BETTY
WHITE. Born in Oak Park, Illinois, U.S.A., 17 January 1922.
Attended public schools in Beverly Hills, California. Married: Allen
Ludden, 1963 (died). Began career with appearances on radio shows;
has appeared as star, regular and guest in varius television series,
from 1950s. Recipient: Emmy Awards, 1952, 1975, 1976, and 1986.
Inductee, Television Academy Hall of Fame, 1996.
TELEVISION
SERIES
1953-55
Life With Elizabeth
1954-58 The Betty White Show
1957-58 A Date with the Angels
1970-77 The Mary Tyler Moore Show
1971 The Pet Set
1977-78 The Betty White Show
1979 The Best Place to Be
1980 The Gossip Columnist
1985-92 The Golden Girls
1992-93 The Golden Palace
1993 Bob
1995- Maybe This Time
TELEVISION SPECIALS
1982
Eunice
1986 Walt Disney World's 15th Birtday Celebration
(co-host)
1991 The Funny Women of Television (co-host)
FILM
Advise
and Consent, 1962.
STAGE
(selection)
Summer
stock presentations from late 1960s: Guys and Dolls; Take Me
Along; The King and I; Who Was That Lady?; Critic's Choice; Bells
Are Ringing.
PUBLICATIONS
Betty
White in Person. Garden City, New York: Doubleday, 1987.
Here
We Go Again: My Life in Television. New York: Scribners, 1995.
One
of television's most beloved, talented actresses, Betty White began
as a local TV "personality" and then, defying convention, became
star and producer of her own nationally broadcast sitcom. But it
was later that she obtained her greatest fame. In a pair of very
different roles on sitcom hits, in the 1970s and 1980s, her skillful
acting as part of an ensemble and her way with a comic line earned
her acclaim and a loving following; a following that has made her
a legend.
Early
on White played leads at Beverly Hills High. After graduation, she
took on stage roles at the Bliss-Hayden Little Theater Group. She
began to work as a radio actress as well; local TV quickly followed
since it was a natural "option for someone just starting." In 1949,
Los Angeles TV personality Al Jarvis called White and gave her her
first regular TV assignment. Jarvis took to the airwaves six days
a week on KLAC to act as a "disc jockey," to play records just like
on radio. Between selections, he delivered commercials, performed
in sketches and conducted interviews. White was hired as his on
air "girl Friday" to do much of the same. Jarvis left in 1952 and
soon after White took over full hostessing duties.
While
still appearing on daily Los Angeles television, White, with two
male partners, co-founded Bandy Productions in 1952 to produce her
own self-starring situation comedy. A direct out-growth of some
of White's daytime sketches, Life with Elizabeth told the
story of married couple Elizabeth and Alvin (played by Del Moore).
It was an unusual program in several respects, not the least of
which was its twenty-eight year old co-creator, producer, and star.
White was one of only two women in the early days of television
(Gertrude Berg being the other) to wield creative control both in
front of and behind the camera. A second distinctive feature of
the program were its non-linear stories--each episode consisted
of three vignettes, three different plots. Leisurely paced, Elizabeth's
stories had a ring of I Love Lucy about them. While Elizabeth
never launched any outrageous schemes, the comic conflicts often
grew out of husband Alvin's disapproval of her logic.
Originally,
Elizabeth aired only in the Los Angeles area, but by 1953 Guild
Films began to syndicate the series nationally and the program was
in production until 1955. Afterward, the show's three act format
made it possible for each episode to be divided up and marketed
to stations as fillers. As ten minute segments Elizabeth
ran successfully and profitably for many years. Betty White earned
her first Emmy in 1952 for Life with Elizabeth.
While
Elizabeth was still in production, White moved to NBC and
to her own daily daytime variety show. Bandy Production's The
Betty White Show premiered February 1954. White would appear
in the two programs simultaneously for a year. The NBC daytime show
ended in early 1955 and White filled the next two years working,
primarily, for game show packagers Goodman and Toddson.
In 1957, White co-created the prime time sitcom A Date with the
Angels. She played Vicki Angel and Bill Williams starred as
her husband Gus. More typical in its format and stories than Life
with Elizabeth, the Angels were newlyweds and were seen fumbling
through their first year of wedded bliss. The program aired on ABC
for six months before the network retooled it into the comedy-variety
vehicle The Betty White Show. Lackluster ratings, which inspired
the revamping, lingered and that program ended in April 1958.
Over the next several years, White concentrated on guest work. She
was a regular visitor to The Jack Paar Show where her funny,
slightly risqué remarks made her an audience favorite. She also
was a frequent visitor to daytime, as a game show panelist.
It
was on Password in 1961 that White met her husband, host
Allen Ludden. They were married in Las Vegas in 1963. The Luddens
were good friends of actress Mary Tyler Moore and her producer husband
Grant Tinker, the two powerhouses behind the hit The Mary Tyler
Moore Show. When script #73 for the series came along it called
for an "icky sweet Betty White type" and the show's casting director
eventually decided to call the genuine article. Though usually thought
of as a series regular, White did not make her first appearance
on The Mary Tyler Moore Show until the program's fourth year
and in her most active season she appeared in only twelve of twenty-six
show regularly scheduled episodes. Nevertheless, she made herself
an integral part of that show's family and dynamic. As Sue Ann Nivens,
the host of "The Happy Homemaker," White created a sparkling presence.
Satirizing her own image, White threw herself into the role of a
catty, man-chaser who hid her true self behind a gooey shell of
sugar. White won Emmys in the 1974-75 and 1975-76 seasons for Best
Supporting Actress. She was part of The Mary Tyler Moore Show's
final episode in 1977.
After
the end of The MTM Show , White was put into her own series.
The sitcom The Betty White Show premiered in 1977 on CBS.
Critically acclaimed and co-starring such pros as John Hillerman
and Georgia Engel, the program faced tough competition on Monday
nights and CBS did not wait for the show to build an audience. It
was canceled in early 1978.
In 1983, White joined the small, exclusive group of women to have
hosted a daytime game show. Just Men! had White as host and
seven male guest stars who tried to help two female contestants
win cars. Though the program lasted only six months, White proved
funny and unflappable as "femcee" and won the Emmy for best game
show host that year. She remains, to date, the only female winner
of that top honor. Back on prime time she took guest roles on St.
Elsewhere and other shows.
In
1985, White, at age 63, began the biggest hit of her career. The
Golden Girls, from Disney, reunited three of TV's greatest comediennes:
White, Beatrice Arthur, and Rue McClanahan. (From the New York stage
it imported Estelle Getty.) A highly anticipated show, it was the
biggest hit of NBC's new fall season. At the end of the first year,
all three lead actresses were nominated for Emmys. White won, for
her innocent, adorably ignorant Rose Nylund whose nature bespoke
of a more optimistic and trusting time. In some ways Rose brought
Betty White full circle: Elizabeth of Life with Elizabeth was sweet
and a little naive and so was Rose.
Golden Girls ran for seven years. The program was repackaged,
without Arthur, for CBS the following season. Golden Palace,
with White, McClanahan and Getty running a Florida hotel, aired
for one year. Then, for White, it was on to Bob, Bob Newhart's third
series, for a few months in early 1994. There she played Sylvia,
the no nonsense head of a greeting card company. After Bob, White
did several guest spots and some television commercials.
White's
eagerly awaited autobiography, Here We Go Again: My Life in Television,
was published that summer not long after it was announced that she
would return to series TV. Maybe This Time, a Disney-produced
sitcom co-starring actress/singer Marie Osmond premiered in the
fall of 1995. That same year saw White's induction into Academy
of Television Arts and Sciences' Hall of Fame. Inducted along with
Dick Van Dyke, Bill Moyers and Jim McKay, among others, White was
the tenth woman so honored.
It
has been a long, highly diverse career. From early TV "DJ" to producer/actress
to game show regular to Emmy-winning ensemble player--from "girl
Friday" to "Golden Girl." White has said her longevity is based
on her "familiarity" to audiences: the generation who knew her as
Elizabeth stayed with her up through Rose. Subsequent generations
have discovered her, like a shiny new penny, along the way. Each
incarnation of Betty White has brought with it a new set of fans.
But
whether as herself or as a character (and in her career she has
shown a range greater than that of most actors) Betty White always
connects with her audience through her honesty and genuineness.
And that quality, intimate and comfortable, makes some TV performers
truly unique and long-lasting--legendary.
-Cary
O'Dell
O'Dell,
Cary. Women Pioneers in Television. Jefferson, North Carolina:
McFarland, 1996.