Duff had a stormy relationship with actress Ava Gardner in the late 1940s. He married fellow actress Ida Lupino in 1951. They had one daughter, Bridget Duff, born on April 23, 1952. They separated in 1966 and divorced in 1984. He later married Judy Jenkinson.
Friday, August 1, 2025
Howard Duff
Duff had a stormy relationship with actress Ava Gardner in the late 1940s. He married fellow actress Ida Lupino in 1951. They had one daughter, Bridget Duff, born on April 23, 1952. They separated in 1966 and divorced in 1984. He later married Judy Jenkinson.
Friday, July 25, 2025
Elinor Donahue
From the age of five, Donahue performed in films with dance choruses and was a ballet partner of Barrie Chase, future partner of Fred Astaire. She was a child actress in vaudeville and had several supporting roles in teen films, including Love Is Better Than Ever (1952), starring Elizabeth Taylor, and Tea for Two (1950), starring Doris Day. She played one of the daughters in Three Daring Daughters in 1948 and appeared as Mamie Van Doren's sister in Girls Town (1959).
Donahue rose to stardom for her role as the eldest daughter, Betty, in the family television series Father Knows Best, which aired from 1954 to 1960. Her co-stars were Robert Young, Jane Wyatt, Billy Gray as her younger brother, James "Bud" Anderson Jr., and Lauren Chapin as her younger sister, Kathy. Donahue was a musical judge on ABC's Jukebox Jury (1953–54), and during the first season of Father Knows Best, she also appeared on The Ray Bolger Show, starring Ray Bolger as a singer-dancer. She later starred alongside James Best, Ann Doran, and J. Carrol Naish in the 1956 episode "The White Carnation" of the religious anthology series Crossroads. She guest-starred in an episode of U.S. Marshal. She also appeared as a newlywed in the episode of The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show titled "The Newlyweds" which aired on April 2, 1956. She starred in the feature film Girls Town (1959 film), which she later described as "a horrible movie."
Donahue played Georgiana Balanger, the niece of George and Martha Wilson, in the 1960 Dennis the Menace episode "Dennis and the Wedding." Donahue also appeared alongside Marion Ross in a 1960 episode ("Duet") of The Brothers Brannagan. She played Miriam Welby on ABC's The Odd Couple, Jane Mulligan on Mulligan's Stew, and the evil Nurse Hunnicut on Days of Our Lives.
She was part of the main cast of the first season of CBS's The Andy Griffith Show as Ellie Walker, Andy's pharmacist in love with her. She was even mentioned in the opening credits before Don Knotts. After one season (1960–1961), Donahue asked for a release from her three-year contract.
In 1963, Donahue appeared in an episode of the short-lived NBC modern western series Redigo, opposite Richard Egan as rancher Jim Redigo. She then starred in another western series, Have Gun Will Travel, as Letty May in the episode "The Burning Tree."
In 1964, she appeared in the NBC series The Eleventh Hour, a medical drama about psychiatry starring Jack Ging and Ralph Bellamy, where she played the role of Melanie in the episode "The Secret in the Stone."
In 1966, she guest-starred on the television series A Man Called Shenandoah, episode 8, "Town on Fire."
In 1967, she made a guest appearance on Star Trek in the second-season episode "Metamorphosis," playing Commissioner Nancy Hedford.
Donahue played Sister Bertrille's (Sally Field) sister in three episodes of the ABC series The Flying Nun (1968–70).
She played Miriam Welby in 17 episodes of The Odd Couple (1972–75).
In 1977, she appeared in an episode of the ABC police series The Feather and Father Gang.
In 1978, Donahue starred in the NBC sitcom Please Stand By.
In 1979, she appeared on Diff'rent Strokes as Mr. Drummond's fiancée in the first season.
In 1981, Donahue appeared in an episode of One Day at a Time as Felicia, Alex's mother.
In 1984, she made an appearance as Mrs. Broderick, the mother of a drug-addicted teenager, in the final season of Happy Days.
In 1987, she played the mother of the title character in the short-lived Fox series The New Adventures of Beans Baxter.
In 1988, she appeared in an episode of Newhart ("Courtin' Disaster").
In 1989, she appeared in an episode of The Golden Girls as the new wife of Dorothy Zbornak's ex-husband, Stan.
In 1990, she played Bridget, a Beverly Hills clothing store manager, in the film Pretty Woman. Donahue played Gladys, the mother of Chris Peterson (Chris Elliott), in all 35 episodes of the sitcom Get a Life (1990–92), and had a recurring role as Rebecca Quinn on the CBS drama series Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman.
In 1991, she played the "orphanage woman" in Freddy's Dead: The Final Nightmare.
In 1992, she voiced the mother in the Fox Kids animated series Eek! the Cat. In 1994, she made an appearance as Aunt Lillian in "The One Where Nana Dies Twice," an episode of Friends. She played Lorraine, Luther Van Dam's girlfriend, in the fifth season of Coach in the early 1990s.
In 1998, Donahue published a memoir titled "In the Kitchen with Elinor Donahue," in which she relived some of her Hollywood memories and provided over 150 of her recipes.
In September 2010, Donahue appeared on The Young and the Restless as Judge Anderson, one of Nikki Newman's old friends and also the minister who will officiate at the wedding of Billy Abbott and Nikki's daughter, Victoria Newman. The wedding took place in front of the Abbotts' new house, which happened to be a replica of the Andersons' house from "Father Knows Best."
In 2015, Donahue played the role of Mrs. Chumley in the Judson Theatre Company's production of Mary Chase's Pulitzer Prize-winning play "Harvey." Donahue called the role her "swan song."
Donahue was married three times. Her first husband was sound producer Richard Smith, whom she married in 1955. They had one son with him. They divorced in 1961. Her second marriage, to producer Harry Ackerman, who was 25 years her senior, took place in 1962 at the Court of Liberty. Ackerman was the adoptive father of her son from her first marriage, and he and Donahue had three children together. Ackerman died in 1991. As a tribute and resource for American television history, Donahue donated Ackerman's personal papers to the Rauner Library at Dartmouth College, her alma mater. In 1992, she married actor Lou Genevrino.
Friday, July 18, 2025
Ted Donaldson
Theodore D. "Ted" Donaldson (August 20, 1933 – March 1, 2023) was an American actor and child actor. Donaldson was best known for his roles as Bud Anderson in the radio version of Father Comes Home and as Cornelius "Neely" Nolan in the 1945 film A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.
In 1944, he made his film debut in Pinky and Curly as Arthur “Pinky” Thompson alongside Cary Grant; Grant called him ‘Teddy’ and attended Donaldson's 1949 high school graduation at the Beverly Hills Hotel with his wife Betsy Drake. In addition to A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, he appeared in films such as Mr. Winkle Goes to War (1945), A Stranger Calls (1952), and a series of eight films starring the German Shepherd “Rusty”. From 1949 to 1954, he was heard as Bud Anderson, son of the character Jim Anderson, voiced by Robert Young, in the radio version of Father's the Best. When the program was broadcast on television, Donaldson turned down the role because he was already 21 years old at the time and did not want to be typecast; the on-camera role was taken by Billy Gray.
Donaldson was a guest of honor at several TCM Classic Film Festivals, for example in 2016, when a restored version of A Tree Grows in Brooklyn was shown to enthusiastic audiences.
He died on March 1, 2023 at the age of 89 from injuries sustained in a fall.
Friday, July 11, 2025
Jean Thurston Vander Pyl
Friday, July 4, 2025
ABC Mystery Time
The ABC Mystery Radio Show, also known simply as Mystery Theater, was an American radio anthology series that aired on the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) during the Golden Age of Radio, specifically at 8:30 pm in the later years of the 1940s and 1950s.
The show was a weekly mystery/thriller program, often featuring classic literature and starring A-list movie talent like Sir Laurence Olivier, Jon Gielgud, Ralph Richardson, Orson Welles, and Michael Redgrave.
Don Dowd of "The Breakfast Club" hosted ABC Mystery Time. ABC Mystery Time, along with other radio programs like Suspense, Inner Sanctum, The Shadow, and Gang Busters, offered listeners a variety of mystery and thriller programs that helped define the genre during the Golden Age of Radio.
It provided listeners with a sense of escape and adventure, allowing them to experience thrilling stories without leaving their homes.
It featured a variety of stories that often centered around Inspector Mark Saber, a British detective from the Homicide Squad, and his assistant, Sergeant Tim Maloney. The show's format allowed for a diverse range of murder mysteries, each week presenting a new case for the sharp-witted inspector to solve.
The show's appeal lay not only in its thrilling narratives but also in
the rich, atmospheric soundscapes that accompanied them. The creak of a
door, the ticking of a clock, or the distant sound of footsteps all
served to draw listeners deeper into the story, proving that sound could
be just as evocative as any visual cue.
The ABC Mystery Radio
Show reminds us of a time when storytelling was an auditory art, where
the imagination was the canvas, and sound was the brush. It stands as a
testament to the enduring power of narrative and the timeless appeal of a
good mystery.
Friday, June 27, 2025
Gunsmoke
In the late 1940s, CBS president William S. Paley, a fan of the Philip Marlowe radio series, asked his head of programming, Hubell Robinson, to develop a hardcore Western series about a Philip Marlowe of the Old West. Robinson delegated this task to his West Coast vice president at CBS, Harry Ackerman, who had developed the Philip Marlowe series.
Ackerman and his writers, Mort Fine and David Friedkin, created an audition script titled "Mark Dillon Goes to Gouge Eye" based on one of their Michael Shayne radio scripts, "The Case of the Crooked Wheel," from mid-1948. Two versions were recorded. The first, recorded in June 1949, closely resembled a hard-boiled detective series and starred Michael Rye (credited as Rye Billsbury) as Dillon; The second, recorded in July 1949, starred Straight Arrow actor Howard Culver in a lighter, more Western version of the same script. CBS liked Culver's version better, and told Ackerman to move forward.
A complication arose when Culver's contract as the star of Straight Arrow prevented him from making another Western series. The project was put on hold for three years when producer Norman Macdonnell and writer John Meston discovered him while developing his own Western series for adults.
Macdonnell and Meston wanted to create an adult radio Western, in contrast to the prevailing youth series such as The Lone Ranger and The Cisco Kid. Gunsmoke was set in Dodge City, Kansas, during the booming cattle era of the 1870s. Dunning notes, "The series was critically acclaimed for its unprecedented realism."
Gunsmoke is often a grim show, especially in its early years. Dunning writes that Dillon "played his hand and often lost. He arrived too late to prevent a lynching. He amputated a dying man's leg and lost the patient anyway. He saved a girl from brutal rapists, then found himself unable to provide what she needed to keep her from turning to prostitution." Some listeners, like Dunning, argue that the radio version was more realistic. The episodes were aimed at adults with some of the most explicit content of its time, including violent crimes, scalping, massacres, and opium addicts. Many episodes end on a grim note, and the villains often get away with their crimes.
The show is set after the arrival of the railroad to Dodge City (1872), and Kansas had been a state since 1861. In reality, a U.S. A marshal (actually a deputy marshal, because only the highest-ranking officer in the district holds the title of "marshal") would not be based in Dodge City and would not be involved in local law enforcement.
Aside from its gloomy tone, Gunsmoke is distinguished from other radio westerns in that the dialogue is often slow and staccato, and the extraordinary sound effects give a palpable sense of the prairie setting. The effects are subtle yet multi-layered, giving the show a sense of spaciousness. John Dunning wrote, "The listener heard strange dialogue in the background, just above the muffled cries of children playing in an alley. He also heard noises from the next block, where the inevitable dog was barking."
Gunsmoke differs from other westerns in that it was not sponsored during the first years of production. The show was financed by CBS for the first two years. The producers of the series said that if the show were to be sponsored, they would have to "clean up the show." The producers wanted to find a sponsor who would allow them to keep the show as it was.
Shortly after the radio show began, talk of adapting it for television began. Privately, Macdonnell had a reserved interest in bringing the show to television, but publicly declared, "Our show is perfect for radio," and feared, as Dunning writes, "Gunsmoke, confined by an image, couldn't be as authentic or attentive to detail. In the end, CBS simply took it away from Macdonnell and began preparing the television version."
Conrad and the others were auditioned, but they were little more than token efforts—especially in Conrad's case, due to his obesity. However, Meston was retained as the primary writer. In the early years, most television episodes were adapted from radio scripts, often using identical scenes and dialogue. Dunning wrote: "That radio fans considered the television show a farce and its actors impostors should surprise no one. That the television show was not a farce is due in large part to the continuing strength of Meston's scripts."
Macdonnell and Meston continued the radio version of Gunsmoke until 1961, making it one of the longest-running period radio dramas.
Conrad directed two television episodes, in 1963 and 1971, and McNear appeared in six, playing characters other than Doc, including three times as grocer Howard Rudd.
In 1955, CBS executives attempted to cast John Wayne to play the lead character, Matt Dillon, but ultimately settled on James Arness. The series first aired that same year.
Between 1955 and 1961, each episode of the series was 30 minutes long, and later grew to an hour. Between 1955 and 1975, 635 episodes aired. Stars such as John Wayne (host of the pilot), Bette Davis, Harrison Ford, Jon Voight, Kurt Russell, Jodie Foster, and many more appeared on the show. In 1987, Gunsmoke: Return to Dodge was filmed, with Arness again in the role of Dillon. The film was followed by Gunsmoke: The Last Apache (1990), Gunsmoke: To the Last Man (1992), Gunsmoke: The Long Ride (1993), and Gunsmoke: One Man's Justice (1994).
Friday, June 20, 2025
Norma Jean Nilsson
Howard Duff
Howard Duff was born in Bremerton, Washington on November 23, 1913 . His first film role was as a prisoner in Brute Force (1947). His notabl...

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