ELIZABETH EIS-SYSYN
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Of Chevy Chase, MD and Los Angeles, CA; cherished daughter of the late Joseph Eis and the late Pauline Eis and loving wife of the late Billy Sysyn died in Los Angeles on January 6, 2012 from complications from Parkinson's disease. Her joy of life and her free spirit will be missed. No service is scheduled. SuSu attended some of our reunions, but she was unable to make the 50th. SuSu, was at
Carnegie-Mellon along with other B-CC classmates, Susie Middleman, Betsy
Blachley and Jane Lake Birt.
Below
are SuSu's
senior yearbook photo and a photo of her when she appeared in Dark Shadows: Washington Post:
Classmate Jane Lake Birt was a close friend of SuSu and has sent this remembrance to help us remember her: So broken hearted. SuSu and I were roommates at Carnegie Mellon. I have kept in distant touch with her ever since, except for these last few years when she went into a care facility not long after her beloved husband Billy died. Her parents were fabulous and always so welcoming to her friends, feeding us with mama's homemade cheesecake and sharing Friday evening meals with whoever SuSu brought through the door. Her mother had a stall at the Farmers Market in Bethesda, selling her pottery. Her father was a trade unionist activist in the printing business. She was indeed talented and did well at Carnegie drama school then won a place at Lamda in London. Then New York where she had a good run in TV daytime soaps and some theatre. Many of her cohort at Carnegie went onto fame in West Coast TV productions, Hill Street Blues and NYPD, produced by Steven Bochco. Rene Auberjonois was another successful classmate that had moved to LA. SuSu followed but failed to prosper. There followed a period when she was involved in Hari Khrisna. She married late to Billy Syn-Syn thus becoming SuSu Syn-Syn, but kept Elisabeth Eis as her stage name. Billy was the love of her life. Sadly they only had a short time together. At the 40th reunion to which she came with Billy she was already suffering from the side effects of an undisclosed illness. She was a searcher, an experimenter, a player as all thespians are and I only hope she found some well earned respite with her Billy. I will always remember her throaty laugh and high spirits. Jane
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