Minnesota native and TV star Loni Anderson tells of her stand-up comedy past

The "WKRP in Cincinnati" favorite stars in the new Lifetime movie "Ladies of the '80s."

November 25, 2023 at 9:44PM
Donna Mills and Loni Anderson play soap opera stars who come together to film the last Christmas episode of their popular series in Lifetime’s “Ladies of the ‘80s: A Divas Christmas.” (Ser Baffo, Lifetime/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

In "Ladies of the '80s: A Divas Christmas," Loni Anderson plays a former soap opera sensation learning to accept that she's no longer an ingenue. In a pivotal moment, she removes her wig, revealing gray hair to her co-stars.

It's a scene that had the Minnesota native reminiscing about a similar occasion from her younger days.

As a Twin Cities stage actor in the '60s, Anderson snagged the part of Billie Dawn in "Born Yesterday" at the one-time Friars Dinner Theatre in Minneapolis — but only after purchasing a $19.95 blond wig to cover her natural brown hair. She didn't tell the director about the ruse.

"On opening night, I got a standing ovation at the start of the second act," the 78-year-old actor said during a recent phone interview from her Los Angeles home. "When the show was over, I came backstage and ripped my wig off in front the cast. There was dead silence. I asked the director, 'Would you have cast me if you knew I wasn't a blonde? He said, 'I'd like to think I'm open-minded enough that I would have considered it.'"

Anderson didn't actually dye her hair until she played brainy beauty Jennifer Marlowe in "WKRP in Cincinnati." It's a show that should have the same legacy "The Office" does, but clearing the music rights has kept streaming platforms from picking up the sitcom and introducing it to a new generation.

"It's too bad," she said. "I watched a few episodes recently and it's still relevant. In many ways, it was way ahead of its time."

"WKRP" showed off Anderson's impeccable comic timing, also on display in "Divas," premiering at 7 p.m. Dec. 2 on Lifetime. But she struggled to be taken seriously.

"Being pretty and funny wasn't a thing," she said. "I didn't like the way some people treated me, like I didn't have a brain."

Anderson might have chosen a different path if her comedic gifts would have been more appreciated when she was starting out.

"I won the talent portion of the Miss Roseville pageant for doing stand-up, although nobody called it that back then," she said, recalling her 1963 victory. "I did a take-off on something Dorothy Parker wrote. I wanted to be funny. What held me back was that I didn't look funny."

These days, Anderson is only interested in material that makes her laugh. Unlike her character in "Divas," she's not interested in fame for fame's sake, which explains why she's turned down "Dancing With the Stars" several times.

She's content spending time with her husband, Bob Flick, a founding member of the Brothers Four, whom she met when his folk group performed at a movie premiere in Minneapolis. She was a high school student, hired by a local newspaper to pose for pictures with the visiting musicians.

"He was so cute and we talked on the phone a few times after that. But my dad got in the way," she said. "I was jailbait."

The two reconnected after Anderson's divorce from Burt Reynolds. a split that got more attention than her screen work.

"I wanted to be a character actress that was always working and never have to deal with notoriety," she said. "Obviously, I didn't get what I wished for."

Anderson can't recall visiting the Twin Cities since her 50th high school reunion, but the Minnesotan in her comes out while visiting her daughter near California's Mount Shasta.

"If you see a crazy woman zipping by on a snowmobile, that's me," she said.

about the writer

about the writer

Neal Justin

Critic / Reporter

Neal Justin is the pop-culture critic, covering how Minnesotans spend their entertainment time. He also reviews stand-up comedy. Justin previously served as TV and music critic for the paper. He is the co-founder of JCamp, a non-profit program for high-school journalists, and works on many fronts to further diversity in newsrooms.

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