Teresa Ganzel


Teresa Ganzel is an American television, film and voice actress.

Career

Ganzel may be best known as a recurring cast member of The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson in the role of the Matinee Lady in the popular "Tea Time Movie" skits. She has often played ditzy, busty, blonde bimbo roles, as in the 1982 film The Toy with Jackie Gleason and Richard Pryor, in the Married... with Children episode "A Three Job, No Income Family", National Lampoon's Movie Madness and as Greedy Gretchen in the Three's Company episode "Lies My Roommate Told Me".
In 1984, Ganzel played another young and ditzy blonde, Mrs. Sheree Winkler, in the short-lived sitcom The Duck Factory, which introduced a young Jim Carrey to American audiences. She was a frequent game show celebrity in the 1980s, particularly on the $25,000 and $100,000 incarnations of Pyramid and a recurring celebrity on the 1986–1989 version of Hollywood Squares. She also appeared as a celebrity in the 1987 game show pilot for Money in the Blank.
Ganzel has had several voice-over roles on cartoons, animated movies and series, including Cow and Chicken, The Emperor's New School, Monsters, Inc., Goof Troop, Aaahh!!! Real Monsters, Rugrats and Horton Hears a Who!. Her first venture into voice acting was playing Kitty Glitter in Top Cat and the Beverly Hills Cats. Her most well-known role in animation, Miss Vavoom, is an homage to all of the sexy film stars, singers and damsels in distress who served as Droopy's love interest in the Tex Avery cartoons. Ganzel appears in Tom & Jerry Kids and Droopy, Master Detective.
In 2010, Ganzel played a principal role in the Off-Broadway production of Viagara Falls after appearing in the same role, Jacqueline Tempest, in productions of the play staged in other cities.
Most recently, she appeared on Ken Reid's TV Guidance Counselor podcast on April 20, 2016.

Reputation

TV writer Mark Evanier opined that Ganzel "took the Matinee Lady from being someone to be ogled and laughed-at because her I.Q. was lower than her bra-size to being a skilled comic actress playing that kind of character...This all may wind up to a tiny milestone in the evolution of women on TV but I think it's quite real and that Teresa deserves some real credit."

Selected roles