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Julie Harris, Star of Stage (and Screen), Dead at 87

Julie Harris, the diminutive actress who won five Tony Awards for her stage performances and was also honored for her work in television and film, died on Saturday at age 87, a Massachusetts funeral home said.

Bill Collins, a funeral director at the Nickerson Funeral Home in Chatham, Massachusetts, confirmed the death of Harris, who lived in nearby West Chatham.

Aside from her widely acclaimed theater work, Harris was known to television audiences in the 1980s for her role in the prime-time soap opera Knots Landing, in which she played a country music singer and the mother of another key character.

Harris was also nominated for an Oscar and appeared in more than 30 films, including East of Eden in 1955, in which she played James Dean's love interest.

She was born in Grosse Pointe, Michigan. Her father was an investment banker and her mother a nurse.

Harris attended the Yale School of Drama for one year before leaving in 1945 to begin acting on Broadway. After appearing in a number of productions, she was catapulted to fame at age 24 for her role in Carson McCullers' American stage hit The Member of the Wedding.

Later in her career, Harris would come to epitomize 19th century American poet Emily Dickinson, in her performance of William Luce's 1976 one-woman play The Belle of Amherst.

She won the 1977 Tony Award for Best Actress in the play recreating Dickinson's world by gossiping about neighbors, recounting daily household routines and reciting the verse of the isolated, idiosyncratic poet.

Harris "in a new twist on the old theatrical saw of an actor captivating an audience by reading the phone book" brought down the house by carefully and guilelessly reciting the poet's recipe for her black cake which included 19 eggs and five pounds of raisins," wrote theater critic Louis Chaplin.

Harris received a Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Recording for the audio recording of the play.

She won four other Tony Awards and received five more Tony nominations during her career, in addition to a lifetime achievement Tony in 2002.

Harris also won three Emmys, U.S. television's highest honor, and was nominated for an Oscar for her role in the 1952 film The Member of the Wedding--the movie version of the play that made her famous.

The actress best known for her stage work often said in interviews that an active career in the theater did not encourage stable marriages, and she was married and divorced three times.

"At its best, the theater is a balm for hurt minds," Harris said in a 2000 interview. "It unites us as human beings, gives us a home, brings us together. You say: 'That's what it means to be alive, to be human, to feel your heart beat. That what it means. Theater does that.'"

(Reporting by Kevin Murphy, editing by Alex Dobuzinskis, Peter Cooney and Logan K. Young)

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