Friday, June 20, 2025

Norma Jean Nilsson


Norma Jean Nilsson was born on January 1, 1938 in Hollywood, California, United States. She is an actress, known for The Actress (1953), The Green-Eyed Blonde (1957) and Lux ​​Video Theatre (1950).
Nilsson was the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Arthur V. Nilsson. Her father was a professor of anatomy at the Los Angeles College of Chiropractic. Acting on radio from the age of three, she had become the highest paid radio child actress in America by 1947. From the mid-50s, she acted in juvenile roles on television. She has an older brother, Arthur Jr. She began performing when she was 3 years old and was active during World War II, entertaining troops at Army camps across the United States.
Nilsson attended Victory Garden School and Bancroft Junior High School. Newspaper columnist Louella Parsons wrote in 1946 that Nilsson had an IQ of 162.
When Nilsson was 4 years old, she won a talent contest on Tune-Out Time on KECA. At 5, she made her "first big-time radio appearance", portraying a dying girl on Free World Theatre. At 8, her picture was featured on the cover of the July 21, 1946, issue of Radio Life magazine.
Nilsson was reading a commercial on an Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy episode when guest Cecil B. DeMille recognized her talent, and she performed on many Lux Radio Theatre episodes. In 1947, Nilsson was the highest paid child actor.
An article published in Radio and Television Mirror in 1951 reported that she was "a charter member of the Five Hundred Club, an organization of children who have appeared on five hundred or more radio broadcasts."
Nilsson played Cookie (the Bumsteads' daughter) in the radio version of Blondie, Kathy (the Andersons' younger daughter) on the radio version of Father Knows Best, Glory Mae (the "little girl who lives next door") on The Jack Carson Show.,and as the lead actress Lois to Raymond Burr's antagonist in the "Murder on Mike" (1957) episode of Suspense.
Nilsson’s other OTR credits include Cavalcade of America, Luke Slaughter of Tombstone, Have Gun, Will Travel, Stars Over Hollywood, The Doctor Fights, This My Best.
She was also heard on Luke Slaughter of Tombstone, Cavalcade of America and the radio version of Have Gun, Will Travel.
Nilsson passed away at age 87.


Friday, June 13, 2025

Rhoda Williams




Rhoda Elaine Williams (born on July 19, 1930) was an American actress who provided the voice of Drizella Tremaine in Walt Disney's Cinderella.

Williams learned to read at age three, and radio acting came natural to her. She soon had her own weekly program on KMPC, We Who Are Young.

Williams graduated from Hollywood Preparatory School at 14, after which she earned a bachelor's degree in theater arts from the University of California.

In 1949, Williams began playing Robert Young's eldest daughter, Betty, on the NBC radio show Father Knows Best for five years.

She also appeared in films such as National Velvet, Meet John Doe, and That Hagen Girl.

In Walt Disney's Cinderella, she voiced the evil stepsister, Drizella. She attended Hollywood Preparatory School and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts from UCLA at age 18.

With the advent of television, Williams entered the new medium on early live programs such as Lights, Camera, Action! and Slice of Life, and with the advent of film television, on Date With Judy, Chrysler Theatre, Laredo, The Big Valley, Run for Your Life, Dragnet, Ironside, Project UFO, Marcus Welby, M.D., Policewoman, and Barnaby Jones. She appeared on Superior Court and General Hospital and voiced aliens in Star Trek IV and Star Trek V.

She also specialized in voices and dialects and was the "voice" of Brigitte Bardot in the American version of The Night Heaven Fell, as well as voicing a 9-year-old French boy in The Jayhawkers!. She returned to Walt Disney Studios as the voice and model for the AudioAnimatronic mother and teenage daughter in General Electric's "Carousel of Progress" at Disneyland. She also did uncredited voice work for an episode of The Twilight Zone, "Little Girl Lost".

In 1968, she began her master's degree at California State University, Northridge. While there, she began a second career as a teacher of dialects and speech, first at the CSUN Summer Theatre Workshop for Teenagers, and later during regular sessions. She also created a film about "Medieval Theatre," which Oleson Films distributed to colleges and universities nationwide. In 1972, she earned a Bachelor of Arts in Drama and continued to teach at CSUN intermittently. She also taught voice and speech at Estelle Harman's Actor's Workshop in Hollywood.

She began a long association with various civic and professional organizations in 1959, when she served as PTA President of the Alexandria Avenue School in Los Angeles. Since then, however, most of her activities have been linked to her unions, the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA) since 1938 and the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) since 1937. While a member of the Los Angeles Local, she served on the Local and National Board, as Chair of the Local Education Committee, Co-Chair of the Los Angeles Women's Caucus, as Chair of the Western Region of the National Women's Caucus, and as a member of the AFTRA-SAG Merger Study Committee. She also served as editor of the local Los Angeles publication, DIALLOG, from 1974 to 1987.

From 1978 to 1981, she served as the West Coast Coordinator for a CETA project to increase employment for performing arts professionals. From 1981 to 1982, she served as Deputy Executive Director of the Los Angeles Local of AFTRA. In January 1993, after moving to Oregon, Williams was elected to the AFTRA Portland Local Board, where she served as Treasurer and Alternate to the AFTRA National Board. She and her husband also served as editors of the SAG/AFTRA Portland newsletter for AFTRA and SAG.

In Los Angeles, she served as Vice President and Secretary of the Los Angeles Chapter of the Coalition of Trade Union Women (CLUW). She also served for several years as a member of the State Broadcasting Industry Wage Board and as an AFTRA delegate to the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor (AFL-CIO). For the California State Federation of Labor, she coordinated and led the communication skills workshop at the Federation's "Women in the Workforce" conferences from 1977 to 1989. She also taught communication skills at the AFL-CIO Western Section's Summer School for Trade Union Women.

From 1984 to 1992, she served as Secretary-Treasurer of the UCLA Theater, Film, and Television Alumni Association and was one of the organization's founding members. She also served as Secretary of the InterGuild Women's Caucus, an organization of women from guilds and unions in the entertainment industry, which awarded her its Distinguished Service Award. She was a founding member of the Los Angeles Music Center Education Board, with a special interest in the Music Center on Tour program; a former member of the Glendale Arts Council; a founding member of Pacific Pioneer Broadcasters; and an honorary member of REPS (Radio Enthusiasts of Puget Sound) and SPERDVAC (The Society for the Preservation of Radio Drama, Variety, and Comedy).

Williams performed at local theaters in Eugene, Oregon. She starred in "Pirates" at the Lord Leebrick Theater (now Oregon Contemporary Theatre), and "70 Girls 70" at the Very Little Theater.

On March 8, 2006, Williams died of heart attack at his home in Eugene, Oregon at the age of 75.

Friday, June 6, 2025

Sam Edwards




Sam George Edwards was born on May 26, 1915. He was an American actor. 

Born into an artistic family. He appeared on radio in the 1930s in the Adventures of Sonny and Buddy one of the first radio serials ever syndicated, and later in The Edwards Family, a series based on the life of Sam, brother Jack, who was also an actor, sister Florida, and his parents, Edna Park and Jack Edwards Sr. Sam was also an early cast member of one of the first radio soap operas, One Man's Family.

Edwards worked on a variety of radio programs. He co-starred in the comedy The First Hundred Years on ABC in 1949 and landed a starring role playing Dexter Franklin opposite Janet Waldo in the long-running Meet Corliss Archer series. Also he participated in Crime Classics, Dr. Paul; Father Knows Best, Guiding Light,Fort Laramie; Gunsmoke; Dragnet; Suspense; Escape; This Is Your FBI; The Six Shooter; and Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar. 

Edwards appeared on many television series starting in the mid-1950s: Dragnet and Gunsmoke throughout their long runs, series likeThe George Burns and Gracie Allen Show, Straightaway, The Andy Griffith Show, Petticoat Junction, Green Acres, Mannix, Mission: Impossible, The Streets of San Francisco, Adam-12, The Red Skelton Show, Happy Days, The Dukes of Hazzard, and even Days of Our Lives. 

Edwards died of a heart attack in Durango, Colorado on July 28, 2004.

Friday, May 30, 2025

Herb Vigran




His full name was Herbert Vigran, and he was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, although his family moved to Fort Wayne, Indiana, when he was 16. He got his Bachelor of Laws degree from Indiana University, but later chose to pursue acting.

Herb Vigran (Cincinnati, United States; June 5, 1910 - Los Angeles, United States, November 29, 1986) was an American character actor, active in Hollywood from the 1930s to the 1980s. Throughout a career of more than 50 years, he acted in more than 350 television and film productions.

Under the name Herbert Vigran, he was a Broadway stage actor in three plays between 1935 and 1938.

After starting out on Broadway, Vigran soon moved to Hollywood with no money and only the Broadway acting experience. 

In 1939, Vigran's agent secured him a lead role in the radio drama Silver Theatre
The actor had a $5 recording made of the radio show and used it as a demo to get other jobs with his unique voice. He later appeared in similar radio shows with Jack Benny, Bob Hope, Lucille Ball, and Jimmy Durante.

He later made several hundred appearances on television shows such as The Adventures of Superman (six episodes), Dragnet 1951(eleven episodes), I Love Lucy (four episodes), The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet (seven), The Dick Van Dyke Show (three), Perry Mason (two episodes), Dragnet 1967 (seven), Petticoat Junction (one episode in 1969), and The Brady Bunch (two episodes). One of Vigran's recurring roles was as Judge Brooker in Gunsmoke between 1970 and 1975. Among Vigran's many roles were police officers, judges, jurors, waiters, neighbors, shopkeepers and others.

Vigran had a small but significant role in Charlie Chaplin's film Monsieur Verdoux (1947), as a reporter interviewing Chaplin as the main character awaits execution. The 1954 film White Christmas, starring Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye, featured Vigran in the role of Novello, a nightclub owner.

In the rock and roll film Go, Johnny, Go (1959), Vigran played promoter Alan Freed's assistant, engaging in dialogue with rock legend Chuck Berry.

In 1952, Vigran married Belle Pasternack, with whom he had two children.

Active until his death, Herb Vigran died of complications from cancer on November 29, 1986, at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, California. His remains were cremated.

Friday, May 23, 2025

Eleanor Audley




Eleanor Zellman, better known as Eleanor Audley, was an American voice, radio, and television actress, known for voicing Maleficent in Sleeping Beauty and Lady Tremaine, the evil stepmother in Cinderella, the two famous villains in Disney animated films. She also voiced Madame Leota in the Disneyland attraction "The Haunted Mansion."

Eleanor Audley was born on November 19th, 1905 as Eleanor Zellman. She grew up in New Jersey, and at about 12 years old her family moved to New York City. It was the perfect location to launch her career in entertainment, where she began on Broadway. Her first ever role was the “Guest of the Hotel” in Howdy, King in December 1926. That show ran for a month and had 40 performances. She continued on Broadway all the way through to 1944, starring in shows such as On Call, Pigeons and People, Thunder on the Left, Kill that Story, Ladies’ Money, Susan and God, and In Bed We Cry. Her longest running role was Charlotte Marley in Susan and God.

After Eleanor’s career on Broadway, she began making appearances on radio shows. This is where her recognizable voice really started to become synonymous to her. One of her most famous roles was on a radio sitcom called My Favorite Husband that starred Lucille Ball and Richard Denning. The radio show ran from 1948 to 1951, with Eleanor starring as the mother-in-law, Mrs. Cooper, in a few episodes. She also starred in Father Knows Best, another radio sitcom that aired on NBC every Thursday night in the 1950s. She played the neighbor, Mrs. Smith.

Eleanor soon after began her work in film, with her first role in The Story of Molly X in 1949. She had already begun to make a name for herself in the industry, and was soon casted to be the evil stepmother in Disney’s newest animated film, Cinderella, in 1950. Disney animator Andreas Deja speaks about how she was the perfect fit for the role in the documentary From Rags to Riches: The Making of Cinderella.

Eleanor not only served as the voice of Lady Tremaine, but was also the live action reference model for her as well. In certain photos of Audley you can see the great similarities the 2 have. Frank Thomas was the supervising animator for the character of the Step-Mother, Lady Tremaine, in Cinderella. He recalls their time working together on the project, as he modelled the majority of the look of the character after Audley. The look and the voice together just made sense.

After her successful time at Disney working on Cinderella, she was then cast as the villain again in Disney’s next princess film, Sleeping Beauty. According to the 1997 VHS documentary of the making of Sleeping Beauty, it is said that Walt personally suggested Eleanor for the role. It’s been said that she initially turned down the role due to having tuberculosis at the time of the offer, but luckily was able to recover before having to record. The lead animator for Maleficent, Disney Legend Marc Davis, worked closely with Eleanor as he wanted to model the facial features after her as well, similarly to Lady Tremaine. He got the idea for the cape and horns from different historical religious texts he studied.

Her experience on radio sitcoms and films then translated into her getting roles on television sitcoms through the 1950s to the 1970s. Her first television appearance was on The Mickey Rooney Show as Bessie, which was actually the pilot episode of the series in 1954. She continued to play supporting characters on other successful TV shows such as I Love Lucy (1957), The Millionaire (1958), The Twilight Zone (1960), The Dick Van Dyke Show (1961), and Green Acres (1965). Audley continued to appear on television shows all the way up until 1970, her last series being My Three Sons.

She appeared in both versions of Father Knows Best, on radio (in the recurring role of neighbor Mrs. Elizabeth Smith), and in other roles.

She also participated in RomanceEscapeSuspenseLux Radio TheatreThe Story of Dr. KildareThe Railroad Hour, and Yours Truly, Johnny DollarShe appeared as Mrs. Humphrey in All That Heaven Allows.

She also appeared in two episodes of the television series The Beverly Hillbillies as Millicent Schuyler-Potts, the strict headmistress of Potts School, where Jethro Bodine enters the 5th grade.

Other television appearances included Carlton Murdock in the series Honey West, starring Anne Francis and John Ericson, and Agnes Wilton in the television series Richard Diamond, starring David Janssen.

He died on November 25, 1991, due to respiratory failure, at age 86.

Friday, May 16, 2025

Father Knows Best




Father Knows Best is an American television series that aired in 203 25-minute episodes in black and white, created by writer Ed James in the 1940s, and aired on radio from 1949 to 1954 and on television from 1954 to 1960. It portrayed life in a middle-class American household, centered around the Anderson family in Springfield.

It was created by writer Ed James, who made an audition disc on December 20, 1948. On the audition disc, the father is known as Jim Henderson rather than Jim Anderson. Eight months later, the series began August 25, 1949, on NBC Radio. Set in the Midwest, it starred Robert Young as General Insurance agent Jim Anderson. His wife Margaret was first portrayed by June Whitley and later by Jean Vander Pyl. The Anderson children were Betty (Rhoda Williams), Bud (Ted Donaldson) and Kathy (Norma Jean Nillson). Others in the cast were Eleanor Audley, Herb Vigran and Sam Edwards. Sponsored by General Foods, the series was heard Thursday evenings on NBC until November 19, 1953.

It starred actor Robert Young as Jim Anderson, a kindly father in a happy family; his wife, Margaret, played by Jane Wyatt, and their three children: Betty (Elinor Donahue), Bud (Billy Gray), and Kathy (Lauren Chapin).

Jane Wyatt won the Emmy for Best Actress three consecutive years (1958, 1959, 1960) for her work on the series, while Robert Young won the Emmy for Best Actor two consecutive years (1957 and 1958).

The family comedy revolves around the dilemmas, problems, and concerns of a typical middle-class family's daily life and the way resourceful father Jim Anderson confronts and resolves them, weighing the consensus of his wife, Margaret, who possesses a great deal of common sense. The children know that whenever they need support, advice, or anything else, they can count on their father, because "Daddy knows best."

Characters: 

Jim Anderson (197 episodes, 1954-1960): The father, played by Robert Young.
Margaret Anderson (196 episodes, 1954-1960): The mother, played by Jane Wyatt.
Betty (192 episodes, 1954-1960): The eldest daughter, played by Elinor Donahue.
Bud (196 episodes, 1954-1960): The middle child, played by Billy Gray.
Kathy (196 episodes, 1954-1960): The youngest daughter, played by Lauren Chapin.

Matt Groening, the creator of The Simpsons, revealed that, of all the Springfields in the United States, the one that inspired him to be the city where the dysfunctional family lives is in Oregon and he also chose that city because his father liked watching the series Father Knows Best.

While the show is often regarded as an example of the conservative and paternalistic nature of American family life in the 1950s, it is also cited as an overly rosy portrayal of American family life.

A feature-length live-action movie remake starring Tim Allen was announced by Paramount Pictures and Nickelodeon Movies for theatrical release in 2008.

Friday, May 9, 2025

Frederick William Ziv



Frederick William Ziv was born on August 17, 1905. He was an American broadcasting producer and syndicator who was considered as the father of television first-run syndication and once operated the nation's largest independent television production company. An obituary in The Cincinnati Enquirer noted that Ziv "was known throughout the television industry for pioneering production, sales, promotion and marketing of TV series."
Frederick Ziv was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, to William and Rose Ziv. His parents were Jewish immigrants: his father William, a manufacturer of button holes for overalls, came to the US in 1884 from KelmLithuania and his mother Rose from Bessarabia three years later. He had a sister named Irma. He graduated from Hughes High School.
He earned a Juris Doctor degree from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor in 1928, however, Ziv did not practice law, but instead opened an advertising agency. His birth city, Cincinnati, was an important center for radio in the 1920s. The nation's largest radio sponsor, Procter & Gamble, and one of its most powerful radio stations, WLW, were based there. Ziv and writer John L. Sinn, who later became his business partner and son-in-law, founded the Frederic W. Ziv Company (also given as Frederick W. Ziv Company) that produced syndicated radio and television programs in the United States. Horace Newcomb's Encyclopedia of Television described the company as "by 1948, the largest packager and syndicator of radio programs" and later "the most prolific producer of programming for the first-run syndication market during the 1950s. They produced pre-recorded radio shows such as Boston Blackie and The Cisco Kid and occasionally bought old shows for new syndicated rerun broadcast. The best known was the serial comedy Easy Aces in 1945.
Ziv sold his company to United Artists in 1959 for $20 million. He later taught for 22 years at the University of Cincinnati-College Conservatory of Music, which presents an award for broadcasting achievement in his name each year.
By the 1950s, Ziv's company was the largest privately owned TV film firm in the industry, with nearly 2,000 employees worldwide.
Ziv died at the age of 96 on October 13, 2001. He was survived by a son and a daughter.
He is buried in the United Jewish Cemetery in his city, Cincinnati, Ohio.

Norma Jean Nilsson

Norma Jean Nilsson was born on January 1, 1938 in Hollywood, California, United States. She is an actress, known for The Actress (1953), The...