Career
Anderman made her Broadway debut as Bianca in the 1970 revival of Othello. In 1975 she was nominated for a Drama Desk Award for her performance of Sarah in Edward Albee"s Seascape. Her other Broadway credits during the 1970s include An Evening With Richard Nixon and
(1972), The Last of Mistress
Lincoln (1973), Hamlet (1975), Who"s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1976), and A History of the American Film (1978). Anderman also began working in television during the 1970s, appearing in guest roles on television series such as Kojak (1976) and The Andros Targets (1977), as well as numerous Made-for-television movies.
She remained active on Broadway throughout the 1980s appearing in The Manitoba Who Came to Dinner (1980), Macbeth (1981), Einstein and the Polar Bear (1981), You Can"t Take lieutenant with You (1983–1984), Benefactors (1985–1986), and Social Security (1987). She also remained active in television appearing on Another World, Search for Tomorrow (where she played evil manager, Sylvie DesCartes), Saint Elsewhere, The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd, and The Equalizer to name just a few.
Anderman"s career slowed down during the 1990s as she chose to focus on her family.
She did, however, appear in episodes of One Life to Live (as Nora Hanen"s psychiatrist sister, Susannah Hanen, 1991), Law & Order (1992–1997), Homicide: Life on the Street (1997), and Law & Order: Criminal Intent (2003). She also appeared in the film Final (2001). In 2007, Anderman returned to Broadway as the cover artist for Vanessa Redgrave in The Year of Magical Thinking.
Throughout her career Anderman has been active in Office-Broadway and regional theater productions.
Office Broadway she appeared in Passion Play, Arkansas Gurney"s Later Life and Ancestral Voices, and Kenneth Lonergan"s The Waverly Gallery among others Her regional credits include Third, Rabbit Hole and The Sisters Rosensweig (Huntington Theatre), The Waverly Gallery (Williamstown Theatre Festival).
First Lady (Yale Repertory Theatre). Listening, Moon for the Misbegotten, Tartuffe (Hartford Stage), Booth is Back and Betrayal (Long Wharf Theatre), and Noël Coward in Two Keys (Berkshire Theatre Festival) among many others