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Patricia Cuthbert | Obituary | The Tribune Democrat

Patricia Cuthbert | Obituary | The Tribune Democrat
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Lovecraft Country Actress Carol Sutton Passes Away At 76

Lovecraft Country Actress Carol Sutton Passes Away At 76 Sutton appeared in more than one hundred film and television productions without leaving her hometown of New Orleans. The Eve’s Bayou, and Sutton initially began performing in the theater. She appeared in the plays The Last Madam, Native Tongues, and  A Raisin in the Sun before pivoting to television in 1974. She loved New Orleans so much that she refused to relocate for her career. She explained her choice to her friend and colleague Tommye Myrick in a 2019 interview. “When everyone else left, I never had a desire to leave New Orleans. I never wanted to go to L.A. or New York,” she reportedly said.“In those places, there were hundreds of people trying to do the same things I wanted to do. If I wanted to get on stage or get in a movie, I was able to do that right here.”

Carol Sutton: TRUE DETECTIVE Actress Dies of COVID Complications

Carol Sutton: TRUE DETECTIVE Actress Dies of COVID Complications By Mike Sprague “You know Carcosa? He who eats time. His robes, it’s a wind of invisible voices. Rejoice, death is not the end. Death is not the end. Rejoice, Carcosa.” The first season of HBO’s True Detective is one of the best seasons of TV ever. And one of our favorite moments comes when an old woman comes out of her stupor to tell Rust and Marty the scary-ass lines above. It’s also a super-creepy moment. And it comes to us from actress Carol Sutton. Sadly, we hear Sutton died Thursday in New Orleans of complications of coronavirus infection at the age of 76.

Carol Sutton, mesmerizing New Orleans actress for half century, dies at 76

She died of complications of coronavirus infection, said Tommye Myrick, a friend and local theater director. “Among actors in New Orleans, there was Carol Sutton - and there was everybody else,” said David Cuthbert, a retired Times-Picayune critic. “She opened her mouth, and out came truth. Wherever she was on stage, that was center stage.” After making her acting debut in the late 1960s in Dashiki Project Theatre productions, Sutton appeared on stages around the city in productions such as “The Last Madam,” “Native Tongues” and “A Raisin in the Sun.” She moved to television in 1974 with “The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman” and went on to roles in such movies as “Monster’s Ball,” “Ray,” “Steel Magnolias” and “The Help,” and in the television series “Tremé,” “True Detective” and “Lovecraft Country.”

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