Catherine Elizabeth Coulson (October 22, 1943 – September 28, 2015) was an American stage and screen actress who worked behind the scenes on various studio features, magazine shows and independent films as well as acting in theater and film since the age of 15. She is best known for her role as Margaret Lanterman, the enigmatic Log Lady, in the David Lynch TV series Twin Peaks.[1][2]
Coulson met Lynch in 1971[4] and performed various behind the scenes functions during the four-year filming of his low-budget classic Eraserhead (1977). Lynch reports that she began meditating at the same time as did he during this period.[5] She also appeared in Lynch's short film The Amputee (1974), in which she played a woman with no legs.
During the filming of Eraserhead, Lynch told Coulson that he had an image in his head of her holding a large log. Fifteen years later, he created such a role for her in Twin Peaks, on which she starred for 12 episodes through seasons 1 and 2.
Coulson went on to reprise her role in the film prequel, Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me, and in the 2017 revival.[6] In the new series, her character (the Log Lady) appears in the first, second, tenth, eleventh and fifteenth episodes, where she passes on a message from her log for Deputy Hawk to resume the search for Agent Cooper.[7]
Coulson appeared in "Dual Spires", a 2010 episode of Psych that spoofed Twin Peaks.[8] In 2012, she appeared in the second season of Portlandia.
Coulson was married to actor Jack Nance (who played Henry Spencer in Eraserhead, and Pete MartellinTwin Peaks) in 1968; they divorced in 1976. Her second husband, Marc Sirinsky, with whom she had a daughter, Zoey (born 1987), is a rabbi, at one point resident at Temple Emek-Shalom in Ashland, Oregon.[9]
On September 28, 2015, Coulson died of complications from cancer at her home in Ashland.[1][11] She appeared posthumously in five episodes of the revived Twin Peaks in 2017, reprising her role as the "Log Lady" Margaret Lanterman in scenes filmed before her death; the first episode is dedicated to Coulson, while the fifteenth episode, the final to feature her character (who announces her upcoming death before dying offscreen), is dedicated to Lanterman herself.[12][13]
^Schneier, Matthew. "The Transcendentalists". Style.com. Retrieved July 21, 2014. The log lady from Twin Peaks, she and I started meditating together, and she was always worried about keeping me happy.