Monday, January 03, 2022
R.I.P. Sue Ann
I know I am late to the game, but wanted to join in on the tributes to the legendary Betty White, who recently passed away. Many of the commentators said it was White’s generous way of not staining 2022. I had the opportunity to briefly meet/get photos of her at an Actors and Others for Animals event in March 2005. Not surprisingly, she was just as warm and kind in person, cheerfully posing for all the guests who stormed her at the end of the event. Yes, I was one of those obnoxious people. While most remember her as Rose from “The Golden Girls,” I was much more impressed by her comic turn as Sue Ann Nivens on “The Mary Tyler Moore Show.” I was able to pose for photos with all the leads from that show in person other than Valerie Harper. Here are Cloris Leachman and Mary herself; both are now “dining at the Lord’s Table”:
At the same event where I met Betty White, the head table was populated with Ed Asner, Leachman, and Gavin MacLeod. This photo could be titled, “The Lord’s Table,” as every single one of them (including Monty Hall on the left, Alex Trebek at center, and Fred Willard) has passed on, too.
But back to Betty…
What made her so delicious as Sue Ann on “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” was that her character was truly rotten, but White played it with comic delight. There are villains that you hiss at, and those that you silently cheer on because they make being rotten so much fun. Sue Ann was the hostess of a show called “The Happy Homemaker.”
While her character appeared to be a sweet retro woman who dispenses advice on cooking and cleaning with a smile, behind the scenes she is a backstabbing husband stealing tramp. White’s squeaky clean public image made her casting as Sue Ann a stroke of brilliance. White made her first appearance in the season four episode titled, “The Lars Affair,” which first aired on September 15, 1973.
The show begins at one of Mary’s typical troubled dinner parties. Inevitably, something goes wrong. “Oh, will you look at that, somebody spilled coffee all over my brand new table cloth,” exclaims Mary to her guests. “Oh, don’t worry dear, that will come up with no trouble at all,” replies Sue Ann as she swoops in to save the day. “You simply stretch the fabric over a bowl and then pour boiling water through the stain from a height of two feet,” she advises, without taking a breath or losing her cheerful smile. “I better get my wrap, that nice man said he’d be bringing the car around any minute now, wasn’t that sweet of him to say he would take me home? I’m sorry we didn’t get a chance to talk more, dear!” she chirps to Phyllis.
“Who’s Little Bo Peep?” asks a baffled Phyllis (Leachman) to Mary as Nivens makes her exit. “Oh, that’s Sue Ann Nivens.,” replies Mary. “She does the Happy Homemaker show at our station. You know she gives household hints, sewing lessons, recipes, cooking lessons, things like that.” “How in the world did I live so long without seeing the Happy Homemaker?” replies Phyllis with acid. “I love her dimples,” chimes in Rhoda (Harper). “I wonder if she made them herself?” As it turns out, the man who offered to give her a ride is Phyllis’s husband, and the two begin a torrid affair.
White was perfection as Sue Ann. Here, she is talking to the cameraman who sadly informs her that they do not have a third camera to give her the overhead coverage shot she has asked for when making her chocolate soufflĂ©. With a sugary-sweet smile and a delivery that no man could say “no” to, she gets what she wants.
At the end of the episode, when Phyllis arrives to tell Sue Ann to back off, her final question to the home-wrecking whore is this: “By the way, Sue Ann…do you know how to remove chocolate stains?” You can guess what happens next. You must watch this episode to see White’s true genius.
In other news, I received an email from Reed Browning’s daughter, who had seen my blog from a few year’s back asking who that was, since his name was listed on an A-Frame in front of the Golden Horseshoe back in 1956:
Your blog has a vintage photo of the Saloon at Disneyland in the first year that it opened. You asked who was Reed Browning. My late father, Reed Browning was there for ABC to cover the opening of Disneyland and had a show from the saloon for at least the first year. His actual name was Bill ( William) Livesay. In those days, many celebrities used names that were easier to pronounce and remember than their birth names. My Dad was a major announcer and star of shows at ABC. He interviewed the televised premiers of major movies including, "Oklahoma", "Moby Dick" and many others. He starred on The Reed Browning Show and "Beat The Record" TV shows. He started the first talk show on ABC talk Radio. Unfortunately, at the age of 45, he was diagnosed at the Mayo clinic with Peri-Arteritis Nodosa, a rare auto-immune disease and died a year later in October, 1962. Joe Pyne took over as the commentator of the Talk Show "Night Line"
This is the stuff I love. Happy New Year!
See more Daveland photography and pop culture at my main website.
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2 comments:
Very sorry to see Betty White go, she was one of those rare few who were already adored by the public but then just seemed to keep getting more loved as time went on.
Thank you to Reed Browning's daughter if she returns to read this. I'm always curious about the names on vintage signs and who they were since I don't recognize some.
A nice tribute to Betty White. Seemed like with her positive attitude she would be with us forever...and she is.
I also echo the thank you to Reed's daughter giving us the opportunity to more fully appreciate his contribution to the early days of TV. KS
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