Actress Eileen Brennan as Capt. Doreen Lewis in Private Benjamin (1980). Photo: Warner Bros Pictures/APActress Eileen Brennan as Capt. Doreen Lewis in Private Benjamin (1980). Photo: Warner Bros Pictures/AP

American actress Eileen Brennan has died at the age of 80. She died at home in California, after a battle with bladder cancer, said her managers Jessica Moresco and Al Onorato.

Whether she was issuing orders as an Army captain in Private Benjamin, rambling as a real-life rendition of Mrs Peacock from Clue or blasting an immortal monster with a shotgun as a crazy cat lady in Jeepers Creepers, Brennan injected perfectly timed comedy into each of her roles.

“Our world has lost a rare human,” her Private Benjamin co-star Goldie Hawn said in a statement. “Eileen was a brilliant comedian, a powerful dramatic actress and had the voice of an angel. I will miss my old friend.”

Brennan achieved her first major role on the New York stage in Little Mary Sunshine, a musical comedy that won her the 1960 Obie award for best actress, as well as the attention of director Peter Bogdanovich, who cast her as a weary waitress who inherits the cafe where she works in 1971’s The Last Picture Show.

Eileen was a brilliant comedian, a powerful dramatic actress and had the voice of an angel

She captured several sharp-tongued roles which won her fans on television and in films, including gruff Army Captain Doreen Lewis in 1980’s Private Benjamin, aloof Mrs Peacock in 1985’s Clue, and cruel orphanage superintendent Miss Bannister in 1988’s The New Adventures of Pippi Longstocking.

“I love meanies, and this goes back to Capt. Lewis in Private Benjamin,” Brennan said in a 1988 interview.

“You know why? Because they have no sense of humour. People who are mean or unkind or rigid, they cannot laugh at themselves. If we can’t laugh at ourselves and the human condition, we’re going to be mean.” Private Benjamin brought her a supporting actress nomination for an Oscar.

She also won an Emmy for reprising her Private Benjamin role in the television version and was nominated six other times for guest roles on such shows as Newhart, thirtysomething, Taxi and Will & Grace, in which she played an over-the-top acting coach.

“Eileen Brennan was a brilliant actress, a tough and tender woman and a comic angel,” tweeted Clue co-star Michael McKean.

Brennan’s Private Benjamin role led to an enduring friendship with Hawn. A couple of years after they filmed the movie, the two women had dinner one night in 1982 in Venice, California.

As they left the restaurant, Brennan was struck by a car. Her legs were smashed, bones on the left side of her face were broken, her left eye socket was shattered. Brennan said she fought her injuries with rage.

“I was no saint,” she said in an interview with Ladies Home Journal.

“I was angry, and anger is a powerful emotion. It increased my determination not to go under, to get well.”

Brennan became dependent on painkillers, and two years after the accident she entered the Betty Ford Centre to cure her addiction.

A decade after the accident, Brennan said she was glad she had been struck by the car.

“You learn from powerful things,” she said in 1992. “Initially, there’s enormous anger, but your priorities get shifted around.”

She was a member of the original company of Hello, Dolly on Broadway.

From the New York stage, Brennan moved to the screen in The Sting, The Cheap Detective, Divorce American Style and The Last Picture Show and TV guest shots on everything from All in the Family and McMillan & Wife to Kojak, The Love Boat, Murder She Wrote, Mad About You and 7th Heaven.

Brennan is survived by her ex-husband, David John Lampson, and their two sons, Patrick and Sam.

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