From the category archives:

General

Patsy Cline

Patsy Cline was born Virginia Patterson Hensley on September 8, 1932 in Winchester, Virginia. Her mother, Hilda, was only 16 years old when Patsy was born. Patsy, the oldest of three children, always knew she’d one day be a star. . Their father deserted the family when the children were young, leaving them with lots of love but very little of anything else.

Patsy Cline’s first husband was Gerald Cline. Their marriage ended due in part to her infidelity, with her manager, and to Cline’s lack of interest in her career (kind of explains wandering heart). They divorced in 1957. It was her second husband, Bill Peer, who “gave” her the name Patsy – from her middle name, “Patterson.”

Her third husband, Charlie Dick, was the one Patsy would go on to call the love of her life. Charlie Dick, who was known for his good looks and charismatic personality, captured Patsy’s heart. They’d remain married for the remainder of her life.

One of the songs chosen for Patsy Cline’s first album was Walkin’ After Midnight, written by Don Hecht and Alan Block. Cline initially did not like the song because it was, according to her, “just a little old pop song.” However, the song’s writers and record label insisted that she record the song.

Around this time, Patsy Cline auditioned for Arthur Godfrey’s Talent Scouts in New York City on CBS, and was given a chance to sing on the show. Patsy’s appearance on the show on January 21, 1957 is often referred to as her “discovery.” Her mother, Hilda Hensley, presented Patsy. She sang her recent recording “Walkin’ After Midnight,” the little old pop song. Godfrey’s staff insisted that Patsy Cline not wear one of her mother’s handmade cowgirl outfits for the performance. Instead, she wore a cocktail dress.

The audience’s ovations stopped the meter at its apex! For several months Patsy Cline appeared regularly on Godfrey’s radio program.

Walkin’ After Midnight was released in early 1957, and before long it was a hit, reaching #2 on the country charts and #12 on the pop charts. Cline became one of the first country singers to have a crossover pop hit.

After the birth of their daughter, Julie, in 1958, Patsy and Charlie moved to Nashville, Tennessee.

In 1959, Cline met Randy Hughes, who became her manager. With Randy’s promotion and a new contract with Decca Records-Nashville, Cline would begin her amazing ascent to the top of country music, and to her rightful place in music history.

Patsy Cline released another hit in 1961 called “I Fall to Pieces.” This song was written by Hank Cochran and Harlan Howard and was promoted on both country and pop music stations across the country, leading to success on both country and pop charts.

I Fall to Pieces hit No. 1 on the country charts and became Patsy Cline’s first No. 1 song. This song made Patsy Cline a household name.

Also in 1961, Patsy Cline realized a lifelong dream when she joined the cast of the Grand Ole Opry. She became one of the Opry’s greatest stars, and is believed to be the only person granted Opry membership merely by asking for it!

Patsy Cline is known for her remarkable singing voice, but those who had the good fortune of knowing her always seemed to be more impressed with who she was as a person. She was apparently one of the most generous, fun-loving, and warm individuals you could hope to meet. Patsy Cline loved to help others who were trying to make their own dreams come true. Loretta Lynn, Dottie West, Barbara Mandrell, Jan Howard, and Brenda Lee are just some of the artists she reached out to.

According to Loretta Lynn and Dottie West, Patsy Cline was always extremely generous with her friends. She bought them groceries and new furniture when they were hard up. On occasion, she would even pay their rent, enabling them to stay in Nashville and continue their quest for stardom.

In Ellis Nassour’s 1980 biography Patsy Cline, Cline’s friend, honky tonk pianist and Opry star Del Wood, was quoted as follows: “Even when she didn’t have it, she’d spend it — and not always on herself. She’d give anyone the skirt off her backside if they needed it.

In the 1986 documentary The Real Patsy Cline, singer George Riddle said of her, “It wasn’t unusual for her to sit down and have a beer and tell a joke. She’d never be offended at the guys’ jokes, because most of the time she’d tell a joke better than you! Patsy was full of life, as I remember“.

Patsy Cline used the term of endearment “Hoss” to refer to her friends, and referred to herself as “The Cline.” Though she never met Elvis Presley, she admired his music, and called him “The Big Hoss.”

Patsy gave birth to a son in 1961 (Randy), but the year didn’t bring ALL sunshine. She had a nearly fatal car wreck on June 14. Patsy and her brother, Sam, were involved in a head-on car collision on Old Hickory Boulevard in Nashville. The impact of the accident threw Patsy into the windshield, nearly killing her. Upon her arrival at the scene, singer Dottie West picked glass from Patsy’s hair, while Patsy insisted that the other car’s driver be treated first. Patsy later stated that she saw the female driver of the other car die right before her eyes at the hospital.

Ironically, Dottie West would be involved in a serious car accident in 1991. She also insisted that the driver be given first treatment. She did not survive the surgeries afterward.

Patsy suffered from a jagged cut across her forehead that required stitches, a broken wrist, and a dislocated hip. During her month long hospitalization, Patsy rededicated herself to the Lord and to her Christian faith. She received, literally, thousands of cards and flowers sent by fans.

When she left the hospital, her forehead was still visibly scarred. For the remainder of her career, she wore wigs and careful makeup to hide the scars and headbands to relieve pressure on her forehead.

“Crazy”, written by Willie Nelson, would become Patsy’s next hit. Oddly enough, she originally hated this song! Her first attempt at recording “Crazy” turned out to be a total disaster, with her maintaining that the song was too difficult to sing. The high notes were hard, and even painful, for Patsy becaue of her injuries from the wreck. For an entire day, she and her manager went head to head in all out war!

Patsy Cline recorded the song the following week in one take. Her version was completely different from the demo, which is why it became such a classic. It also became Patsy Cline’s signature song – the one for which she remains best known.

In late 1961, the song was an immediate country pop crossover hit, and was also her biggest pop hit, making the Top 10. Friend Loretta Lynn later reported that the night Cline premiered “Crazy” at the Grand Ole Opry, she received three standing ovations.

What amazes me the most about Patsy Cline is the two distinct sides to the lady: On one side, you have a woman who was as tough as nails. She had the guts to stand up to men during a time when most women wouldn’t even consider it. She fought for what was fair for herself, her friends, and her band members. Her good friend Dottie West stated, “It was common knowledge around town that you didn’t mess with ‘The Cline!‘”

On the flip side, you have a woman who was as kind and gracious as anyone I’ve ever read about or researched. Her family, friends, and fans meant the world to her. She even became very close friends with some of her fans. She would stay for hours after concerts to chat with her fans and sign autographs.

Her success allowed Patsy Cline to buy her dream home in Nashville’s Goodlettsville community. She personally decorated her home and had real gold dust sprinkled into the bathroom tiles. Now that’s Class! Loretta Lynn stated in a 1986 documentary interview, “She called me into the front yard and said, ‘Isn’t this pretty? Now I’ll never be happy until I have my Mama one just like it.’”

In the Ellis Nassour biography, Patsy Cline, Patsy’s friends Dottie West and June Carter Cash both recalled Cline telling them that she felt a sense of impending doom and didn’t expect to live much longer in the months leading up to her death. Cline also told Loretta Lynn of this sense of doom.

She even began giving away personal items to friends, writing out her own last will on Delta Air Lines stationery and asking close friends to care for her children if anything should happen to her. She reportedly told Jordanaire back up singer Ray Walker as she exited the Grand Ole Opry a week before her death: “Honey, I’ve had two bad ones (accidents). The third one will either be a charm or it’ll kill me.”

Although very sick with the flu, on March 3, 1963, Patsy performed a benefit show at the Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kansas, for the family of a disc jockey, Cactus Jack Call, who had recently died in an automobile accident. Also performing on the show were George Jones, George Riddle and The Jones Boys, Billy Walker, Dottie West, Cowboy Copas, Hawkshaw Hawkins, Wilma Lee and Stoney Cooper, and George McCormick and the Clinch Mountain Clan. Patsy Cline closed the show with “I’ll Sail My Ship Alone” to a thunderous ovation.

Dottie West was afraid for Patsy to fly and pleaded with her to ride back in the car with her and her husband, Bill. However, Patsy was anxious to get home to her children and refused West’s offer, saying, “Don’t worry about me, Hoss. When it’s my time to go, it’s my time.”

She called her mother from the airport and then boarded a Piper Comanche bound for Nashville, flown by her manager Randy Hughes, along with Cowboy Copas and Hawkshaw Hawkins. After stopping to refuel in Dyersburg, Tennessee, the plane took off at 6:07 pm. According to revelations by the airfield manager in the Nassour biography, he suggested that they stay the night after advising of high winds and inclement weather on the flight path, but Hughes responded, “I’ve already come this far. We’ll be there before you know it.”

They never made it to Nashville. The plane flew into severe weather and crashed at 6:20 p.m., according to Patsy’s wristwatch, in a forest just outside of Camden, Tennessee, only 90 miles from the destination. There were no survivors.

Patsy Cline was just 30 years old.

Patsy was buried in her hometown of Winchester, Virginia. With the help of Loretta Lynn and Dottie West a bell tower, erected in her memory at the cemetery, plays hymns daily at 6:00 p.m., the hour of her death.

Quotes About Patsy Cline:

“Patsy Cline belongs shoulder-to-shoulder with Frank Sinatra and Ella Fitzgerald.” – Elvis Costello

“It’s wonderful that whenever Patsy Cline’s name is mentioned, people’s voices fall and they become right sentimental. And, rightly so.” – Maya Angelou

“All Patsy Cline had to do was sing somebody else’s song and her version would outsell theirs because it would be so good!” – George Jones

“When I was a kid my Dad never let me sing Patsy Cline songs for one simple reason: they’ve already been done.” – Tanya Tucker

“She could sing country, she could sing pop, she could sing jazz — she could sing anything! She had the style and the voice and the charisma.” – Eddy Arnold

“If it had not been for people like Patsy, it wouldn’t be possible for women like me to do what I do today.” – k.d. lang

“There was a lot of hurt in Patsy’s voice. A lot of deep love in her voice. And I think she portrayed that.” – June Carter Cash

“Patsy Cline? Larger than life! She taught me emotion: raw, sincere, unashamed.” – Reba McEntire

“She was a lady, but when it came to her career, she had people (in the industry) right in the palm of her hand.” – Barbara Mandrell

“I think Patsy Cline made country music classy. She just opens her mouth, and it’s just heavenly.” – Melissa Etheridge

“I guess you could say that I’m the luckiest girl because I got to meet my true hero. She was a precious person. She made me a better singer, a better person. She was the consummate artist and human being.” – Dottie West

“She probably had the best pipes ever.” – Toby Keith

“There’s never going to be another Patsy Cline. Without her, I don’t think I would have lasted.” – Loretta Lynn

“I was a Patsy Cline fan long before we ever met. I loved her for the person she was, good-hearted and loyal. She loved her family, she loved to laugh, and she loved to sing. I’m so glad her music is timeless.” – Jan Howard

“Its a magic that’s indescribable. She just absolutely knew how to sing a song. Just made you believe every word. There’s never been another artist like her.” – Trisha Yearwood

“Undoubtedly, Patsy Cline was a trailblazer and in that respect, all women who are singular in a man’s field have a special power.” – Carly Simon

“There is no one who can touch Patsy Cline. Hell – I hang on every line!” – Jimmy Buffett

“Her delivery was so special that people that maybe didn’t like country music started listening to it because she had this mighty voice that was just heavenly! She didn’t care what anybody thought about her. She was just out there saying, ‘Hey, I can sing, and I‘m a girl. I love it, so don’t get in my way. Just let me sing and do my thing!’” – Dolly Parton

Fast & Furious

Today I read yet another negative movie review for Fast & Furious.   This critic tore it up pretty good. The most positive thing they said was that Paul Walker (Brian) looked blankly cute.  I guess that’s good, right?

The thing is, I saw Fast & Furious Saturday night and liked it a lot.  I’ve said it before and I guess I’m about to say it again.  Too many peoople expect too much from movies, especially critics.

I’ve read at least 5 reviews that criticized the dialogue.  Hello?! Did they not see Vin Diesel on the movie poster?  Vin Diesel’s fans don’t go to movies for dialogue, we go for the action, the fun, and the excitement  – and once again we got what we wanted.

My only criticisms are minor:

  1. I would have liked more “Letty” (Michelle Rodriguez) in the movie, I’m a fan of the actress and the character.   She brings a great deal of energy to her roles and would have brought more energy to the film, if she’d been allowed the luxury.   I hope to see Michelle in more movies. She’s woefully underused.
  2. For whatever reasons, when movie makers want to flavor a film with  a taste of Latin, they do so without much tastefulness.      I’m not against sexiness, but come on.   A few scenes looked like they’d walked onto the set of a music video and were obviously thrown in for shock value.   They weren’t much of either.

But back to the positive.  The action in this movie is the kind that makes you lean forward and dash your eyes all over the screen, trying to take it all in.  I can only imagine how excited “automobile fanatics” get during this movie.  There are some pretty incredible cars in this movie.  I’m not a “car person” but even I was impressed.

Fun Fast & Furious Trivia:

  • When Jordana Brewster and Michelle Rodriguez were hired for first movie in the series, The Fast and the Furious, neither even had a driver’s license!
  • Jordana Brewster once dated Mark Wahlberg.
  • Gal Gadot (Giselle) was Miss Israel while serving in the Israeli military.  That has to be a first.

If you want to have a fun time at the movies, see Fast & Furious.  If you want your brain to feel stimulated, see Duplicity (another movie I liked a lot).

Taylor Dayne

Music superstar Taylor Dayne gives Chandler High Class of ‘88 a second chance to relive their senior prom, and makes it an unforgettable night. Dayne takes the stage with her huge hit, “Tell It to My Heart,” on the season finale of “High School Reunion” April 8th at 10:00 p.m. ET/PT on TV Land during TV Land Prime.

Below is a synopsis of the season finale courtesy of TV Land!

In the season finale, as the reunion comes to an end, the classmates decide to revive their high school tradition of having a sleepover on the football field the night before the prom. The excitement of the prom is building but with not enough guys to go around, the Chandler girls begin to wonder who will be asked to the prom and who will have to go stag. At the prom, Scott W., “The Skate Punk,” continues to struggle with his feelings for Maricela, “The Outcast,” and Andrew, “The Band Geek,” receives the surprise of his life from his high school crush. The class is shocked when singing sensation Taylor Dayne makes a surprise appearance and wows them with a performance. Finally, on the last day of the reunion, as the classmates pack their bags and say their tearful goodbyes, Tom, “The Jock,” and Kara, “The Homecoming Queen,” stay behind to make a decision that will change their lives forever.

Frank Sinatra Sharing a Laugh with Fellow Entertainer Jackie Gleason



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One of the most gifted comedians ever, Jackie Gleason was born on this date in 1916.

Herbert John Gleason was born in New York City into a poor Irish-Catholic immigrant family living in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn. His father, John Herbert Gleason, an insurance clerk, abandoned the family when Jackie was eight. His mother, Mae Kelly Gleason worked as a subway token booth agent and died when Jackie was only 16.

His only sibling, Clemence, died from tuberculosis when Jackie was 3.

As a teen, Jackie was very athletic – excelling in boxing and football. He was also very well known for being a snazzy dresser, having a sharp tongued sense of humor, and for having crazy skills around the pool table.

Jackie knew, from an early age, that he wanted to entertain people – especially if it meant making them laugh. He became very popular at vaudeville houses, carnivals, and amateur shows. He was also a very popular disc jockey. When he was 25, Jackie headed for Hollywood but, sadly, they didn’t seem to know quite what to do with him!

Finally in 1952, CBS saw the Jackie Gleason magic that would soon make television history. He was given his own television show, The Jackie Gleason Show. They paid him $10,000 per week, which made him one of the highest paid television stars of the day. CBS also built him a circular mansion in Peekskill, New York!

Jackie Gleason and CBS had a beautiful relationship for the next 18 years. How sweeeeeeet it was!

The Honeymooners was the shows most popular and beloved sketch. “To the moon, Alice” became a huge catch phrase all over the country!

The Honeymooners became a 30 minute comedy which stood on its own. While there were actually only 39 episodes, television history was made. In 1985, dozens of the old “Honeymooners” skits from the Gleason comedy-variety shows were re-edited and released as The Honeymooners: The Lost Episodes.

Jackie Gleason didn’t let his lack of box office success stand in his way – he simply moved to television and found more fame than many film stars ever knew. He did, however, leave a few very memorable performances in the movies.

In The Hustler (1961), he starred alongside Paul Newman as the legendary pool player Minnesota Fats, performing his own pool shots for the camera. The role earned him an Academy Award nomination.

One of my favorite Jackie Gleason movies was Papa’s Delicate Condition (1963). He was absolutely, positively perfect in this film. However, my favorite Jackie Gleason movie role would have to be Sheriff Buford T. Justice in the Burt Reynolds Smokey and the Bandit movies (1977, 1980, 1983). No one one earth could have played Sheriff Buford T. Justice except Jackie Gleason. No one!

He was also brilliant in Requiem for a Heavyweight (1962), in which he portrays Maish Rennick, a boxing manager caught between gambling debts to the mob and loyalty to a punch-drunk fighter.

Jackie also appeared in The Toy (1982), The Sting II (1983), Nothing in Common (1986), costarring Tom Hanks, and Izzy and Moe (a 1985 television movie that reunited him with Art Carney).

Jackie Gleason died of heart failure on June 24, 1987, in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

Honeymooners-Very Best of the Honeymooners
Honeymooners-Very Best of the Honeymooners

Jackie Gleason Collection (DVD/2 Disk)

Jackie Gleason Collection (DVD/2 Disk)

Also See:
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Honeymooners…I Had a Life

Jackie Gleason and Arnold Palmer Away We Go Black and White 16 x 20 Photograph (Unframed)

Phil Carey (Asa, left) and Clint Ritchie (Clint, right)If you, like me, grew up watching One Life to Live, you fondly remember the Buchanans: Asa and his sons Clint and Bo. The wonderful, wonderful actors who portrayed Asa (Phil Carey) and Clint (Clint Ritchie) each passed away within the past few weeks. Clint Ritchie died from a heart attack the last of January and Phil Carey passed away this past weekend.

Clint Richie

Clint Richie played Clint Buchanan (love interest to the shows heroine, Vicki) on One Life to Live for over 20 years. He was a real cowboy as well as one on the show, with a strong love for horses.

Clint had suffered a heart attack in late January and had to have surgery. A pacemaker was implanted but, unfortunately, a blood clot formed and he died in his sleep on January 31. He had never married and didn’t have any children.

In addition to OLTL, Clint Richie appeared on television’s Wild, Wild West, The Centennial, Dallas, and Batman (he played one of The Joker’s henchmen, Boff!)

Clint Richie was 70.

Phil Carey

Phil Carey created, in Asa Buchanan, one of the most popular and beloved characters on all of daytime…ever. Asa was somewhat of an evil man, but Phil Carey’s portrayal was so brilliant that you often found yourself cheering him on!

Before finding fame on OLTL, Phil Carey appeared on Gunsmoke, Ironside, Little House on the Prairie, Police Woman, and Bionic Woman – among others. He was also a powerful stage actor.

Phil Carey had been diagnosed with lung cancer in 2006 and underwent chemotherapy.

One of my favorite daytime actors ever, Timothy D. Stickney (RJ Gannon, OLTL) had the following to say about Phil Carey: “He was a very kind and considerate man. Always aware of the others feelings. NOT like Asa at all in that respect. I grew to like him as much as I respected him. A good man from a time when not all were as open and respectful toward others.”

Phil Carey is survived by a wife and five children. He was 83.

Rest in peace, cowboys.  Daytime television hasn’t been the same without ya’ll.

Ricardo Montalban, Fantasy Island

My dad and I used to watch Fantasy Island every week. We absolutely loved that show.  It may sound cliche, but they honestly don’t make purely entertaining television dramas anymore.  The kind you can sit back and enjoy with every member of the family.

Ricardo Montalban had such an amazing charisma and screen presence. I’m pretty sure if he were to read the phone book, I would have tuned in to watch – from A to Z.

Sadly, Mr. Montalban passed away Wednesday, January 14, 2009. He was 88 years old. His wife of 68 years, Georgianna, had passed away only last year. “He was in peace,” said his son-in-law Gilbert Smith. “He will be missed.” He is survived by four children and six grandchildren.

Ricardo Montalban was born in Mexico City, Mexico in 1920.

He worked passionately for the advancement of Spanish actors and actresses in Hollywood. He injured his back while filming Across the Wide Missouri in 1951.

In 1993, he was in surgery for over 9 hours as doctors tried to repair damage to his spine.  He was said to have been in constant pain.

A Few DID YOU KNOWS about Ricardo Montalban:
His wife Georgianna’s sister was Loretta Young.
Agreed to reprise his role of “Khan” in Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan (1982) for only $100,000 because he loved the role so much!
Is the only “Star Trek” movie villain who previously appeared on “Star Trek” (1966). He played Khan Noonien Singh in the “Star Trek” (1966) episode “Space Seed” and Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan (1982).
In 1970, he founded the non-profit organization “Nosotros” whose goal is “to help fulfill the goals of persons of Spanish-speaking origin in the motion picture and television industry.” (www.nosotros.org).
Best remembered by the public for his starring role as “Mr. Roarke” on “Fantasy Island” (1978).

After winning his Emmy for “How the West Was Won” in 1978, Ricardo Montalban said, “I don’t know about Mr. Roarke, but this certainly fulfills my fantasy. Thank you very much.”

Rest in perfect peace, Ricardo Montalban.

Eartha Kitt as Catwoman

Wow. Talk about making a lasting impression. I never realized it until I loooked into it this morning, but Eartha Kitt was actually in only 3 Batman episodes:

  • Catwoman’s Dressed to Kill (1967)
  • The Funny Feline Felonies (1967)
  • The Joke’s on Catwoman (1968)

It seems like her beautiful face and remarkable voice were around for a lot more. That’s the beauty of syndication.. multiplication.

Sadly, Eartha Kitt passed away yesterday – on Christmas Day.

The 5′ 4″ beauty was born in South Carolina. Her birth was the result of a white plantation owner raping a sharecropper mother of African-American and Cherokee Native American descent. I wasn’t going to include that bit of ugliness in this article, but the fact that Eartha came from such unremarkable beginnings, yet ended her life known the world over strikes me as spectacular!

I also wanted to be clear about why her mother would even think about giving her baby girl away – which she did. By the age of 9, Eartha was living in Harlem. She dropped out of school by the age of 15. Eartha was too busy just trying to survive – school didn’t rank up there with finding a place to sleep and something to eat. During this time, she slept at friends houses and on the subway.

While Eartha Kitt was born with a lot of burdens to bear, she was also born with a lot of talent. She literally sang and danced her way to a better life. Eartha performed with the Katherine Dunham Dance Troupe on a European tour, and she performed as a solist at a Paris night club, where she became a very big deal. Get this, the infamous Orson Welles called her “the most exciting girl in the world.”

Eartha Kitt never shied away from speaking her mind. I guess when you’ve already seen life’s ugliest, you throw caution aside – sort of like, “What do I need with you?!” She was all but booted from the country after making anti-war statements during a White House luncheon with Lady Bird Johnson in 1968. It wasn’t until 1977, under Jimmy Carter’s administration, that she was welcomed back to the White House.

Eartha Kitt Quotes:
“I have a great need for affection from an audience. I don’t know whether this is because I had such a tough life when I was a child.”

At the White House, 1968: “I am a mother and I know the feeling of having a baby come out of my gut. I have a baby and then you send him off to war. No wonder the kids rebel and take pot.”

“I don’t carry myself as a black person, but as a woman that belongs to everybody”

“Jamie and I were like brother and sister. He told me in fact he thought of me as a sister. Our relationship was strictly platonic and spiritual.” (About her friendship with James Dean.)

Eartha Kitt was 81 when she passed away, but (again) thanks to syndication, she’ll forever live on just as we remembered her.

Rest in Purrrrrrrrfect Peace, Eartha.

Bettie Page - Hot Bettie



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Bettie Page passed away on December 11, from a heart attack. She was 85 years young.

Born in Nashville, Tennessee in 1923, Bettie was known for her sexy poses and her short bangs. In fact, in the 1950’s, she was considered quite scandalous!

In high school, lovely Bettie was a straight A student and took part in several school plays. Her Hollywood career never quite measured up to her pin up career, but her pictures will live on forever. And beautifully, at that.

Rest in peace, Bettie.

Vera-Ellen (on the right when the video begins) Trivia:

  • Vera-Ellen was born in Cincinati, Ohio in 1921
  • Nicknamed “Bunny,” she was an only child.
  • Vera was painfully shy as a child and, by nine, had developed health problems.
  • She began dancing at 10.
  • This beautiful musical star silently battled anorexia before doctors even understoon the condition.
  • When musicals faded out in the 1950’s, Vera-Ellen sort of disappeared from the radar.
  • During the filming of White Christmas, the costumes were made to cover Vera-Ellen’s neck because, due to anorexia, it appeared much older than her face.
  • Once said, “Fred Astaire will never say, though he’s always asked, which of his dancing ladies was his favorite partner. If you ask me, he preferred the solo turns.”

Rosemary Clooney (on the left when the video begins) Trivia:

  • George Clooney is her nephew.
  • Was Mother in Law to singer Debby Boone.
  • Once Rosemary was performing with singer/pianist Michael Feinstein at the Hollywood Bowl. Before taking the stage, they were both noticably nervous. Expecting Rosemary to give him words of strength and encouragement, Michael Feinstein was shocked when she told him, “Don’t think this ever gets any easier.”
  • Her brother, veteran television newscaster Nick Clooney, gave a eulogy at the end of the hour-long traditional Catholic funeral mass. Actor George Clooney, Nick’s son, sat with more than three dozen family members and was one of 10 pallbearers. Also in the crowd were singer Debby Boone, Clooney’s daughter-in-law; actors Al Pacino and Beverly D’Angelo; and Maysville native and former Miss America Heather Renee French, the wife of Kentucky Lt. Gov. Steve Henry.
  • One of her more interesting quotes (and she had a lot of them!) was: “In the final analysis, it’s true that fame is unimportant. No matter how great a man is, the size of his funeral usually depends on the weather.”