Entertainers etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster
Entertainers etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster

4 Kasım 2020 Çarşamba

Guy Lombardo at the Amity Inn

Guy Lombardo at the Amity Inn

Big Band leader Guy Lombardo was in the city on March 20, 1946 to help Father Francis J. Schlindwein to break ground for the new Saint Boniface School that was to be erected at 9363 Wattsburg Road. Father Schlindwein had all sorts of celebrities that came to Erie to help with fund raising and special events, he personally knew many of the celebrities that would come to Erie to aid his efforts. He met Guy Lombardo in New York City in 1943.

After the ground-breaking ceremony at the site where St. Boniface school was to be erected, Guy Lombardo had dinner at the Amity Inn located at 1334 West 26th Street with the local dignitaries. The men in the photo (from left to right) are: Erie Mayor Charlie Barber, Father Schlindwein, Guy Lombardo and Joseph Ferraro.

Mr. Ferraro owned the Amity Inn. The identity of the woman seated at the table is not known

 

Guy Lombardo at the Amity Inn in Erie


28 Aralık 2019 Cumartesi

The Younger Brothers' Fabulous Epics at the Peppermint Lounge

The Younger Brothers' Fabulous Epics at the Peppermint Lounge

The Younger Brothers' roots go back to 1962, when Paul Yoculan formed The Fabulous Epics. In 1963 The Epics moved to New York City and became the house band at the world-famous Peppermint Lounge.

Years later Tom Hanks would call them "The Wonders" and tell their story in his film That Thing You Do.

Singer Paul Yoculan and Vinny Frazini formed The Fabulous Epics while living in Erie. The Band performed routinely at the Sons of Italy, which had a club at 621 West 18th Street. After a little over a year the Epics moved to New York, where they quickly won a slot as house band at The Peppermint Lounge.

The Peppermint Lounge opened in 1958 at 128 West 45th Street in Manhattan, New York. It had a lengthy mahogany bar running along one side, lots of mirrors and a dance floor at the back, with a capacity of just 178 people. The club had a gay and celebrity clientèle. Celebrities swarmed into the Peppermint Lounge: Audrey Hepburn, Truman Capote, Marilyn Monroe, Judy Garland, Liberace, Noël Coward, Frank Sinatra, Norman Mailer, Annette Funicello, even the elusive Greta Garbo. In 1964, the Beatles were filmed visiting the club during their first visit to the United States.

While the band was performing at the Peppermint Lounge on the evening of February 09, 1964, the Beatles had just finished their appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show and were eager to visit the Peppermint Lounge to see the Fabulous Epics, whom had developed a Beatles parody as part of its act. They had wigs cut out and fake noses on while playing fake instruments, including a wild stand-up bass with door knobs, a rear-view mirror, towel racks, and a built-in phone that rang with a long-distance call from England.

The Epics were aware that the Beatles might stop in, so they didn't want to do the spoof, worried that the Beatles may take offense, but the club owner insisted that they perform the act. Accompanied by DJ Murray the K. and a big press contingent, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, and John Lennon visited the club, George Harrison was ill. Club Security and Police cordoned off the whole club, and eventually the block as the word got out about the Beatles impending visit to the club. The Beatles arrived, watched the show and loved it, and from the audience gave the band the thumbs up.

The entire Fab Four visited the club again the following night, where they told the New York press that they liked the Younger Brothers, which made the papers the next day.

Ironically, the Epics didn't think much of the Beatles before meeting them, but after meeting them they learned two Beatles' songs and added them to their act.

The Fabulous Epics was the house band at the Peppermint Lounge for three years. During that period, they opened the American Hotel in Manhattan and performed for President John F. Kennedy at Carnegie Hall. The Fabulous Epics were the first show band of its kind, in history, to play Carnegie Hall. The Beatles were so entertained by the Fabulous Epics that word reached England about the Epics as the British Invasion continued. Groups like the Rolling Stones, The Animals, The Dave Clark Five, Gerry And The Pacemakers, all came to the lounge to sit and play with the Epics.

When the Fabulous Epics broke up, Paul Yoculan and Vinny Frazini, the band’s founders; with Vince Hopkins, formed the Younger Brothers at the suggestion of Warner Brothers, who had signed the Epics to a recording contract while they were playing at the Peppermint Lounge in the early 60s.

Walt Slivinski, with Neil Myers and Larry Parker, left the Epics and formed the band, Orange Colored Sky, which erroneously has been linked to the Fabulous Epics.

Around 1967, Walt Slivinski, along with Neil Myers and Larry Parker, moved to San Francisco looking to attract a broader audience. San Francisco was in the middle in of The Summer of Love and Psychedelic Music got top billing in the city. There, they formed the band, Larry Younger and The Epics, where they worked out of a club called "The Rock Garden" as an opening act for bands like Country Joe And The Fish, and Buffalo Springfield. Soon they would discover that San Francisco wasn’t their niche.

In 1968 the band opted to relocate to Southern California. Hitting the Los Angeles club circuit, they quickly attracted the attention of Universal Studios, which signed them to a recording contract, along with a brief cameo in the Don Knotts film, The Love God. They also appeared in TV commercials with Petula Clark, as well as The Steve Allen Show.

At Universal's insistence they adopted the name, Orange Colored Sky. Teaming the sextet with producer Norman Ratner, fronted by singer Larry Parker and keyboardist Walter Slivinski, who is credited with penning all 11 tracks, the band produced their first and only album.

Members of the Fabulous Epics:

Paul Yoculan
Vinny Frazini
Vince Hopkins
Walt Slivinski
Neil Myers
Larry Parker
Loren Cope

The Fabulous Epics meets the Beatles at the Peppermint Lounge

Front row, Left to Right: George Harrison, John Lennon  Back row, Left to Right: Larry Younger, Walter Slivinski, Vinny Younger, Paul McCartney.
Front row, Left to Right: George Harrison and John Lennon. Back row, Left to Right: Larry Parker, Walter Slivinski, Vinny Frazini and Paul McCartney.

Front row, Left to Right: George Harrison, John Lennon  Back row, Left to Right: Neal Myers, Larry Younger, Walter Slivinski, Vinny Younger, Paul McCartney.
Front row, Left to Right: George Harrison and John Lennon. Back row, Left to Right: Neal Myers, Larry Parker, Walter Slivinski, Vinny Frazini and Paul McCartney.


Left to Right: Neal Myers, Paul Yoculan, Larry Parker, Paul McCartney, Vinny Frazini, Walter Slivinski and John Lennon.

Left to Right: Neal Myers, Paul Yoculan, Larry Parker, Paul McCartney, Vinny Frazini and Walter Slivinski.

Left to Right: Paul Yoculan, Loren Cope, Paul McCartney, Vinny Frazzini and John Lennon.

13 Şubat 2016 Cumartesi

Orange Colored Sky

Orange Colored Sky

When one of the most successful bands from Erie, during the 1960s, broke up, three of the former members of the Fabulous Epics: Walt Slivinski, with Neil Myers and Larry Parker, went on to create their own band.

Paul Yoculan, Vinnie Frazini and Vince Hopkins, formerly of the Fabulous Epics, had regrouped and formed the Younger Brothers Band, at the suggestion of Warner Brothers, who had signed the Epics to a recording contract while they were playing at the Peppermint Lounge in the early 60s. Walt Slivinski, along with Neil Myers and Larry Parker, around 1967, moved to San Francisco looking for an opportunity to capitalize on the success of the former Epics, and to attract a broader audience.

In the 1960s California was the place to be for any band seeking to be discovered. San Francisco was in the middle in of The Summer of Love and Psychedelic Music got top billing in the city. It was there that they formed the band, Larry Younger and The Epics, hoping that the success the Fabulous Epics enjoyed at the Peppermint Lounge would follow. They worked out of a club in the San Francisco’s Mission District called “The Rock Garden” as an opening act for bands like Country Joe And The Fish, and Buffalo Springfield. With their experience being that of a house band, befitting popular music, they soon would discover that San Francisco wasn’t their niche. Larry Parker, disappointed in their lack of progress, left the band.

San Francisco was a learning experience that influenced both the band and its members and in 1968, when the band opted to relocate to Southern California, hitting the Los Angeles club circuit, they quickly attracted the attention of Universal Studios. It was at Universal's insistence that they adopted the name, Orange Colored Sky. Universal signed them to a recording contract, along with a brief cameo in the Don Knotts film, The Love God. They also appeared in TV commercials with Petula Clark, as well as The Steve Allen Show.

Teaming the band with producer Norman Ratner, fronted by singer Tony Barry and keyboardist Walter Slivinski, who is credited with penning all 11 tracks, the band produced their first and only album.

With three lead singers in Tony Barry, Jack Skinner and Harold Little, their only album was released:

ORANGE COLORED SKY

1. The Sun and I (Walter Slivinski) - 2:45
2. The Shadows of Summer (Walter Slivinski) - 3:45
3. Knowing How I Love You (Walter Slivinski) - 3:13
4. Just Like Humpty Dumpty (Walter Slivinski) - 2:55
5. I'm Taking Her To Dinner (Walter Slivinski) - 2:32
6. Sometimes (I Wish I Didn't Love You) (Walter Slivinski) - 2:22
7. Everyday I Love You More (Walter Slivinski) - 3:25
8. L.A. (Los Angeles) (Walter Slivinski) - 3:55
9. Girl of My Dreams (Walter Slivinski) - 2:41
10. Orange Colored Sky (Walter Slivinski) - 2:55

In the early 1970s producer Don Costa brought Orange Colored Sky to MGM records, under the direction of future California Lieutenant Governor Mike Curb. At MGM, Sky recorded “Simon Zealotes” from the rock opera Jesus Christ Superstar, arranged by Don Costa and released to U.S. radio stations three months prior to the appearance of the "Superstar" national cast album.

Bassist/vocalist Larry Parker joined Orange Colored Sky in 1974. Undergoing a string of personnel changes throughout the years the band found a home on the Las Vegas and Tahoe casino circuit, opening in the for such acts as Burt Bacharach and Frank Sinatra. By the 1980s many showrooms had been replaced by discotheques and Sky slowly disbanded.

The band reunited in the early 1990s under a new band-leader, Michael Chanslor, who was Susan Anton's longtime keyboardist vocalist, conductor and arranger. Also in the band was bassist and vocalist, Larry Parker; drummer and vocalist, Dennis Edwards, formerly with Eric Burdon and Eddie Money; and guitarist and vocalist, Tom Bethke. Sky’s founder, Walter Slivinski, had long since, after the band’s first break up, returned to Erie, opening the Honey bear Studio there.

The band newly formed band performed at casinos, conferences and other events throughout the Southwest. Sky is known to Southern California sports fans for their unique, a cappella performances of the The Star-Spangled Banner for the Los Angeles Lakers at Staples Center and for the Mighty Ducks at Arrowhead Pond.

Partial List of Band members:

Tony Barry - vocals
Michael Chanslor - keyboards
Ernie Hernandez - vocals, guitar
Harold Little - vocals, drums
Neal Myers - guitar, backing vocals
Larry Parker - vocals, bass
Jack Skinner - vocals, bass
Walter Slivinski - keyboards

A San Francisco Newspaper ad promoting the Larry Younger and the Epics Band along with Country Joe and the Fish (1967)
A San Francisco Newspaper ad promoting the Larry Younger and the Epics Band along with Country Joe and the Fish (1967)

24 Ocak 2016 Pazar

Alberta Nelson

Alberta Nelson

Alberta Nelson was an American television and film actress of the 1960s. She was born on August 14, 1937, in Erie. Nelson attended Villa Maria Academy and later graduated from Andrews High School in Willoughby, Ohio, graduating with the class of 1955. She briefly attended St. John's Hospital School of Nursing, Cleveland, Ohio, before in the late 1950s moving to New York City where she modeled.

While in New York she performed on Broadway. She also performed at the Erie Playhouse and the Erie Roadhouse.

Alberta married Ryan MacDonald (Machunas) in 1959 in New York City. Their son Adam was born in New York City in 1960 and was a victim of sudden infant death syndrome at the age of two-months. Adam is buried in his father's hometown of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Alberta never had any other children. Ryan MacDonald was the first male centerfold in the first issue of Playgirl magazine, published in 1978. Ryan and Alberta divorced in 1962 and Alberta moved to Beverly Hills, California, where she pursued an acting career.

After several dramatic roles on television in the early 1960s, Nelson made five guest appearances on The Andy Griffith Show, four of them as Goober Pyle's girlfriend, Flora Malherbe. She also made a guest appearance on The Dick Van Dyke Show.

After her successful girl-next-door stint as Flora on The Andy Griffith Show and her comedic career as biker girl Puss, Nelson starred in 1970 in the movie The Wild Scene as Dr. Virginia Grant, a female psychiatrist who talks graphically about her tawdriest cases — The Wild Scene is the only film where that Alberta Nelson was the star; this, and a 1970 appearance on Love, American Style, would be Nelson's last credited roles.

Alberta appeared in seven movies in the 1960s as one of Eric Von Zipper's mice in the successful American International Beach Party series. She is the only person who appeared in all seven Beach Party movies, including Beach Party, Muscle Beach Party and How to Stuff a Wild Bikini. Nelson played the leather clad Rat Pack (aka Rats & Mice) biker chick Puss, one of the comic villains who dogged the steps of America's sweethearts, Annette Funicello and Frankie Avalon.

Alberta married Herbert Lester Gilman in Erie on February 14, 1971, her second marriage. Alberta was married for 35 years to Herbert Gilman.

Alberta fought cancer of the jaw/throat for several years, dying in Herbert's arms on April 29, 2006, at the home of Herbert Gilman's daughter, in Willoughby Hills, Ohio.

Alberta was buried next to her mother and father at Laurel Hill Cemetery in Erie on May 2, 2006.

Herbert Gilman died on June 29, 2007. He was buried at Laurel Hill Cemetery in Erie on July 1, 2007.

Alberta Nelson's appearance on the Andy Griffith Show
Alberta Nelson’s appearance on the Andy Griffith Show.

5 Haziran 2015 Cuma

Magician Harry Kellar

Magician Harry Kellar

Erie native Harry Kellar, born July 11, 1849, was an American magician who presented large stage shows during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Kellar was a predecessor of Harry Houdini and a successor of Robert Heller. He was often referred to as the Dean of American Magicians and performed extensively on five continents. One of his most memorable stage illusions was the levitation of a girl advertised as the Levitation of Princess Karnack (similar to an illusion invented by John Nevil Maskelyne). He was a longtime customer of the Martinka Magic Company, which built many of his illusions and sets, including the Blue Room.

Early life

Like most magicians, there is little of Kellar's early life that can be confirmed. His real name was Heinrich Keller and he was born to German immigrants in Erie. He was sometimes called Henry, but later changed it to Harry. As a child, Kellar loved to play dangerous games and was known to play chicken with passing trains.

Kellar apprenticed under a druggist and frequently experimented with various chemical mixtures. On one occasion, Kellar reportedly blew a hole in the floor of his employer's drugstore. Rather than confront the wrath of his parents, Kellar stowed away on a train and became a vagabond. He was only ten years old at the time. Kellar was befriended by a British-born minister of religion from upstate New York. He offered to adopt Kellar and pay for his education if he would study to also become a minister. One evening Kellar saw the performance of a traveling magician, The Fakir of Ava (the stage name of Isiaiah Harris Hughes), and, after the show, Kellar immediately got the urge to go on the stage. He later told Houdini that, "I became very restless, bought books on magic and finally left my friend and benefactor." While working on a farm in Buffalo, New York, Kellar answered an ad in the newspaper that was placed by Hughes, who was looking for an assistant. Kellar was hired and, at the age of sixteen, gave his first solo performance in Dunkirk, Michigan. It was a disaster and Kellar went back to work with Hughes. Two years later, Keller tried again with better results, but, as he was in poor financial condition, often had to leave town during intermission to avoid creditors.

Career

In 1869, Kellar began working with The Davenport Brothers and Fay, which was a group of stage spiritualists made up of Ira Erastus Davenport, William Henry Davenport, and William Fay. Kellar spent several years working with them, until 1873, when he and Fay parted ways with the Davenports and embarked on a world tour through Central and South America.

In Mexico, they were able to make $10,000. In 1875, the tour ended in Rio de Janeiro and with an appearance before Emperor Dom Pedro II. Then, on their way to a tour in England, the ship Kellar and Fay were sailing on, the Boyne, sank in the Bay of Biscay. Lost in the wreckage were Keller's equipment and clothing, along with the ship's cargo of gold, silver and uncut diamonds. After the shipwreck, Keller was left with only the clothes on his back and a diamond ring he was wearing. Afterwards, his bankers in New York cabled him telling him that his bank had failed. Desperate for money, Kellar sold his ring and parted ways with Fay, who left to rejoin the Davenports.

After visiting John Nevil Maskelyne's and George Alfred Cooke's theatre, called Egyptian Hall, Keller was inspired and liked the idea of performing in one spot. He loved the illusions Maskelyne and Cook performed and spent his remaining money to buy the trick from them. Kellar borrowed $500 from Junius Spencer Morgan (father of J.P. Morgan) and returned to the United States to try to retrieve his funds from bank transaction from when he was in Brazil. Knowing that mail from Brazil was slow, he was able to recover all of the $3,500. With the money, Kellar started a troupe based on Masekylne's and Cooke's in England, even go so far as naming his theater Egyptian Hall.

In 1878, Kellar returned to England and invested $12,000 into purchasing new equipment, including a version Maskelyne's whist-playing automaton Psycho.

After a disappointing tour in South America, Kellar cancelled his remaining shows and returned to New York. Shortly before arriving, Kellar was told of the death of magician Robert Heller. The New York Sun accused Kellar of pirating Heller's name, saying that "Heller is scarcely dead before we read of 'Kellar the Wizard'." The article goes on to say, "Of course 'Kellar' aims to profit by the reputation that Heller left, by adopting a close imitation of Heller's name. This is not an uncommon practice." Kellar attempted to prove that his name had always been Keller with an e and that he had actually changed it years previously to try to avoid being confused with Heller. He also pointed out that Heller had changed his name from William Henry Palmer. The public was still unreceptive to him, causing Kellar to eventually cancel his upcoming shows in the United States and return to Brazil.

After another world tour in 1882, Kellar was performing again in Melbourne, Australia and met a fan, Eva Lydia Medley, who came backstage to get his autograph. Kellar promised to send postcards and letters from his travels. They exchanged letters for the next five years.

Kellar started his version of Egyptian Hall in December 1884, after renting out an old Masonic temple on Chestnut Street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. After 264 performances, Kellar closed the theater on June 24, 1885. Shortly after Kellar left, the theater burned down.

While Kellar was performing in America, Medley arrived a few weeks before his appearance in Erie. She played the cornet in the show and started to learn about the magic business. Kellar and Medley were married on November 1, 1887 at a church in Kalamazoo, Michigan. She played an important role in Kellar's shows in the coming years — not only did she play a part in many of his upcoming illusions, but she also provided music for the shows.

Kellar returned to Philadelphia in October 1891 and opened his second Egyptian Hall at Concert Hall, located also on Chestnut Street. On April 30, 1892, Kellar ended a successful seven month run at his second Egyptian Hall. Kellar then returned to the road.

During the times Kellar was abroad, another magician, Alexander Herrmann, had become famous and came into competition with Kellar when Kellar returned to the United States. Herrmann often criticized Kellar's lack of sleight of hand and claimed he preferred to use mechanical tricks instead. While he lacked sleight of hand, Kellar was so good in using misdirection, that he said a "...brass band playing at full blast can march openly across the stage behind me, followed by a herd of elephants, yet no one will realize that they went by." Herrmann died on December 17, 1896.

Later life

Kellar retired in 1908, and allowed Howard Thurston to be his successor. Kellar had met Thurston, who was doing card tricks, while on vacation in Paris, France. Kellar did his final show at Ford's Theatre.

Kellar eventually moved to his house in Los Angeles, California. Kellar's wife died two years later.

On November 11, 1917, Houdini put together a show for the Society of American Magicians to benefit the families of those who died in the sinking of the USS Antilles by a German U-boat (who have been considered the first American casualties of World War I). Houdini got Kellar to come out of retirement to perform one more show.

The show took place on the largest stage at the time, the Hippodrome. After Kellar's performance, Kellar started to leave, but Houdini stopped him, saying that "America’s greatest magician should be carried off in triumph after his final public performance." The members of the Society of American Magicians helped Kellar into the seat of a sedan chair, and lifted it up. The 125-piece Hippodrome orchestra played Auld Lang Syne while Kellar was slowly taken away.

Kellar lived in retirement, until he died on March 3, 1922 from a pulmonary hemorrhage brought on by influenza. He was interred in Angelus-Rosedale Cemetery in Los Angeles.

Notable Illusions

The Levitation of Princess Karnac

Kellar supposedly developed this trick by abruptly walking onto the stage during a show by Maskelyne, seeing what he needed to know, and leaving. Unable to duplicate it, Kellar hired another magician to help build another, but eventually designed a new trick with the help of the Otis Elevator Company. Another version built by Kellar was purchased by Harry Blackstone, Sr., who used the trick for many years. The Buffalo writer John Northern Hilliardwrote that the levitation was a marvel of the twentieth century and "the crowning achievement of Mr. Kellar's long and brilliant career."

The Nested Boxes

Kellar borrows six finger rings from members of audience. He loads them into the barrel of apistol, aims and fires the pistol at a chest that is hanging on the side of the stage. The chest is opened and inside is another, smaller chest. Inside that, are six boxes nested in each other. As each is opened, they are stacked on top of each other and inside the smallest one are the five rings each tied with ribbon to flowers. The five rings are returned to their owners. The owner of the sixth ring wonders what happened to hers, with Kellar pretending not to notice. He continues with his next trick, which a variation of Robert-Houdin's Inexhaustible Bottle. Audience members call out different beverages like wine, whiskey, lemonade, or just water. Each one is poured from the same bottle and the audience acknowledges that they are indeed receiving their requested drinks. Once bottle is empty, Kellar takes it and breaks it open. Inside is a guinea pig with a sash around its neck which has the sixth ring attached to it. The ring is eventually handed back to its owner.

A variation of the trick was performed in front of United States President Theodore Roosevelt and his children, Ethel, Archie, Quentinand Kermit. Ethel was the owner of the sixth ring and after Kellar had returned her ring, he asked if she would also like to have the guinea pig as a pet. Then Kellar wrapped the guinea pig in paper and handed it back to Ethel. When it was opened, inside was a bouquet of pink roses.

The Vanishing Lamp

A lamp is seen set on top of a glass table. Still lit, Kellar covers the lamp with a thin cloth. Kellar told the audience that each evening, the lamp would be returned to its purported, original owner in India at a specific time. As a bell sounded out the current time of day, Kellar loaded a pistol and aimed it towards the lamp. At the last chime, Kellar fired the pistol. The lamp seemed to melt away, with the cloth falling to the stage.

Kellar was known to have a short temper, and once, after an incident in which the Vanishing Lamp failed to vanish, he took an axe to the defective prop. Later Kellar built another one that would continue to work reliably long after his retirement.

Harry Kellar
Harry Kellar.

Harry Kellar
Harry Kellar.

Harry Kellar
Harry Kellar.

Harry Kellar (seated) with magic legend Harry Houdini
Harry Kellar (seated) with magic legend Harry Houdini.

Harry Houdini and Harry Kellar (1917)
Harry Houdini and Harry Kellar (1917)

Keller, Harry (Heinrich Keller) (1849-1922), American magician. Cabinet photograph inscribed and signed on verso ("Harry Kellar"), by Sarony, New York (imprint in red on mount), n.d. [ca.1885]. 6½ x 4¼ in
Keller, Harry (Heinrich Keller) (1849-1922), American magician. Cabinet photograph inscribed and signed on verso ("Harry Kellar"), by Sarony, New York (imprint in red on mount), n.d. [ca.1885]. 6½ x 4¼ in.

Warmly inscribed to a fellow magician, the photo above is an outstanding early portrait of the man known as the dean of American magicians, posed in a white collar and jacket, sporting a florid moustache.

Boldly inscribed in ink: "To my dear friend Frederick E. Powell with kindest regards and best wishes Harry Kellar. Dec. 1885."

Powell, to whom Kellar presented this photograph, was himself was a magician of considerable repute. Kellar toured widely, enjoyed widespread celebrity, and is widely regarded as a predecessor of Harry Houdini. Rare, particularly with the association to Powell


2 Haziran 2014 Pazartesi

Ann B. Davis

Ann B. Davis

A seasoned, Emmy Award-winning, comedic character actress best known for her role as the eternally wise and wise-cracking housekeeper Alice Nelson on The Brady Bunch, Ann Bradford Davis was born in Schenectady, New York, on May 5, 1926, to Cassius Miles and Marguerite Scott Davis. She had a twin sister, Harriet, and an older brother, Evans. When Davis was just 3 years old, her father, an electrical engineer, and her mother, an amateur actress, moved the family to Erie, where she attended school at Longfellow and Gridley, graduating from Strong Vincent High School in 1944. The family first lived at the corner of Eighth and Sassafras streets, then moved to Oxford Street. Davis, who made her debut in show business at age 6 earning $2.00 in a puppet show, had planned to study medicine, but became interested in acting again after seeing her older brother's performance of Oklahoma. She went on to earn a degree in drama and speech from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan, in 1948. L. Newell Tarrant, former managing director of the Erie Playhouse, cast Davis' mother, Marguerite, in his first production in Erie, Kiss and Tell, in which she played a maid. "That must be where I learned," Davis joked about being typecast as a maid, when she returned to Erie in 1990 for a Playhouse reunion. Davis, who starred on the Playhouse stage before and after graduating from the University of Michigan, was described as a dependable actress with a cheerful outlook — Past Playhouse alumni included Dom DeLuise and Rue McClanahan, neither of which were Erieites.

Schultzy on "The Bob Cummings Show"

In the 1953–1954 season Davis appeared as a musical judge on ABC's Jukebox Jury while continuing her acting career in Erie at the Playhouse and touring with a variety of musicals before she was recommended by her boyfriend, a casting director, in 1955, for the role of Charmaine Schultzy Schultz, the lovesick and outspoken assistant to photographer and womanizer Bob Collins, on The Bob Cummings Show. The series ran for four years and was later titled Love That Bob for syndication. Davis was nominated for Emmy Awards four times for her performance on the show, and won for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for her last two nominations, in 1958 and 1959.

Commercials and Guest Appearances

For a period in the 1960s and 1970s Davis was known for her appearances in television commercials for the Ford Motor Company, particularly for the mid-sized Ford Fairlane models. She appeared on January 23, 1958, as a guest star on The Ford Show, Starring Tennessee Ernie Ford. Davis was also featured in commercials for Minute Rice until the mid-1980s.

In the 1965–1966 television season Davis appeared as Miss Wilson, a physical education teacher at a private girls' academy in John Forsythe's single-season NBC sitcom, The John Forsythe Show.

Davis' other television credits include Wagon Train, The Dating Game, Love American Style and The Love Boat.

Davis also toured Vietnam, Thailand and Korea with the USO.

Alice on "The Brady Bunch"

In 1969 Davis was cast as the flip and funny live-in housekeeper and peacemaker Alice Nelson on a new family sitcom, The Brady Bunch, starring Florence Henderson and Robert Reed as the parents of a blended family. Davis often stole the scenes and got the biggest laughs while mediating family disputes with her friendly but sarcastic words of wisdom.

Throughout most of the show, Davis's character, Alice, dated Sam the Butcher (Sam Franklin), played by Allan Melvin. The Brady Bunch aired 117 episodes, running until 1974, followed by reunion shows, TV movies and spin-offs. In the Brady Bunch sequels, Alice eventually married her bowling-loving butcher, but in real life, Davis never married.

Davis, like other cast members, capitalized on the show’s popularity in a string of mostly ill-conceived follow-up projects, including The Brady Bunch Variety Hour, a 1976-77 series, and the television movies The Brady Girls Get Married and A Very Brady Christmas in the 1980s. When the torch passed to a new generation in The Brady Bunch Movie (1995), starring Shelley Long and Gary Cole in the roles originated by Florence Henderson and Robert Reed, Ms. Davis made a cameo appearance with a wink to older moviegoers. She played a truck driver named Schultzy. (The comedian Henriette Mantel played Alice.)

While on hiatus from The Brady Bunch, Davis had no trouble finding work in regional theaters, starring in Arsenic and Old Lace, Once Upon a Mattress and Auntie Mame, among other productions. She toured Southeast Asia with the United Service Organizations and, in the mid-1990s, appeared on Broadway in Crazy for You, featuring the music of George and Ira Gershwin.

Movie Career

Davis' first motion picture part was in Strategic Air Command (1955) with James Stewart, as a waitress who sets a cake in front of Stewart. The scene was later cut out of the film.

In 1961 Davis appeared in the movie Lover Come Back, a romantic comedy, with Doris Day and Rock Hudson. Her other film credits from this period include A Man Called Peter (1955), Pepe (1960) and All Hands on Deck (1961). Davis took her Brady Bunch persona with her for a brief appearance in Naked Gun 33 1/3.

On February 8, 1960, Davis was honored by the entertainment industry with her own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Later Years & Death

In 1976 Davis sold her home in Los Angeles, California, to move to Denver, Colorado, where she met Bishop William C. Frey and joined an Episcopal community called Trinity School for Ministry which was led by the Bishop at the time. Davis, Bishop Frey, his wife, Barbara, and their five would all become lifetime friends, Davis becoming a lifelong member of the Frey family. In 1989 when Bishop Frey became the third dean and president of the community’s seminary school located at Ambridge in Beaver County, Pennsylvania, Davis relocated to the school with the Frey family. In 1996 Bishop Frey resigned from his position at the school. Afterwards, Davis, Bishop Frey and his family, moved to San Antonio, Texas where Davis became a lifelong volunteer for the Episcopal Church, working at the General Convention, attending services at churches around the country.

Though Davis quit show business for the most part she continued to make occasional TV and film appearances.

In 1994 Davis published Alice's Brady Bunch Cookbook, a compilation of recipes with dishes such as Marcia, Marcia, Marcia Muffins and Groovy Old-Fashioned Pancakes.

Although reportedly in good health, Davis fell in her bathroom at the Frey’s home and hit her head on June 1, 2014. She suffered a subdural hematoma and passed away later that day at the hospital in San Antonio, at the age of 88.

Ann B. Davis
Ann B. Davis.

Publicity photo of Bob Cummings and Ann B. Davis from the television program, The Bob Cummings Show
Publicity photo of Bob Cummings and Ann B. Davis from the television program "The Bob Cummings Show."

Ann B. Davis as "Schultzy" with Bob Cummings as Grandpa on The Bob Cummings show
Ann B. Davis as "Schultzy" with Bob Cummings as Grandpa on "The Bob Cummings show."

Ann B. Davis appearance on "The John Forsythe Show"
Ann B. Davis appearance on "The John Forsythe Show."

Ann B. Davis as "Alice" on the Brady Bunch Television sitcom
Ann B. Davis as "Alice" on "The Brady Bunch" Television sitcom.