Who Is Still Alive From ‘Laverne and Shirley’?

Plus, which cast members released an album as their characters?

LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY, Eddie Mekka, Betty Garrett, David L. Lander, Cindy Williams, Michael McKean, Penny Marshall, Phil Foster, 1976-1983

Everett Collection

50 years ago, Laverne & Shirley — the original Happy Days spin-off show, and the most successful — premiered on January 27, 1976. After first appearing in the 1975 Happy Days episode “A Date with Fonzie,” Laverne DeFazio (Penny Marshall) and Shirley Feeney (Cindy Williams) got their own series, following the roommates and best friends who worked together at the Shotz Brewery and enjoyed wacky relationships with landlady Edna, Shirley’s boyfriend Carmine (a.k.a. the Big Ragoo), and neighbors Lenny and Squiggy.

Though Williams reportedly told cast member Michael McKean, “You know, this is gonna flop” before shooting the first episode, the show ran for eight successful seasons, and became the number one TV show in the country two years in a row.

Today, sadly, only one classic cast member is still with us — though two others who were added to the show’s later seasons, when the gang all moved to Los Angeles, are also still alive.

Lenny

WHATEVER WORKS, Michael McKean, 2009.

Sony Pictures Classics/Courtesy Everett Collection

One half of the greaser duo who lived upstairs from Laverne and Shirley, McKean actually created the character of Lenny while in college at Carnegie Mellon University; David Lander, who played Squiggy, was a fellow student. “Lenny and Anthony,” as they were originally called, were among a large array of characters that McKean and Lander performed during their days in the Chicago live improv comedy scene. And according to a 2010 interview with McKean, “we thought [Lenny and Squiggy] were the least commercial things we did.”

After Laverne & Shirley was sold to the network, the series needed more characters, so Penny Marshall invited McKean and Lander to a party where the show’s producers would be present. Marshall urged them to perform as Lenny and Squiggy — which impressed the producers enough to offer McKean and Lander spots on the show as writers, with the idea that maybe Lenny and Squiggy would make small cameos somewhere down the line.

But when the show’s first script needed more jokes, the decision was made to throw the comedians in front of the cameras, and they appeared in almost every episode thereafter. Lenny and Squiggy were so popular, they released a 1979 live album, Lenny & Squiggy Present Lenny and the Squigtones, which featured future McKean collaborator Christopher Guest on guitar.

After leaving the show in 1982, McKean starred alongside Guest in Rob Reiner‘s infamous 1984 mockumentary This Is Spinal Tap, and turned in a memorable performance alongside Tim Curry, Christopher Lloyd and Madeline Kahn in 1985’s Clue.

In the decades since, McKean has become one of the most recognizable faces in comedy, whether from his frequent TV roles, his time as a Saturday Night Live cast member in the 1994-95 season, or his frequent collaborations with Guest, which include 2000’s Best in Show and 2003’s A Mighty Wind, which won McKean a Grammy for Best Song Written for a Motion Picture.

His most recent appearance was in 2025’s Spinal Tap II: The End Continues. His next film with be the comedy In Memoriam, starring Marc Maron.

McKean has two sons with first wife Susan Russell, whom he was married to from 1970 to 1993. In 1999, he married actress Annette O’Toole. His son Colin passed in 2012.

Rhonda Lee

Leslie Easterbrook Police Academy Then Now

Warner Brothers/courtesy Everett Collection; Phillip Faraone/Getty Images

The name “Rhonda Lee” may not immediately stir up any Laverne & Shirley memories — Rhonda was introduced as an aspiring actress who lived next door in the sixth season, when the girls relocated to southern California. But if you spent much time at the cineplex in the ’80s, you might remember Easterbrook as Sgt. Debbie Callahan, who she played in six Police Academy films.

She’s stayed busy with film and TV roles in the decades since, with her most recent credit a role in the 2022 film Give Til It Hurts.

Sonny St. Jacques

A UNICORN FOR CHRISTMAS, Ed Marinaro, 2022.

Level 33 Entertainment / courtesy Everett Collection

Another addition from the show’s California seasons, Marinaro was a professional football player who competed at Super Bowl VIII and Super Bowl IX with the Minnesota Vikings. After retiring from football, he joined Laverne & Shirley in 1980, appearing in 11 episodes as Sonny, the girls’ new landlord.

After the series, Marinaro starred in six seasons of Hill Street Blues as Officer Joe Coffey from 1981-86, and three seasons of the football comedy Blue Mountain State, from 2010-11. He’s also made guest appearances on countless TV shows, with his most recent credit a 2019 TV movie called SnowComing.

What happened to the rest of the cast members who have passed away?

PORTLANDIA, (from left): Penny Marshall, Fred Armisen (as Toni), 'The Feminist Book Store 10th Anniversary', (Season 2, ep. 208, aired Feb. 24, 2012).

Danielle Mathias / © IFC / Courtesy: Everett Collection

Marshall, who played Laverne, went on to a career as one of the most successful comedy film directors of the ’80s and ’90s. Her hit 1988 Tom Hanks film Big became the first movie directed by a woman to gross over $100 million. In addition to directing classics like 1992’s A League of Their Own, Marshall continued to direct, produce, and occasionally act on TV; her final appearance was in a 2016 episode of The Odd Couple reboot. She died in 2018, at age 75.

NEW YORK - JANUARY 04: Actress Cindy Williams poses for a photo during the unveiling of Bob Saget's portrait at Sardi's Restaurant in honor of his role in "The Drowsy Chaperone" on Broadway January 4, 2008 in New York City.

Scott Gries/Getty Images

Williams, who played Shirley, left the show at the beginning of its eight season, due to both a pregnancy that producers refused to properly accommodate, and an alleged feud with Marshall (which the two later resolved). After the show, she appeared in a number of films and TV shows, and also appeared in a number of touring and regional theater productions. She and Marshall reunited on screen in 2013, on an episode of the Nickelodeon show Sam & Cat. Williams passed away in 2023, at age 75, after a brief illness.

LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY, David L. Lander, Michael McKean, 1976-1983

Lander, who played Squiggy on the show until 1982, was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1984, an ailment that sadly slowed down his acting career. However, he still made live guest appearances on shows including Twin Peaks, Married…with Children, and The Drew Carey Show. Lander became an accomplished voice actor in the years after Laverne & Shirley, appearing as a recurring character on the Garfield animated series, as well as in A Bug’s Life,  Titan A.E.Tom and Jerry: The Movie and Galaxy High. He began speaking publicly about his multiple sclerosis diagnosis in 1999, and in 2002, released the memoir Fall Down Laughing: How Squiggy Caught Multiple Sclerosis and Didn’t Tell Nobody. He died in 2020, at the age of 73, from complications from multiple sclerosis.

LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY, (from left): Cindy Williams, Eddie Mekka, (Season 6), 1976-1983

Paramount/Everett Collection

Mekka, who played Carmine “The Big Ragu” Ragusa, appeared on Laverne & Shirley until its 1983 cancellation. After the show, Mekka appeared as a guest star on TV shows ranging from The Bold and the Beautiful to It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia. He also performed in live theater, which twice led him to share a stage with Williams — in a 2000 production of Grease, and again in a 2008 production of the play It Had to Be You. He died in 2021, at the age of 69.

Betty Garrett, who played Edna, appeared on dozens of shows after leaving the series, including Murder, She WroteThe Golden Girls and Grey’s Anatomy, and maintained a theater career. She died in 2011, at the age of 91, after suffering an aneurysm.

Phil Foster, who played Frank DeFazio, died shortly after the series ended, in 1985, at the age of 72.

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Gabrielle Moss

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