Advertisements

Difference between revisions of "Gracie Allen and Adoption"

m (Admin moved page Gracie Allen to Gracie Allen and Adoption)
 
(No difference)

Latest revision as of 20:04, 13 May 2014

Publicity still of Allen from the Burns and Allen CBS Radio program
Source: Wikipedia.org.

Biography

1895 or 1902 – 1964

Comedian

Gracie Allen was a comedienne of the movies, radio, and early television. Born Grace Ethel Cecile Rosalie Allen, she was the scatterbrain of the team Burns and Allen, and her husband George Burns was the straight man. They originated the catch-phrase "Say 'good-night,' Gracie."

Gracie's birth certificate was destroyed in the California Earthquake of 1906, and thus it is believed she was either born in 1897 or 1902 (more than likely the latter). Born into an Irish Catholic show-business family, Allen was educated at the Star of the Sea Convent School as a girl, and then became a vaudeville performer with her sister Bessie in 1909. She teamed up with George Burns in 1922, and married him in 1926. Early on the team noticed that Gracie was getting far better audience laughs than George even though she was the comic foil of the team. Bowing to reality, the team switched roles and the team had great success.

In the 1930s they adopted two children: Sandra Jean and Ronald "Ronnie" John; when Ronnie was grown, he joined the cast of his parents' 1950-1958 Monday-night television show on CBS, The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show.

Allen's stage persona was as a bizarre, illogical, and not very bright woman. Offstage she was anything but dimwitted, however: historians credit her with having the genius to deliver her lengthy diatribes in a fashion that made it look as though she was making her arguments up on the spot.

She and Burns were deeply devoted to each other. After her death, Burns told a reporter that he had received a number of letters asking why he remained married to "that fruitcake". Burns replied to them by publishing a book titled: I Love Her, That's Why.

Allen had one green eye and one blue one. At least one biographer has speculated that her sensitivity about that was what caused her to retire from television when color television came in, which would have revealed that feature to her fans. She had stopped making films in the early 1940s when color movies came in, too.

Gracie Allen died of a heart attack in Hollywood at the age of 69 (or only 62).

References

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Gracie Allen".

Credits: Wikipedia and Internet Movie Database Inc.