
Lorna Raver
Biography
Lorna Raver (October 9, 1943 - May 12, 2025) was an American actress who has appeared in numerous plays, films, and television series. She is sometimes credited as Lorna Raver Johnson. Born in York County, Pennsylvania, Raver had early experience performing at the Hedgerow Theater in Pennsylvania. She moved to New York City, appearing off-Broadway in the premieres of Last Days at the Dixie Girl Cafe and Between Daylight and Boonville. She then spent several years as a stage actress in Chicago and regionally before moving to Los Angeles, where she had many guest roles on TV and continued to work in live theater, including performances of The Seagull, Spinning into Butter, The Women, The American Plan, Oedipus Rex, and The Drama Coach, for which she won the Drama-Logue and LA Weekly awards. She also performs in radio drama. On September 19, 2006, she began appearing as Rebecca Kaplan (previously played by Millie Perkins) on CBS's The Young and the Restless. She won wide critical acclaim as Mrs. Ganush in Sam Raimi's Drag Me to Hell. In addition to numerous other stage and television appearances, she is a notable audio book narrator for Tantor, Books on Tape and Blackstone Audio, frequently working with her domestic partner Yuri Rasovsky.
Also Known As
Movie Appearances

Armored
as Child Welfare Agent
2009

Drag Me to Hell
as Mrs. Ganush
2009

Sinbad: The Fifth Voyage
as Zoreh
2014

The Caller
as Rose Lazar
2011

Freeway
as Judge
1996

Rushlights
as Belle
2013
Candor City Hospital
2005

Jane Doe: Ties That Bind
as Mrs. Wolcott
2007

Pardon My Curse: The Making of Drag Me to Hell
as Self
2024
TV Appearances

Desperate Housewives
as Judge Sullivan
2004

Beverly Hills, 90210
as Mrs. Van Dyke
1990

CSI: Crime Scene Investigation
as Sister Elizabeth
2000

Clubhouse
2004

Raising the Bar
2008

Weeds
as Irma
2005

Star Trek: Voyager
as Q-Judge
1995

Gilmore Girls
as Professor Anderson
2000

One Tree Hill
as Zelda
2003

Grey's Anatomy
as Ghost Lady
2005

The Practice
as Pearson's Assistant
1997

Bones
as Professor Marlene Twardosh
2005