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| Irene Ryan (October 17 1902 – April 26 1973) was one of the few entertainers who found success in vaudeville, radio, film, television and Broadway. Today, she is most widely known for her portrayal of "Granny" on the long running TV series The Beverly Hillbillies (1962-1971). She was nominated for an Emmy Award for "Outstanding Continued Performance by an Actress in a Series (Lead)" in 1963 and 1964. Personal lifeRyan was born Irene Noblette in El Paso, Texas, to an American father and an Irish emigrant mother, and died on April 26, 1973, in Santa Monica, California, at the widely accepted age of 70, several days following a stroke suffered during a performance of the musical Pippin on Broadway, after which she was flown back to California. She had been diagnosed with a brain tumor some time previously, but reportedly was never made aware of it, although her friend from TV, Nancy Kulp tried to persuade her not to go to New York for the musical.CareerHer career in vaudeville began by touring in an act called "Tim & Irene", with her first husband, actor Tim Ryan, who was also a prolific actor in multiple media. In the mid-1930s they made several short films based on the vaudeville shows.Her first feature-length movie appearance was a bit part in the 1941 romantic comedy, Unfinished Business, which starred Irene Dunne, Robert Montgomery, and Preston Foster. In 1943's Ann Miller musical, Reveille with Beverly, she had another small part, notable only in that it was her first time working with her ex-husband Tim since their 1942 divorce. Around this time she toured with Bob Hope's renowned USO tours. She later performed on NBC Radio's "The Bob Hope Show", from 1948 to 1950. Her first starring big-screen role was with her Tim and Ann Corio, in Sarong Girl later in 1943. Tim, Irene, and Corio teamed up again, along with Charles Butterworth, in the Arthur Dreifuss film The Sultan's Daughter in 1944. Also in 1944, Tim and Irene were paired again, along with Dona Drake and Robert Lowery in another musical comedy, Hot Rhythm. In the following 17 years she had various roles in 25 movies, including Bonzo Goes to College and Rockabilly Baby, which also featured Les Brown and His Band of Renown. It was also during this period that she married (1946), and divorced (1961), her second husband, Harold E. Knox. The Beverly Hillbillies' debut in 1962 brought many new fans, as the show jumped to #1 in the USA in 3 weeks, a feat (as of 2004) not since matched. In 1965 she played "Granny" on an episode of Mr. Ed, and appeared on the TV game show Password. After the series' run, she made two Love, American Style appearances; the second one first aired post-humously. Ironically, popular TV/voice actress, Bea Benaderet was originally set to play "Granny", but when Ryan read for the part, producers knew they had to make a change. As a result, the series Petticoat Junction was created as a starring vehicle for Benaderet. Her final acting role was also her first Broadway role, as "Berthe", grandmother of "Pippin" (played by John Rubenstein) in the popular musical Pippin. Despite performing only one song in the entire show, she would bring down the house nightly with her show-stopping solo, "No Time At All." The song earned her numerous call backs and ovations, especially on the lyric "It's hard to believe I'm being led astray/ By a man who calls me Granny", a reference to her role on the The Beverly Hillbillies. She was nominated for a Tony Award for her performance, but lost to actress Patricia Elliott from Stephen Sondheim's A Little Night Music. DeathPallbearers at her funeral included Hillbillies co-stars Buddy Ebsen and Max Baer, Jr., along with Hillbillies creator Paul Henning. Having no living relatives, she left her more than $1,000,000 US estate to fund the Irene Ryan Foundation, which donates scholarships to young theater arts students involved with the Kennedy Center's American College Theater Festival. She is interred a mausoleum crypt at the Woodlawn Memorial Cemetery in Santa Monica, California.[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Irene Ryan ] Some related entries: Xavier Saint-Macary | Michael Ian Black | Joyce DeWitt | Scott Levy | Cole Hauser | Nicole Sullivan | Dean Martin | Townsend Coleman | Al Waxman | Bimbo Danao | Jean-Pierre Aumont This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Irene Ryan; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | Searches on eBay
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