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Mrs. Cleaver-RIP

Started by Ted, October 17, 2010, 06:59:48 AM

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Ted

    http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/obituaries/la-me-barbara-billingsley-20101017,0,6137521.story

Barbara Billingsley, mother on 'Leave It to Beaver,' dies at 94

 As June Cleaver, Billingsley was the model 1950s mom, clad in dresses, high heels and pearls even while vacuuming. 'She was the ideal mother,' Billingsley said of her character.


 Barbara Billingsley, who played June Cleaver, the quintessential 1950s sitcom mom on "Leave It to Beaver," and later did a memorable send-up of her white-bread image playing the "jive-talking" passenger in the hit comedy "Airplane!," has died. She was 94.

Billingsley, who played small parts in B movies and appeared on television before achieving sitcom immortality, died Saturday at her home in Santa Monica of the rheumatoid disorder polymyalgia, said publicist Judy Twersky.

"Ward, I'm worried about the Beaver," Billingsley's June would say to her TV husband, played by Hugh Beaumont, on "Leave It to Beaver."

The gentle-humored series, which viewed life from a kid's point of view and ran from 1957 to 1963 — on CBS before moving to ABC in the fall of '58 — featured Jerry Mathers as Theodore "Beaver" Cleaver and Tony Dow as his older brother, Wally.

As June Cleaver, Billingsley was the personification of an Eisenhower-era stay-at-home mom — at least one residing in fictional Mayfield, U.S.A.: a mild-mannered, perfectly coiffed housewife who typically wore dresses, high heels and a strand of white pearls even while vacuuming or baking cookies for her boys.

"She was the ideal mother," Billingsley said of her character in 1997 in TV Guide. "Some people think she was weakish, but I don't. She was the love in that family. She set a good example for what a wife could be. I had two boys at home when I did the show. I think the character became kind of like me and vice versa. I've never known where one started and where one stopped."

As for the idealized TV family on "Leave It to Beaver," which continues in reruns on cable more than half a century after its debut, Billingsley had her own explanation for the Cleavers' enduring appeal.

"Good grief," she told TV Guide, "I think everybody would like a family like that. Wouldn't it be nice if you came home from school and there was Mom standing there with her little apron and cookies waiting?"

Born Barbara Combes in Los Angeles on Dec. 22, 1915, she and her sister grew up in a single-parent household after her parents divorced when she was an infant.

She always wanted to be an actress. She was attending Los Angeles City College when she joined the cast of "Straw Hat," a comedy that went to Broadway in late 1937. The show closed after four performances, but she "decided New York was more fun than college" and found work as a $60-a-week fashion model. She later toured with Billie Burke in a production of "Accidentally Yours."

Her marriage in the early 1940s to restaurant operator Glenn Billingsley, nephew of Stork Club owner Sherman Billingsley, produced two sons and prompted her move back to Los Angeles, where her husband managed the Mocambo nightclub.

When the marriage ended in divorce in the late '40s, Barbara Billingsley already had begun playing uncredited bit parts and small roles in a string of B movies. That continued into the '50s, when she also began landing roles on "Four Star Playhouse" and other television anthology programs.

In 1955, she played co-star Stephen Dunne's wife on the short-lived situation comedy "Professional Father," and she portrayed Gale Gordon's girlfriend on several episodes of the situation comedy "The Brothers."

In 1953, Billingsley married director Roy Kellino, who died three years later of a heart attack at age 44.

"It's a terrible blow, but you can't wallow in your grief," Billingsley said in a 1993 interview with The Times. "When Roy died, my agent made me work all the time. And six months later, they called me to start the series."

"They" were Joe Connelly and Bob Mosher, the creators of "Leave It to Beaver," the first TV series to show life from a child's point of view.

"Joe Connelly had seven children, and Bob Mosher had two, and they had a lot of material right there,"   Billingsley told the Nashville Tennessean in 2003. "Every show was taken from some kernel of truth, something that had happened to their children or a relative."

As for her trademark white-pearl necklace, Billingsley said in 2003 in The Times that she wore it "because I have a big hollow in my neck" and the necklace covered the spot perfectly.

"So no matter what I was doing — cleaning, cooking or answering the phone — I had those darn pearls on," she said. And there was a practical reason she wore high heels on the show.

In the beginning of the series I wore flat shoes, but then Wally and the Beaver began to get taller," she said. "That's why they put me in heels. The producers wanted me to be as tall or taller than the kids."


But even with heels, Billingsley said, "sometimes I would stand on the stairs for a scene so I could have some more height."

After "Leave It to Beaver" ended in 1963, Billingsley made occasional TV guest appearances. But she primarily maintained a low public profile with her third husband, Dr. William Mortensen, whom she had married in 1959. He died in 1981.

In 1980, Billingsley was firmly back in the public eye with her cameo in the disaster-movie spoof "Airplane!" — as the unlikely passenger who volunteers to translate the incomprehensible urban ghetto talk of an ailing black male passenger for the flustered flight attendant. ("Oh, stewardess, I speak 'jive.'")

In 1983, Billingsley returned as June Cleaver in "Still the Beaver," a made-for-television film that reassembled the old series' cast, with the notable exception of Beaumont, who died in 1982.

"No father on television was ever better than Hugh," Billingsley once said.

Beaumont's wise and caring father figure was there in spirit in the reunion film, however, as Billingsley's June would visit his grave and say, "Ward, what would you do?"

The success of the "Still the Beaver" TV movie led to the series "Still the Beaver" on the Disney Channel from 1984 to 1986, with Billingsley returning as June. Retitled "The New Leave It to Beaver" when it was picked up by the cable superstation WTBS in 1986, the series ran until 1989.

Billingsley, who provided the voice of Nanny on the animated "Muppet Babies" series that aired from 1984 to 1991, appeared on television only sporadically in the '90s. She also played a cameo — as Aunt Martha — in the 1997 feature film "Leave It to Beaver."

Billingsley is survived by sons Drew Billingsley of Granada Hills and Glenn Billingsley of Phillips Ranch; stepson William Mortensen Jr. of Pacific Palisades; 16 grandchildren; and 23 great-grandchildren.

Ted


  Two iconic parent figures pass away within a few days of each other. First, Beaver's mom.  Now, the Happy Days dad:

   http://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/chi-101019-tom-bosley-dies,0,5160359.story
 
 
  Chicago-area native Tom Bosley of 'Happy Days' fame dies at 83

Tribune Newspapers
4:19 p.m. CDT, October 19, 2010

  Tom Bosley, a Tony Award-winning actor who was best known for playing Howard Cunningham, the amiable father on the hit TV series "Happy Days," has died. He was 83.

Bosley died early Tuesday morning at Eisenhower Medical Center in Rancho Mirage, Calif., after a brief battle with lung cancer, said Grey Munford, a CBS representative.

He was born in Chicago and grew up in Glencoe, the son of a father who worked in real estate and a mother who had been a concert pianist, the actor told People magazine in 1979. A great-grandfather had been an orthodox rabbi in Chicago.

The family was well-off until the stock-market crash of 1929, Bosley told the magazine, and his parents divorced when he was 11.

He would remain a Cubs fan his whole life, however, even while living in Los Angeles and attending Dodgers games regularly.

"When I was a kid, I'd sit in the bleachers in Wrigley Field," Bosley told the Tribune in 1974, "and dream about being up in the broadcasters' booth one day. I spent my time in the service, and when I was discharged I enrolled in radio school, determined to become a sports announcer. But it didn't take me very long to figure out the odds against my becoming the announcer of the Chicago Cubs.

"Television was just starting up then, so I switched to acting because I figured the competition wouldn't be quite as tough."

About that time, in 1948, the Tribune's "Inquiring Camera Girl" column asked Bosley and other young actors "if a 'pickup date' is ever allowable or proper." Bosley's response, after some qualification: "I say, yes, it's proper."

He had enrolled at DePaul University thinking of become a lawyer but then switched over to the theater school. Some of his early training was at the Woodstock Opera House, alongside Paul Newman, but he moved to New York in the early 1950s and, "after knocking about in stock all over the country, doing radio and TV and playing off Broadway," according to the Tribune, had his first triumph there at the end of the decade.

Reviewing Bosley's starring role in the 1959 musical "Fiorello!" about New York Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia, the Tribune's John Chapman called Bosley the "living personification" of the mayor as a young man.

But it was television that gave Bosley his greatest fame.

His role as the dad to Ron Howard's Richie and Erin Moran's Joanie Cunningham on "Happy Days," the 1950s-set ABC series that debuted in 1974, earned him an Emmy nomination.

"He was my (TV) husband for 11 years," actress Marion Ross, who played Marion Cunningham, said in a statement. "We made a perfect couple, and he was the father of the company in many ways. He was so smart, he could make up or fix a joke for a better end scene at the drop of a hat."

Expressing his sadness at "the loss of our wonderful Tom Bosley," Howard recalled in a statement that "Tom's insight, talent, strength of character and comic timing made him a vital central figure in the 'Happy Days' experience.

"A great father and husband, and a wonderful artist, Tom led by example, and made us all laugh while he was doing it. My last conversations with Tom reflected the love of life and peace of mind that he always maintained throughout his full and rewarding life. I miss him already."

Of his role as "Mr. C," Bosley told the Orange County Register in 1989 that he knew he'd "always be Howard Cunningham to most people, but I'm proud of that character and don't mind being identified with it.

"It's a compliment that people remember the character. The only time I don't enjoy it is when somebody walks up to me and tells me they grew up on the show, and they've got gray hair around the temples. I could live without that."

After "Happy Days" ended, Bosley played Cabot Cove Sheriff Amos Tupper on "Murder, She Wrote" for four years. He then starred as a crime-solving Chicago priest on "Father Dowling Mysteries," the 1989-91 TV series with Tracy Nelson as Sister Stephanie. "If you're a male actor and you live long enough, you're going to play many kinds of fathers," Bosley said in the 1989 Register interview.

Bosley is survived by his wife, Patricia; his daughter, Amy Baer; his stepdaughters, Kimberly diBonaventura and Jamie Van Meter; his brother, Richard Bosley; and seven grandchildren.