Maria Tucci
Biography
Tucci made her Broadway debut in 1963, in The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore. She has fourteen Broadway credits. Principal roles include Rose Delle Rose opposite Maureen Stapleton in the 1966 production of The Rose Tattoo by Tennessee Williams. In 1967, she starred as Alexandra Giddens in a revival of The Little Foxes by Lillian Hellman, with Anne Bancroft as her mother. In 1969, she was a replacement for Jane Alexander in The Great White Hope. In 1988, she starred in a revival of The Night of the Iguana as Hannah Jelkes. In 2009, she appeared in the production of Mary Stuart as Hanna.
Tucci began appearing in film in 1969. Her first credits were in Robert Frank's Me and My Brother and a CBS Playhouse production titled Shadow Game. She played Lisa in Sidney Lumet's 1983 film Daniel. In Gus Van Sant's 1995 film To Die For she portrayed Angela Maretto.
She was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Play in 1967 for her performance in The Rose Tattoo. She played Koula in the 2015 mini-series The Slap. She also won an OBIE award for her performance as Phaedo in "Talk" by Carl Hancock Rux at the Joseph Papp Public Theater.
Known For
Acting History
2025
Marcella as Marcella Hazan (voice)
2022Turn Every Page - The Adventures of Robert Caro and Robert Gottlieb as Self
2021American Horror Stories as Dr. Krystal
2015The Slap as Koula
2006Today's Man as Self
1999Third Watch as Civita Tanzi
1999Law & Order: Special Victims Unit as Anne Briggs
1996Spin City as Mrs. Paterno
1995To Die For as Angela Maretto
1995Sweet Nothing as Monika's Mother
1990Law & Order as Helen Brolin
1989Broadway's Dreamers: The Legacy of the Group Theatre as Self
1988Tattingers
1986Touch and Go as Dee Dee
1983Daniel as Lise Lewin
1983Enormous Changes at the Last Minute as Alexandra
1976The Land of Hope as Lea Gianni
1975Beyond the Horizon as Ruth Atkins
1973Kojak as The Psychiatrist
1972ABC Afterschool Special as Marie Mills
1971Great Performances as Ruth Atkins
1969Shadow Game as Carmen
1969Me and My Brother
1966CBS Playhouse









