I'm going to toot my horn for a moment since I wrote this book and I'm trying to publicize it wherever possible.
Agnes Moorehead was one of the most distinguished actresses of her time. She was one of the great character actresses and excelled in every facet of show buisness on stage, screen, radio, television and even recordings.
She is best known today as "Endora" on "Bewitched", but before taking on this part, somewhat reluctantly, she had more than 30 years of show business experience behind her.
She was one of the great ladies of radio--she was famous for her impression of Eleanor Roosevelt on "The March of Time", one time Mrs. Roosevelt surprised Agnes while she was portraying her and complimented her on how well she did. Needless to say she was devoted to Mrs. R after that. She also was well known as "The Lovely" Margo Lane on "The Shadow". She was one of the charter members of Orson Welles' Mercury Theatre of the Air and won radio immortality with her performance as the bedridden woman who slowly realizes the victim of the murder plot she overhears is herself in "Sorry, Wrong Number."
Orson Welles brought her to Hollywood and she appeared in "Citizen Kane" and most memorably as Aunt Fanny in Welles' mangled masterpiece, "The Magnificent Ambersons" winning the first of her Four Oscar nominations and the NY Film Critics Award as Best Actress. She appeared in more than sixty more films including "Our Vines Have Tender Grapes", "Johnny Belinda", "Dark Passage", "Show Boat", "Magnificent Obession", "Pollyanna", "How The West Was Won", and "Hush...Hush Sweet Charlotte", supporting and stealing the movie from many of the biggest stars of her time.
On stage she helped revolutionize the theatre with "Don Juan in Hell" in the early 50's and then with her own much acclaimed one-woman show, "The Fabulous Redhead."
On televison she became a cultural icon as Endora, but also did memorable performances on many early live TV dramas and such series as "The Twilight Zone" and won an Emmy for a guest apperance on "The Wild, Wild West" in 1967.
I was fortunate to have access to 159 boxes of her papers stored at the Wisconsin State Historical Society. I also interviewed friends and co-workers like Jane Wyman, Debbie Reynolds, Karl Malden, Carol Lynley, Nanette Fabray, Himan Brown, Norman Corwin, Joan Fontaine, among others.
If you might be interested in this book (428 pages, with many never before seen photos) here is the publishers website:
http://www.bearmanormedia.bizland.com/id74.htmlor it can be ordered at Amazon.com or BN.com or at any book store.
Thank you!