in the clothes he abandoned. Russ returns home but is hit in the head with a baseball bat when Hank mistakes him for an intruder. Russ explains that after selling drugs for the Druckers in Colorado's nightclubs, he was forced to involve Roman, who owes money to the Russians' boss. The key unlocks a storage unit with just over $4 million he was meant to split between the various parties on the day he left for London. Fearing for his life, Russ prepares to take the money and flee the country, leaving Hank as the fall guy, but Hank knocks him unconscious.

Meeting with Roman and the Russians, Hank offers them Russ and the key in exchange for Bud. Russ panics and kills Aleksei before escaping with Hank and Bud, suggesting that Roman might have been the one who killed Yvonne. They get away on the subway, where Russ succumbs to his injuries. Hank spends the night on Coney Island. Roman calls the following day, demanding he bring the key to the Russians' supper club otherwise he will be framed for the several murders, and hints at killing his mother. After calling to warn her, Hank goes to see the Druckers. They agree to kill Roman in exchange for Hank leading them to the money.

As they arrive at the club, Hank is restrained to the steering wheel while the Druckers carry out shooting the place up. Hank breaks free when seeing Roman flee and chases her. He injures Roman by impaling her foot with the broken baseball bat handle, whereupon the Druckers arrive to kill her. Hank reveals where he hid the key, and the brothers decide to let him live with a share of the money. They force him to drive them home, when Hank notices that Lipa has Yvonne's lighter. Noticing his reaction to the lighter, the brothers admit they killed Yvonne to send a message to Hank for evading them. Hank purposefully crashes the car, this time killing the two brothers. Some time later, Hank escapes to Tulum while posing as Russ, even taking Bud with him, and mailing the other half of the money to his mother.

Cast

Production

In 2013, screenwriter David Hayter was developing an adaptation of Charlie Huston's trilogy of novels centered on the character of Hank Thompson, with Patrick Wilson set in the lead role.[6][7] A new film adaptation was reported to be in development at Sony Pictures in March 2024, with Huston adapting their own novel, Darren Aronofsky directing, Austin Butler attached to star and Protozoa Pictures producing.[8] In July 2024, Zoë Kravitz and Regina King joined the cast in undisclosed roles.[9][10] In August, Matt Smith, Liev Schreiber, and Bad Bunny were added to the cast,[11][12] with Griffin Dunne, Vincent D'Onofrio, D'Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai, and Action Bronson joining the following month.[13][14][15][16] In December 2024, it was announced that Carol Kane had joined the cast in a role where she mostly speaks Yiddish.[17]

Principal photography began on September 5, 2024, in New York City.[18][19] The film had a net production budget of $40 million, with some estimates of total costs at $65 million.[20] The film's score was written by Rob Simonsen and recorded by the British post-punk band Idles. According to lead singer Joe Talbot, the collaboration originated from a "chance backstage meeting" with Aronofsky while recording an episode of The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, on which both had appeared as guests. The band also contributed five songs to the soundtrack, including a cover of Junior Murvin's "Police and Thieves".[5]

Release

Caught Stealing had its world premiere on August 7, 2025, in Guaynabo, Puerto Rico, at Caribbean Cinemas with director Darren Aronofsky in attendance, as well as Austin Butler and Bad Bunny, who is credited by his birth name, Benito A. Martínez Ocasio. The premiere was held in Puerto Rico to promote the island, as well as coinciding with Bad Bunny's sold-out 30-date concert residency, being held about 8 miles away from the theater, which Aronofsky and Butler attended as Bad Bunny's VIP attendees.[21][22]

The film was released in the United States on August 29, 2025.[23]

Reception

Box office

As of October 2, 2025, the film has grossed $19 million in the United States and $12 million internationally, for a worldwide total of $32 million.[3][2]

The film made $1.2 million in Thursday night previews.[24] The film would make $9.6 million over the four-day Labor Day weekend, doing moderately well at the box office.[25]

Critical response

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 84% of 246 critics' reviews are positive. The website's consensus reads: "A freewheeling throwback, Caught Stealing splendidly showcases Austin Butler's movie star charisma while marking a surprisingly lighthearted gearshift for director Darren Aronofsky."[26] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 65 out of 100, based on 47 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[27] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B" on an A+ to F scale.[28]

Carol Kane (1952-)

 


Carolyn Kane (born June 18, 1952)[1] is an American actress and comedian. She gained recognition for her role in Hester Street (1975), for which she received an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress. She became known in the 1970s and 1980s in films such as Dog Day Afternoon (1975), Annie Hall (1977), When a Stranger Calls (1979), The Princess Bride (1987), Scrooged (1988) and Flashback (1990).

Kane appeared on the television series Taxi in the early 1980s, as Simka Gravas, the wife of Latka, the character played by Andy Kaufman, winning two Emmy Awards for her work. She has played the character of Madame Morrible in the musical Wicked, both in touring productions and on Broadway from 2005 to 2014. From 2015 to 2020, she was a main cast member on the Netflix series Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, in which she played Lillian Kaushtupper. She currently plays the recurring role of Pelia in Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (2023–present).

Early life

Kane was born on June 18, 1952, in Cleveland, the daughter of Joy, a jazz singer, teacher, dancer, and pianist, and architect Michael Kane.[2] Her family is Jewish, and her grandparents emigrated from Russia, Austria, and Poland.[3][4] Due to her father's occupation, Kane moved frequently as a child; she briefly lived in Paris at age eight, where she began learning to speak French.[2][5] Additionally, she resided in Haiti at age 10.[2] Her parents divorced when she was 12 years old.[6]

She attended the Cherry Lawn School, a boarding school in Darien, Connecticut, until 1965.[7][8] She studied theater at HB Studio[9] and also went to the Professional Children's School in New York City. She became a member of both the Screen Actors Guild and the Actors' Equity Association at age 14.[10] Kane made her professional theater debut in a 1966 production of The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie starring Tammy Grimes, her first job as a member of Actors' Equity.[11][12]

Career

1971–1979: Career beginnings and early recognition

Kane's on-screen career began while she was still a teenager, when she appeared in minor roles in films such as Desperate Characters and Mike Nichols's Carnal Knowledge in 1971, the latter of which led her to befriend lead actor Jack Nicholson. In 1972, she was cast in her first leading role in the Canadian production Wedding in White, where she played a teenage rape victim who is forced into marriage by her father. She also appeared as a sex worker in Hal Ashby's 1973 film The Last Detail, where she collaborated with Nicholson yet again.[13]

Theatrical release poster for Hester Street (1975)

In 1975, Kane was cast in Joan Micklin Silver's feature-length debut Hester Street, in which she played a Russian-Jewish immigrant who struggles with her husband to assimilate in late 19th-century New York.[13] For her performance in the film, Kane garnered her sole Academy Award nomination for Best Actress at the 48th Academy Awards, and it remains her favorite of all her roles.[5] Additionally, in 1975 she appeared as a bank teller in Sidney Lumet's crime drama Dog Day Afternoon, which received numerous Academy Award nominations in other categories that same year. This also marked her first on-screen collaboration with Al Pacino, whom she had known prior to the film thanks to their shared background in theater.[4][14]

Despite this recognition, however, Kane has recounted waiting for approximately a year before being cast in her next role, which she has attributed to the trend of actors being typecast after receiving awards attention.[15] Her return to the screen would come with Gene Wilder's 1977 comedy The World's Greatest Lover, which she has credited for identifying the comedic talents that would become her staple in later years.[14] During the same year, she was cast in Woody Allen's romantic comedy Annie Hall, where she played Allison Portchnik, the first wife of Allen's character Alvy Singer.[2] She also appeared in Ken Russell's film Valentino, which, like The World's Greatest Lover, takes inspiration from the silent film era, as it is a biographical drama loosely inspired by the life of Rudolph Valentino.

Kane and Gene Wilder in a publicity photo for The World's Greatest Lover, 1977

After this, Kane appeared in the horror films The Mafu Cage (1978) and When a Stranger Calls (1979); ironically, Kane herself is largely averse to horror, and she admits to being unable to watch the latter.[16] In 1979, she also appeared in a cameo role in The Muppet Movie.[17]

1980–1990: Taxi and transition into comedy

From 1980 to 1983, Kane portrayed Simka Dahblitz-Gravas, the wife of Andy Kaufman's character Latka Gravas, on the American television series Taxi. She has theorized that she was cast in Taxi in part due to her work in Hester Street, where a significant portion of her dialogue was spoken in Yiddish, since Simka speaks a fictional language with a vaguely Eastern European accent.[18]

Kane has attributed the on-screen rapport she shared with Kaufman to their different work ethics: where she was trained in the theater and enjoyed rehearsal time, Kaufman was rooted more in stand-up comedy and did not care for rehearsals, a contrast that she believes enhanced their believability as a married couple.[19][12] However, she maintains that she and Kaufman had a loving relationship on set, and she has spoken fondly of him in retrospective interviews.[5][12] Kane received two Emmy Awards for her work on Taxi.[13] Her role on the series has largely been credited as the beginning of her pivot towards more comedic roles, as she began to regularly appear in sitcoms and comedy films after the series ended.[16][20]

In 1984, Kane appeared in episode 12, season 3 of Cheers as Amanda, an acquaintance of Diane Chambers from her time spent in a mental institution. She was also a regular on the 1986 series All Is Forgiven.

In 1987, Kane appeared in Ishtar, Elaine May's notorious box-office flop turned cult classic, playing the frustrated girlfriend of Dustin Hoffman's character. That year also saw her make one of her most recognizable film appearances in Rob Reiner's fantasy romance The Princess Bride, where she played Valerie, the wife of Miracle Max (Billy Crystal). In 1988, Kane appeared in the Cinemax Comedy Experiment Rap Master Ronnie: A Report Card alongside Jon Cryer and the Smothers Brothers. During the same year, she was also featured in the Bill Murray vehicle Scrooged, where she portrayed a contemporary version of the Ghost of Christmas Present, depicted in the film as a fairy. For this performance, Variety called her "unquestionably [the] pic's comic highlight".[21] Additionally, she played a potential love interest for Steve Martin's character in the 1990 film My Blue Heaven.

1990–2004: Television and film regularity

Kane became a regular on the NBC series American Dreamer, which ran from 1990 to 1991. In 1993, she appeared in Addams Family Values where she replaced Judith Malina as Grandmama Addams; this role saw her reunite with her Taxi castmate Christopher Lloyd. She also guest starred on a 1994 episode of Seinfeld, as well as a 1996 episode of Ellen. In 1996, she was given a supporting role in the short-lived sitcom Pearl. From there, she continued to appear in a number of film roles throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, including The Pallbearer (1996), Office Killer (1997), Jawbreaker (1999), and My First Mister (2001). In 1998, she voiced Mother Duck in the American version of the animated television film The First Snow of Winter.

In 1999, she made a cameo in the Andy Kaufman biopic Man on the Moon as herself playing the Taxi character.

2005–2014: Wicked and career expansion

Kane is also known for her portrayal of the evil headmistress Madame Morrible in the Broadway musical Wicked, whom she played in various productions from 2005 to 2014. Kane made her Wicked debut on the 1st National Tour,[22] playing the role from March 9 through December 19, 2005. She then reprised the role in the Broadway production from January 10 through November 12, 2006.[23] She again played the role for the Los Angeles production which began performances on February 7, 2007.[24] She left the production on December 30, 2007, and later returned on August 26, 2008, until the production closed on January 11, 2009.[25]

In January 2009, she guest starred in the television series Two and a Half Men as the mother of Alan Harper's receptionist.[26]

She then transferred with the Los Angeles company of Wicked to reprise her role once again, this time in the San Francisco production, which began performances January 27, 2009.[27] She ended her limited engagement on March 22, 2009.[28]

In March 2010, Kane appeared in the ABC series Ugly Betty as Justin Suarez's acting teacher.[29]

Kane starred in the off-Broadway play Love, Loss, and What I Wore in February 2010.[30] She made her West End debut in January 2011 in a major revival of Lillian Hellman's drama The Children's Hour at London's Comedy Theatre, where she starred alongside Keira Knightley, Elisabeth Moss and Ellen Burstyn.[31] In May 2012, Kane appeared on Broadway as Betty Chumley in a revival of the play Harvey.

Kane returned to the Broadway company of Wicked from July 1, 2013, through February 22, 2014, a period that included the show's 10th anniversary.[32]

In 2014, she was cast in a recurring role on the television series Gotham as Gertrude Kapelput, the Hungarian-born mother of Oswald Cobblepot, also known as Penguin.[33]

2015–present: Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt and legacy roles

In 2015, Kane was cast in the recurring role of Lillian Kaushtupper, the landlord to the title character of the Netflix series Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt.[34] Kane joined the cast due in part to her admiration of showrunner Tina Fey, with whom she had previously wanted to collaborate on the NBC series 30 Rock.[12] She was promoted to a series regular for the show's second season.[35] Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt ran for four seasons, making it one of Kane's longest television roles to date. She reprised the role in the "interactive" television special Kimmy vs the Reverend.[36]

In 2018, Kane was cast in Jacques Audiard's Western film The Sisters Brothers.[37] In 2019, she appeared in Jim Jarmusch's horror comedy The Dead Don't Die, marking another collaboration with Bill Murray.[38] That same year, she was featured in the recurring role of Bianca Nova in season one of the HBO series Los Espookys, where she reunited with her Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt castmate Fred Armisen.[39]

In 2020, Kane was featured in the ensemble cast of the Amazon series Hunters, which also includes her longtime acquaintance Al Pacino.[4] Additionally, during the same year, she participated in two cast reunion fundraisers, one with the cast of Taxi for the Actors Fund, the other with the cast of The Princess Bride for the Democratic Party of Wisconsin.[40][41]

It was announced on Star Trek Day 2022 that Kane would join the cast of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds for season two as Chief Engineer Pelia.[42] Prior to her casting, Kane had never seen an episode of the original Star Trek series, though she has said the show's writers thought this oversight improved her performance.[43]

In 2024, Kane starred in Nathan Silver's comedy film Between the Temples, in which she portrays a woman who, having been raised by secular parents, decides to have a bat mitzvah later in life. Kane has stated that she drew inspiration from Silver's mother, who studied for a bat mitzvah in her sixties; she was also inspired by her own mother, who, at age 55, moved to Paris to become a musician.[44][45] For her work in the film, she received the New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actress, and was nominated for Best Supporting Performance at the Independent Spirit Awards.[45] In December 2024, she was announced as part of the cast of Darren Aronofsky's upcoming film Caught Stealing, where she is slated to play a minor role in which she only speaks Yiddish.[44]

Personal life

Kane was in a relationship with actor Woody Harrelson from 1986 to 1988. The two have remained friends since their break-up, and Harrelson was seen attending Kane's 60th birthday party in 2012.[46][47]

She has never been married or had any children. Regarding the latter decision, she has said, "I never felt that I would be calm and stable enough to be the kind of mother I'd like to be. I don't think everyone randomly is mother material."[5]

Kane is often noted for her high, breathy, slow voice, though her vocal timbre has grown raspier with age.[16] Kane, who has often altered her voice to suit various roles, has confessed to disliking it, telling People magazine in 2020 that she wishes her voice was "deep and beautiful and sexy".[48]

A documentary about Kane and her 98 year old mother Joy premiered in 2025, titled Carol & Joy. [49]

Filmography

Key
Denotes film or TV productions that have not yet been released

Film

Year Title Role Notes
1971 Desperate Characters Young Girl
Carnal Knowledge Jennifer
1972 Wedding in White Jeannie Dougall
...and Hope to Die (aka. La course du lièvre à travers les champs)
Scenes cut from finished film[50]
1973 The Last Detail Young Whore
1975 Hester Street Gitl
Dog Day Afternoon Jenny
1976 Harry and Walter Go to New York Florence
1977 Annie Hall Allison Portchnik
Valentino Jean Acker
The World's Greatest Lover Annie Hickman
1978 The Mafu Cage Cissy
1979 The Muppet Movie Myth
When a Stranger Calls Jill Johnson
La Sabina Daisy
1981 The Games of Countess Dolingen Louise Haines-Pearson
Strong Medicine

1982 Pandemonium Candy
Norman Loves Rose Rose
1983 Can She Bake a Cherry Pie? Customer at Cafe
1984 Over the Brooklyn Bridge Cheryl
Racing with the Moon Annie the Hooker
The Secret Diary of Sigmund Freud Martha Bernays
Terror in the Aisles Jill Johnson (archival footage) Documentary film
1985 Transylvania 6-5000 Lupi
1986 Jumpin' Jack Flash Cynthia
1987 Ishtar Carol
The Princess Bride Valerie
1988 Sticky Fingers Kitty
License to Drive Mrs. Anderson
Scrooged Ghost of Christmas Present
1990 The Lemon Sisters Franki D'Angelo
Flashback Maggie
Joe Versus the Volcano Hairdresser cameo
My Blue Heaven Shaldeen
1991 Ted & Venus Colette
1992 In the Soup Barbara
Baby on Board Maria
The Real Story of Here Comes the Bride Margaret Mouse Voice role
1993 Even Cowgirls Get the Blues Carla
Addams Family Values Grandmama
1994 The Crazysitter Treva Van Arsdale
1995 Theodore Rex Molly Rex Direct-to-video, voice role
1996 Big Bully Faith
American Strays Helen
Sunset Park Mona
The Pallbearer Mrs. Thompson
Trees Lounge Connie
1997 Gone Fishin' Donna Waters
Office Killer Dorine Douglas
1998 The Tic Code Miss Gimpole
1999 Jawbreaker Principal Sherwood
Man on the Moon Herself/Simka Dahblitz
The Wacky Adventures of Ronald McDonald Org's mother Short film, voice role
2000 The Office Party Linda Short film
2001 D.C. Smalls Mother Short film
My First Mister Mrs. Benson
The Shrink Is In Dr. Louise Rosenberg
Tomorrow by Midnight Officer Garfield
2002 Love in the Time of Money Joey
2003 Cosmopolitan Mrs. Shaw
2004 Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen Miss Baggoli
2005 The Pacifier Helga
The Civilization of Maxwell Bright Temple
The Happy Elf Gilda Voice role
2008 Kung Fu Panda: Secrets of the Furious Five Sheep Voice role
Four Christmases Aunt Sarah Uncredited
2010 The Bounty Hunter Dawn
My Girlfriend's Boyfriend Barbara
Pete Smalls Is Dead Landlady
2011 The Key Man Marsha
2012 Sleepwalk with Me Linda Pandamiglio
Should've Been Romeo Ruth
Thanks for Sharing Roberta
2013 Clutter Linda Bradford
2014 Emoticon ;) Hannah Song
2015 Ava's Possessions Talia
2018 The Sisters Brothers Mrs. Sisters
Ghost Light Madeline Styne
2019 The Dead Don't Die Mallory O'Brien
2022 iMordecai Fela
2023 Migration Erin Voice role
2024 Between the Temples Carla Kessler[51][52] Also executive producer[53]
Boundary Springs Granny
2025 Caught Stealing Bubbe All Yiddish role[54]
TBA Anxious People TBA Filming[55]

Television

Year Title Role Notes
1974 We, the Woman Susannah White TV movie
1978 Visions
Episode: "Fans of the Kosko Show"
1978 Great Performances Eliza Southgate Out of Our Father's House (anthology series - play
1980 The Greatest Man in the World April TV movie
1980, 1982–1983 Taxi Simka Dahblitz / Simka Dahblitz-Gravas Guest episodes (seasons 2, 4), main cast (season 5)
1981 Great Performances Frances Loomis Episode: "The Girls in Their Summer Dresses and Other Stories"
1982 Laverne & Shirley Olga Episode: "Jinxed"
1983 An Invasion of Privacy Ilene Cohen TV movie
American Playhouse Lavinia Episode: "Keeping On"
Faerie Tale Theatre The "Good" Fairy Episode: "Sleeping Beauty"
1984 Burning Rage Mary Harwood TV movie
Cheers Amanda Boyer Episode: "A Ditch in Time"
1985 Tales from the Darkside Anne MacColl Episode: "Snip, Snip"
Crazy Like a Fox
Episode: "Bum Tip"
1986 Tall Tales & Legends Barbara Episode: "Casey at the Bat"
All Is Forgiven Nicolette Bingham Main cast
1987 Paul Reiser Out on a Whim Fortune Teller TV movie
1988 Drop-Out Mother Maxine TV movie
Rap Master Ronnie: A Report Card
TV movie
1989 Sesame Street Nina the Nice Episode: "Bob accompanies Oscar to Grouchytown"[56]
1990 Tales from the Crypt Judy Episode: "Judy, You're Not Yourself Today"
Tiny Toon Adventures Ollie Episode: "A Quack in the Quarks" (voice role)
1990–1991 American Dreamer Lillian Abernathy Main cast
1991–1992 Brooklyn Bridge Aunt Sylvia 5 episodes
1992 Sibs Sally Episodes: "The Crash: Part 1", "The Crash: Part 2"
The Ray Bradbury Theater Polly Episode: "Tomorrow's Child"
1993 When a Stranger Calls Back Jill Johnson TV movie
TriBeCa Amanda Episode: "Stepping Back"
Eligible Dentist
TV movie
1994 Seinfeld Corinne Episode: "The Marine Biologist"
All-Star 25th Birthday: Stars and Street Forever! Nina the Nice TV special, a.k.a.Sesame Street All-Star 25th Birthday: Stars and Street Forever!, archival footage
Aladdin Brawnhilda Episodes: "Stinkerbelle", "Smells Like Trouble" (voice role)
Empty Nest Shelby Episode: "The Courtship of Carol's Father"
1995 A.J.'s Time Travelers Emily Roebling Episode: "Brooklyn Bridge"
Dad, the Angel & Me The Angel TV movie
Napoleon Spider TV movie, (voice role, English version)
Freaky Friday Leanne Futterman TV movie
1996 Chicago Hope Marguerite Birch Episode: "Stand"
Ellen Lily Penney Episode: "A Penney Saved"
1996–1997 Pearl Annie Caraldo Main cast
1997 Hey Arnold! Emily Dickinson Trophy Episode: "Freeze Frame/Phoebe Cheats" (voice role)
The Tony Danza Show Simka Gravas Episode: "The Milk Run"
Homicide: Life on the Street Gwen Munch Episode: "All Is Bright"
Merry Christmas, George Bailey Cousin Tilly/Mrs. Hatch TV movie
1998 The First Seven Years Mrs. Feld TV short
Adventures from the Book of Virtues The Beetle Episode: "Patience" (voice role)
Noddy Tooth Fairy Episode: "The Tooth Fairy"[57]
1999 Noah's Ark Sarah TV movie
Blue's Clues Little Miss Muffet Episode: "Blue's Big Treasure Hunt" (voice role)
1999–2000 Beggars and Choosers Lydia Luddin 3 episodes
2000 As Told by Ginger Maude Episodes: "I Spy a Witch"; "Carl and Maude" (voice role)
2001 Family Guy Carol Episode: "Emission Impossible" (voice role)
2002 That's Life Gloria Episode: "Baum's Thesis"
The Grubbs Sophie Grubb Episode: "Pilot"
2003 Audrey's Rain Missy Flanders TV movie
2004 Hope & Faith Cornelia Rackett Episode: "Faith Scare-Field"
2005 The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy Mrs. Claus Episode: "Billy and Mandy Save Christmas" (voice role)
2006 The Year Without a Santa Claus Mother Nature TV movie, cameo
2009 Two and a Half Men Shelly Episodes: "Thank God for Scoliosis"; "David Copperfield Slipped Me a Roofie"
Monk Joy Episode: "Mr. Monk Is the Best Man"
2009, 2013 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Gwen Munch Episodes: "Zebras", "Wonderland Story"
2010 Ugly Betty Lena Korvinka Episode: "All the World's a Stage"
2011 Dora the Explorer Grandma Troll Episode: "The Grumpy Old Troll Gets Married" (voice role)
2011–2012 Jake and the Never Land Pirates Sea Witch 2 episodes (voice role)
2011–2014 Phineas and Ferb Nana Shapiro 2 episodes (voice role)
2013 Girls Cloris Episode: "It's Back"
Anger Management Carol Episode: "Charlie and His New Friend with Benefits"
2014–2016 Gotham Gertrud Kapelput Recurring role (seasons 1–2)
2015–2019 Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt Lillian Kaushtupper Main cast
2016 Crowded Linda Episode: "Given to Fly"
2017 Halt and Catch Fire Denise Episode: "Ten of Swords"
Star vs. the Forces of Evil Dr. Jelly Goodwell Episode: "Princess Turdina/Starfari" (voice role)
2017–2019 OK K.O.! Let's Be Heroes Ginger 2 episodes (voice role)
2018 Pinkalicious & Peterrific Edna 3 episodes (voice role)
Animals Chompy 2 episodes (voice role)
2018–2021 F Is for Family Marilyn Chilson 5 episodes (voice role)
Vampirina Madame Spook 2 episodes (voice role)
2018–2019 Rapunzel's Tangled Adventure Madam Canardist 3 episodes (voice role)
2019 Los Espookys Bianca Nova Recurring role (season 1)
Bubble Guppies The Sea Witch Episode: "The New Guppy!" (voice role)
Big Mouth The Menopause Banshee Episode: "Florida" (voice role)
Summer Camp Island Barb Junior Episode: "The Great Elf Invention Convention" (voice role)
2020 Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt: Kimmy vs the Reverend Lillian Kaushtupper TV movie
2020–2023 Hunters Mindy Markowitz Main cast
2022 Naked Mole Rat Gets Dressed: The Underground Rock Experience Grand-Mah TV movie (voice role)
The Simpsons Blythe Episode: "Step Brother from the Same Planet" (voice role)
2023 Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Pelia Recurring role
2024 Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur Bube Bina 2 episodes (voice role)
Dinner with the Parents Nana Main cast
Monster High Ghoul-ma Vondergeist Episode: "Ghoulishly Ghoulma" (voice role)
2025 Super Duper Bunny League Captain Stickybeard Episode: "Space Pirates!" (voice role)
Poker Face Lucille Lunbinski Episode: "Hometown Hero"
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia Samantha Episode: "The Golden Bachelor Live"
Happy's Place Theresa season 2 episode 6 "Izzy and the Professor"

Stage

Year Title Role Venue Notes
1972 Ring Around the Bathtub Esme Train Broadway; Martin Beck Theatre
1978 The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds Tillie Broadway; Biltmore Theatre
1987 A Woman of Mystery Un Named Woman Los Angeles; Court Theatre Directed by John Cassavetes
2003 The Exonerated Sunny Jacobs Touring Replacement
2004 Sly Fox Miss Fancy Broadway; Ethel Barrymore Theatre Replacement
2005; 2007;
2008; 2009
Wicked Madame Morrible Touring
2006; 2013 Broadway; Gershwin Theatre Replacement
2012 Harvey Betty Chumley Broadway; Studio 54
2019 Call Me Madam Grand Duchess Sophie Encores!

Music videos

Year Title Artist(s)
1985 "This Is My Night" Chaka Khan

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Work Result
1976 Academy Awards Best Actress Hester Street Nominated
1978 Drama Desk Award Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds Nominated
1982 AACTA Awards Best Actress in a Leading Role Norman Loves Rose Nominated
Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series Taxi Won
1983 Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy, Variety or Music Series Won
Golden Globe Awards Best Supporting Actress in a Series, Miniseries or Television Film Nominated
1996 Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series Chicago Hope Nominated
2006 TV Land Award Most Wonderful Wedding Taxi Nominated[a]
2007 Medallion Award Won[b]
2024 New York Film Critics Circle Award Best Supporting Actress Between the Temples Won
Independent Spirit Awards Best Supporting Performance Nominated