Terry Finn’s name is forever braided into one of Broadway’s most infamous legends—a show that flamed out quickly, was savaged by critics, and then slowly rose from the ashes to become sacred. In that strange arc from failure to canon, Finn stands as one of the bright original sparks. She didn’t headline the marquee. She didn’t walk away with a Tony. But she created Gussie Carnegie in Merrily We Roll Along, and that performance—sharp, venomous, funny, and precise—never stopped echoing.
She was born Teresa Jo Ann Bernadette Finn on August 6, 1955, in Long Island City, New York, the fifth child in a Catholic, working-class family. Her mother, Katherine, was an elementary school teacher. Her father, Peter David Finn, was a New York City firefighter stationed in Brooklyn. Discipline and public service were not abstractions in that household; they were daily examples. Finn grew up on Long Island, attended St. Pius X Elementary School in Plainview, and made her stage debut at eleven as Flora in The Innocents with the Pius Players. It wasn’t a casual experiment. Even at that age, she leaned into leading roles.
In high school at Queen of the Rosary Academy in Amityville, she studied with the intention of becoming a teacher. Acting, at that point, was passion, not profession. That shift happened almost by accident. At Iona College in New Rochelle, she began as a psychology major, practical and sensible. Then came an impromptu audition for Professor Roderick Nash. The audition changed her course. Nash persuaded her to switch majors to Communication Arts in the Theatre Department. Sometimes a career begins with ambition. Sometimes it begins because someone sees you clearly and refuses to let you look away.
At Iona, Finn didn’t dabble. She took on Blanche Du Bois in A Streetcar Named Desire, a role that demands emotional excavation most undergraduates aren’t ready for. She followed that with Sally Bowles in Cabaret, proving she could toggle between fragility and bravado. After graduation, she returned for a post-grad summer session and starred as Maria in West Side Story. By then, she had already brushed against Stephen Sondheim’s world multiple times—playing Marta in Company and Young Dolly in Follies. She didn’t know it yet, but Sondheim would become the axis of her career.
Her Broadway debut came at the Morosco Theatre in Hugh Leonard’s A Life, where she understudied Dana Delany. Understudying is a quiet apprenticeship—watching, waiting, knowing the part cold while hoping you’ll never need to prove it. Finn absorbed the rhythm of Broadway before stepping fully into it.
Then came 1981.
Casting director Joanna Merlin selected Finn to create the role of Gussie Carnegie in Stephen Sondheim, George Furth, and Hal Prince’s Merrily We Roll Along. The show was ambitious, structurally daring, and, at the time, widely misunderstood. It ran backward in time, following friendships dissolving rather than forming. The cast was young. The expectations were enormous.
It closed after 16 performances and 52 previews.
History would call it a disaster. Finn’s performance was anything but. As Gussie—a producer’s wife with ambition sharp enough to cut glass—Finn brought acidic wit and social precision. Clive Barnes of the New York Post singled her out, praising her “beautifully acrid comic skit” and a turn of phrase that would make “a viper bite out its tongue in envy.” Douglas Watt in the Daily News highlighted her “gushingly imperious” presence. Even in failure, she was noticed.
The day after the show closed—November 29, 1981—the cast gathered at RCA Studio A to record the original cast album. It was an act of preservation, maybe even defiance. That album would later become the lifeline that kept Merrilyalive in the cultural imagination. Though Gussie’s role was smaller on the recording than onstage, Finn’s performance remained part of the show’s DNA.
Two decades later, when a reunion concert was staged at Lincoln Center in 2002, director Lonny Price insisted on finding her. In a search chronicled by Broadway.com under the headline “Finding Finn,” Price recalled that she had been “dazzling” in the role and that the reunion would feel incomplete without her. The concert raised over $200,000 for Musical Theatre Works. What had once been dismissed as a misfire had become beloved. Finn stood onstage again, not as a footnote, but as a necessary piece of history.
Her stage work extended well beyond Sondheim. Off Broadway, she appeared in Clifford Odets’ Paradise Lost at The Mirror Repertory Company, directed by John Strasberg. She played Kate Poplin in Big Maggie, Audrey in As You Like It, and Constanze Weber-Mozart in Peter Shaffer’s Amadeus at the Virginia Stage Company. Critics described her Constanze as “beautiful, talented and engagingly saucy”—a phrase that might summarize her entire career.
Television offered a different kind of visibility. She worked in daytime soap operas in New York and appeared in television movies including Seeds of Tragedy, The Disappearance of Nora, and Shadow of Obsession. Her series debut came in 1989 with a guest role on Trial by Jury, starring Raymond Burr. These were solid, professional turns—evidence of an actress adaptable enough to move between stage precision and camera intimacy.
Film came in the 1990s. She made her big-screen debut in Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey (1991), followed by Super Mario Bros. (1993), one of Hollywood’s more ambitious misfires. Bob Hoskins, her co-star, was impressed enough to invite her to lead in his 1995 fantasy film Rainbow, where she played Jackie Bailey opposite his Frank Bailey. The project revealed a softer, more intimate side of her screen presence. She also appeared in Terminal Velocity and later reunited with Hoskins in Den of Lions. These weren’t blockbuster ascents, but they were steady, thoughtful choices.
In her personal life, Finn found stability with production designer David L. Snyder, whom she married in 1990. They have a son, Finn Henry Snyder, born in 1997. In 2005, they renewed their vows at the former offices of George Harrison’s Handmade Films—the place where they had first met. It was a quiet romantic gesture, fitting for a career defined less by spectacle and more by loyalty.
Terry Finn’s story is not one of relentless spotlight. It is the story of a performance that outlived its opening night. Merrily We Roll Along was once branded a failure. Today, it is revered. Finn’s Gussie was part of that foundation—sharp, ambitious, unapologetic.
Some careers are defined by triumph.
Hers is defined by endurance—
by being dazzling even when the curtain falls too soon.
