Helen Siff, a working character actor whose résumé stretched from studio comedies to network sitcoms, died Dec. 18 in Los Angeles after complications from surgery following a long, painful illness, her family said. She was 88. In a statement, her family credited Siff with bringing professionalism, dedication and kindness to sets, and said she treated every part, large or small, as a chance to serve the story.
Siff’s screen career started before most viewers knew her name. She appeared in a 1976 Subaru commercial alongside her identical twin sister, Carol Infield Sender, then began piling up TV work in the early 1980s, including her on-screen debut on “Lou Grant.” From there, she became the kind of performer casting directors relied on: an actor who could walk into a scene, land the joke or the tension, and disappear without leaving the story scuffed.
Her credits reflect decades of American television’s guest-star ecosystem. She turned up across dramas and comedies, including “Cagney & Lacey,” “L.A. Law,” “Doogie Howser, M.D.,” “Married… With Children,” “Will & Grace,” “Ellen,” “Scrubs,” “My Name Is Earl,” “Modern Family,” “S.W.A.T.,” and “Curb Your Enthusiasm.” Her family said she had a knack for making brief appearances feel specific rather than generic.
On film, Siff played a cashier in John G. Avildsen’s “The Karate Kid,” appeared in “You Don’t Mess With the Zohan,” and had a part as a maid in the Coen brothers’ “Hail, Caesar!”
She kept a parallel commitment to theater, originating the role of Helga in the 1993 off-Broadway production “Grandma Sylvia’s Funeral,” and performing in plays including “Lost in Yonkers” and “Lilies of the Field.” Her final screen work came in the Apple TV+ series “High Desert,” filmed in 2023. She is survived by her sisters, five children and seven grandchildren; her husband Marshall died in 2007 and her son Bruce died in 1999.





















































