Audrey Meadowswas an American actress best known for her role as the deadpan housewife Alice Kramden on the 1950s American television comedy The Honeymooners... (wikipedia)
Toots said to me, 'I gotta hand it to him, thought,when he got into the big money, he came by and handed me the cash, saying, 'Here's what I'm sure I owe you.'
Fans always ask, What did the bedroom look like? All they ever saw was Alice or Ralph going in and out.
Fan mail is one thing, but fans you meet in person are a different matter entirely.
But then there is the one who seems to have a hard time separating the actor's work from reality.
If Terri was upset about how silly she would look, her mother was completely undone. Seems she wanted Terri in her full natural bloom, not with any blooming flower.
Jackie had a keen eye for talent, and like an elephant never forgot. And, he was always right on the mark.
What to do? We yanked the dress up over her lovely attributes and with the addition of a scarf, the problem was solved. Sorry, guys, blame that stuffy censor. He hated surprises.
Jackie considered his resurrection, the world's best return performance.
Terri and her mother arrived. She was obviously a dedicated stage mother because she was loaded down with camera equipment, looking like a Japanese tourist.
When Toots finally could breathe again and the blood returned to his brain, he recalled that he had not passed or been passed by Jackie at any time in the race. Toots never used foul language but he came close that night. Jackie paid.
Censors are energetic and righteous people but they just couldn't work a room like Abbe Lane.
Robert Taylor was not only a splendid actor in a wide variety of roles but one of the most handsome men in the western world.
Somehow he became certain the he himself possessed the skills of a hypnotist. How he reached this judgement, I have no idea, but never convinced the rest of us.
Everyone in show business has had the experience of the fan who is so excited at recognizing their favorite star, they say, 'Oh my gosh, you're my biggest fan!
They weren't impatient for the boys to turn into cartoons again. They awarded sympathy, gave compassion. Because deep down they had found parts of themselves in the characters. You said it George.
Cary Grant, said, 'I heard you were on the lot and I just had to meet you.
We never leave our roots. We just grow new branches.
My father was an Episcopal minister, and for 14 years my family lived in China, in a city called Wuchang. We four children spoke Chinese before we spoke English. We left when the communists came, in the early 1930s. I was about 5 years old.
Frank Marth also played many characters with us, and like George Petrie,he was worth his weight in gold.
Frank Marth also played many characters with us, and like George Petrie, he was worth his weight in gold.
Later, I made a movie with him, 'That Touch of Mink,' and we became good friends but any woman's initial meeting with Cary is right up there with the big moments of her world history.
The only stage direction Jackie ever gave him, George said was: 'If you want to stay in the picture, stay close to me.' The rest of the cast remembered a television director's adage.
When Jackie got his big contract at CBS and was putting together what turned out to be almost a stock company of players, he remembered Frank and said, 'Get me that kid who played the jail sketch.'
Fans always ask, 'What did the bedroom look like?' All they ever saw was Alice or Ralph going in and out.
I've always voted Republican because America is exactly that, a republic. You can't expect much leadership with a Democrat behind the desk their not even close to dual efficient.
A bedroom requires a bed. Everything else was extravagance. Well, he had a bed all right.
I asked Frank what he remembered most about working with Jackie. He said, 'Apart from the fact that he always called me Francis, I always felt like I was going to a party, instead of work. It was such a blast.'