NEW YORK — Former “Saturday Night Live” cast member Jan Hooks has died.

The 57-year-old Hooks died Thursday in New York, according to The New York Times. The newspaper confirmed the death through Hooks’ agent, Lisa Lieberman.

The comic actress was a versatile performer whose impressions ranged from Nancy Reagan to Sinead O’Connor to Tammy Faye Bakker.

Hooks, a Decatur, Georgia, native, moved into prime time in 1991 as a cast member on the sitcom “Designing Women.” She later did an Emmy Award-nominated turn on “3rd Rock From the Sun.”

She also appeared in 1992’s “Batman Returns” and voiced convenience store owner Apu’s wife on “The Simpsons” for several years.

On “SNL,” she was part of a 1986 cast infusion that included fellow standouts Dana Carvey and Phil Hartman that helped the show after the previous season’s ratings dive.

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A former member of the influential comedy troupe The Groundlings, she had been rejected twice before for a spot on the NBC comedy institution.

Besides impersonations that included Bette Davis and Hillary Rodham Clinton, Hooks won laughs for original characters such as Candy, half of the bouffant-haired Sweeney Sisters lounge act. But being on a live weekly broadcast proved hard on the comic actress.

“The show changed my life, obviously. But I have horrible stage fright,” she said in an oral history of “SNL.” While other performers wanted to “get in there and do it,” she said, “I was one of the ones that between dress (rehearsal) and air was sitting in the corner going, ”˜Please cut everything I’m in.”’

She jumped at the chance to move into prime time when asked to join the sitcom “Designing Women,” appearing in the 1991-93 final seasons.

Born April 23, 1957, in Decatur, Georgia, Hooks studied for a time at the University of West Florida in Pensacola before leaving to begin her acting career, which included the 1985 movie “Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure.”

Her screen work became much more sporadic after the 1990s. On “30 Rock” in 2010, she played the avaricious mother of Jane Krakowski’s character, Jenna Maroney.



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