NEW YORK — Anne Jackson, a Tony Award-nominated theater actress who often appeared onstage with her husband, the late Eli Wallach, in comedies and classics, died early Tuesday of natural causes at her home in Manhattan. She was 90.
Her death was confirmed by her son, Peter Wallach.
Jackson and Eli Wallach were a formidable acting duo, starring in a series of plays, including George Bernard Shaw's Major Barbara in 1956 and a hugely successful run of Luv, directed by Mike Nichols, in the mid-1960s. A bench in New York City's Riverside Park is dedicated to them.
"A lot of people say, 'Sorry for your loss,'" said Peter Wallach. "Actually, the part I don't accept is the loss part because it was a gift. My parents gave this tremendous gift, which they gave to the world and they gave to their children."
Jackson and Wallach were also stars of movies and TV. They played a married couple together as recently as 2003 on the NBC medical drama ER.
In 2010, when Wallach received an honorary Oscar from American Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Jackson introduced her husband: "Can I be honest about something?" she said. "I taught him everything he knows."
Jackson, who played a psychiatrist in the classic horror movie The Shining, earned a best featured actress Tony nomination in Paddy Chayefsky's Middle of the Night" in 1956. She also returned to Broadway in the mid-1990s in The Flowering Peach and played Grandma Kurnitz in Lost in Yonkers.
She and the Tony-winning Wallach acted together onstage in such plays as Cafe Crown, Harlequinade, The Typist and the Tiger, Twice Around the Park and Down the Garden Paths in 2000, among others.
The couple met when Wallach appeared in the 1946 Equity Library Theater's This Property is Condemned by Tennessee Williams. The only other performer in the show happened to be Jackson. They married in 1948. He died in 2014.
Peter Wallach, a film animator, recalled growing up in a happy home in which the children never really knew if their parents were actually arguing or if they were just rehearsing.
"Even sometimes when they'd fight, they would kind of step back from the fight and go, 'Wow, that was a really good Tennessee Williams performance I just gave!'" he said. "They always forgave each other so quickly because they were both actors."
Jackson and Wallach loved New York and were friends with everyone from Harry Belafonte to Igor Stravinsky to Groucho Marx. Wallach rode the subway everywhere except for a time in 1997, while performing in Visiting Mr. Green off-Broadway. His wife stepped in and ordered producers to provide a Rolls-Royce to ferry Wallach to and from the show. "She was a tough negotiator — out of love," Peter Wallach said.
Though the couple also acted independently, Jackson told The Associated Press in 1989: "We do have a lot of fun working together. We're both quite good character actors. The characterizations that we come up with make it seem like it's a different person we're relating to."
When he acted without her, Wallach said he asked her advice. "I just finished playing a judge in Law and Order. I said, 'How do I play a judge?' She said, 'Bang the gavel hard and just say, "Overruled!'"
The two wrote and performed a show about their lives that opened in 1993 at the off-Broadway Kaufman Theater. It gracefully weaved scenes from plays in which they acted together or separately with glimpses into their marriage and family life.
"They worked in theater, they worked in television, they worked in movies. They could move eloquently back and forth," said Peter Wallach, who noted his mother's comic chops. "Her timing was just so magnificent. She was the queen of the one-liners."
Jackson wrote a memoir, Early Stages, which traced her childhood and ended with the birth of Peter.
She also is survived by their two daughters, Roberta and Katherine, both of whom followed their parents into acting.