Product Code Database
Example Keywords: smartphones -bioshock $33-107
barcode-scavenger
   » » Wiki: Edie Adams
Tag Wiki 'Edie Adams'.
Tag

Edie Adams (born Edith Elizabeth Enke; April 16, 1927 – October 15, 2008) was an American comedian, actress, singer and businesswoman who was prominent in the second half of the 1900s. She earned a and was nominated for an .

Adams was well known for her impersonations of sexy stars on stage and television, especially . She was the frequent television partner of , her husband, whose death in 1962 left Adams deeply in debt. Paying off the financial burden, she continued her successful show business career for over four more decades on stage, television and in films including It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, and was the pitchlady for for 20 years. Adams also founded two beauty businesses: Edie Adams Cosmetics and Edie Adams Cut 'n' Curl.


Early life
Adams was born in Kingston, Pennsylvania, the only daughter of Sheldon Alonzo Enke and Ada Dorothy (née Adams), whom she described as "two conservative native Pennsylvanians". She had an elder brother, Sheldon Adams Enke. The family moved to nearby areas such as Shavertown and Trucksville and spent a year in New York City before settling in Tenafly, New Jersey, where she attended Tenafly High School.Jackson, Kenneth T. The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives: 2006-2008, p. 3. Charles Scribner's Sons, 1998. . Accessed October 9, 2018. "While attending Tenafly High School, Adams joined the choir and the glee club and sang in the school's operettas." Ada Enke, who had a "trained dramatic soprano voice," taught her daughter singing and piano; mother and daughter were members of the Grove City Presbyterian church choir. Adams's grandmother, a seamstress, taught her how to sew. She made her own clothing beginning in the sixth grade and Adams would later have her own designer line of clothing, called Bonham, Inc.

After high school, she wanted to pursue a career as a vocalist, but was unsure whether she would make the cut after music school auditions. She knew that her costuming skills were at a level to constitute a fallback, with Traphagen School of Fashion as her "safe school" during the college application process. In the event, she succeeded in getting into , where she earned a vocal degree, and then took a "fifth year" and graduated from Columbia School of Drama. She also later studied at the in New York. While at Juilliard she was, by her own account, one of the first women to be interviewed for the on female sexuality. While still at Juilliard, she taught part-time at the Barbizon School of Modeling and gave assemblies at New Jersey high schools, intended to recruit female students for various colleges and commercial schools. The assemblies had been conceived more as lectures, but once she discovered that her pay would be mainly commissions for interest generated, she turned them much more into performances.

Although she studied and sang serious music at Juilliard, summer jobs (including performing in a production of The Pirates of Penzance) and her New York social life introduced her to lighter, more popular performance styles, as well as to New York's café society and the crowd. One of her vocal teachers, Dusolina Giannini gave her some half-encouraging, half-discouraging advice: to abandon her hopes of being an opera singer and "go straight into musical comedy." After turning down an offer from to be an understudy in the road company of South Pacific, she also turned down a 5-year contract from that would have groomed her toward becoming a movie actress, but would not have promised her any specific film work.

She knew that with her Juilliard education she could fall back to being a music teacher, but was still determined to try to break into show business. She began going to every audition (not only as a singer, but for legitimate theater) and entering every vocal contest she could find. She passed an audition to go on the road with , but her father put his foot down about her traveling with a big band. In 1949–50, she appeared in the early live television show Bonnie Maid's Versatile Varieties as one of the original "Bonnie Maids" doing live commercials for the sponsor. According to her memoir, she did a three-week stint in Montreal and Toronto singing with a trio led by Artie Arturo.

In 1950, she won the "Miss U.S. Television" beauty contest, which led to an appearance with on his television show. Her earliest television work billed her as Edith Adams. One of her early appearances was on 's Talent Scouts. She was seen by the producer of the Ernie Kovacs show Three to Get Ready (in Philadelphia), who invited her to audition. Adams had very little experience with popular music and could perform only three songs. She later stated: "I sang them all during the audition, and if they had asked to hear another, I never would have made it." She became part of the show in July 1951. Adams had never seen the program she was hired for. When he saw his daughter on the show, Adams's father was upset to find her role involved trying to avoid pies in the face. In one of his last interviews, Kovacs looked back on the early days, saying, "I wish I could say I was the big shot that hired her, but it was my show in name only—the producer had all the say. Later on I did have something to say and I said it, 'Let's get married.


Career
Adams began working regularly on television with Kovacs and talk show pioneer . After a courtship that included bands and an unexpected diamond engagement ring, Adams and Kovacs eloped; they were married on September 12, 1954, in .
(2026). 9780375410307, Pantheon Books. .
Adams was initially uncertain about marrying Kovacs. She went on a six-week European cruise, hoping to come to a decision. After three days away and many long-distance phone calls, Adams returned home with an answer: yes.
(2026). 9780786413034, McFarland & Company. .
It was Kovacs's second marriage and lasted until his death in a car accident on January 13, 1962.

Adams and Kovacs received Emmy nominations for best performances in a comedy series in 1957. In 1960, she and Kovacs played themselves in The Lucy–Desi Comedy Hour final television special on , during which she performed the send-off song "That's All".

(2026). 037572771X, Alfred A. Knopf. . 037572771X
Adams made four appearances on What's My Line? (once as "Edith Adams (Mrs. Ernie Kovacs)" while her husband was on the panel; once together with Kovacs; twice alone as Edie Adams).

Adams starred on in (1953) opposite (winning the Theatre World Award), and as Daisy Mae in Li'l Abner (1956), winning the Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical. She played the Fairy Godmother in Rodgers and Hammerstein's original Cinderella broadcast in 1957. Adams was to play Daisy Mae in the film version of Li'l Abner but was unable due to the late arrival of her daughter, Mia Susan Kovacs.

After Kovacs's death, his network, ABC, gave Adams a chance with her own show, Here's Edie, which received five Emmy nominations but lasted one season, in 1963. Kovacs was a noted cigar smoker, and Adams did a long-running series of TV commercials for . She remained the pitch-lady for Muriel well after Kovacs's death, intoning in a style and sexy outfit, "Why don't you pick one up and smoke it sometime?" Another commercial for Muriel Cigars, which cost 10 cents, showed Adams singing, "Hey, big spender, spend a little dime with me" (based on the song "" from the musical ). Adams's cigar commercials made her one of the top three most-recognizable television celebrities. In subsequent years, Adams made sporadic television appearances, including on , The Love Boat, McMillan & Wife, Murder, She Wrote and .

Adams played supporting roles in several films in the 1960s, including the embittered secretary of two-timing in the Oscar-winning film (1960). She was the wife of a presidential candidate (played by ) in The Best Man (1964) and was reunited with Robertson for the comedy The Honey Pot (1967). In 2003, as one of the surviving headliners from the all-star comedy It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), she joined actors and at a 40th anniversary celebration of the film. She was also a successful nightclub headliner.

Shortly after her husband's death, Adams won a "nasty custody battle" with Kovacs's ex-wife over Edie's stepdaughters. His ex-wife had previously kidnapped the girls during a visit years before; because Kovacs was their legal guardian, he and Edie had worked tirelessly to locate his daughters and bring them home.

Another court battle began for Adams in the same year, this time with her mother-in-law, who refused to believe there were more debts than assets in her son's estate. Mary Kovacs accused her daughter-in-law of mismanaging the estate and petitioned for custody of her granddaughters. The dispute lasted for years, with Adams remaining the administrator of her husband's estate and guardian of the three girls. She worked for years to pay her late husband's tax debt to the IRS. The couple's celebrity friends planned a TV special benefit for Edie and her family, but she declined, saying, "I can take care of my own children." She spent the next year working practically non-stop.


Starting over
Adams started her own businesses, Edie Adams Cosmetics, which sold door-to-door, and Edie Adams Cut 'n' Curl beauty salons, which she began in 1967. She once owned a 160-acre (65 ha) California almond farm and was the spokeswoman for Sun Giant nuts. Because of her 20 years of commercials for Muriel Cigars (retiring in 1976) and her successful business ventures, Adams went from being mired in debt after Kovacs's fatal accident in 1962 to being a millionaire in 1989.


Personal life
After Kovacs's death, Adams was married two more times. In 1964, she married photographer Martin Mills. In 1972, she married trumpeter , with whom she appeared in a touring production of the musical . In addition to raising stepdaughters Bette and Kippie from her marriage to Kovacs, Adams gave birth to daughter Mia Susan Kovacs (killed in an automobile accident in 1982) and son Joshua Mills.

Although Adams identified as a Democrat, she campaigned for Republican Dwight Eisenhower's re-election during the 1956 presidential election. Motion Picture Magazine, Issue 549, November 1956, Brewster Publications, Inc., Page. 27 as well as for other liberal Republicans such as and later Nelson Rockefeller.

Adams was an early advocate of civil rights, frequently lending her support to the movement at celebrity events and on her own television show during the early sixties. She insisted that her duet with Sammy Davis Jr. on her variety show Here's Edie be staged so that they were seated next to each other – as equals. Prior to that, entertainers of different races and sexes were unable to perform next to one another, so that one had to be in front of or behind the other.

There is a street named after Adams in .


Death
Adams died in , California, on October 15, 2008, at age 81, from cancer and pneumonia. She was interred in Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Hollywood Hills, alongside her first husband Ernie and between her daughter, Mia, and her stepdaughter, Kippie.
(2026). 9781476625997, McFarland. .
After her death an article in The New York Times said that her work "both embodied and winked at the stereotypes of fetching chanteuse and sexpot blonde".


Kovacs' legacy
Adams archived her husband's television work, which she described during a 1999 videotaped interview with the Archive of American Television. Edie Adams Interview|Archive of American Television. Retrieved February 15, 2011. She later testified on the status of the archive of the short-lived DuMont Television Network, where both she and husband Kovacs worked during the early 1950s. Adams said that so little value was given to the film archive that the entire collection was loaded into three trucks and dumped into Upper New York Bay. ()

Upon discovering that her husband's work was disappearing through being discarded and re-use of the tapes, Adams initially used the proceeds of his insurance policy and her own earnings to purchase the rights to as much footage as possible.

Since 2008, Edie Adams' son Joshua Mills has run Ediad Productions, Inc., which controls the rights to all the Ernie Kovacs and Edie Adams TV shows and recordings. Ben Model is the archivist for the Ernie Kovacs and Edie Adams television collections.

In 2015, the Library of Congress acquired a collection of more than 1,200 kinescopes, videotapes and home movies featuring Ernie Kovacs and Edie Adams, from Joshua Mills, Edie Adams' son and the president of Ediad Productions.


Filmography
1956Showdown at Ulcer Gulch cameo
1960Miss Olsen
1961Lover Come BackRebel Davis
1963Call Me BwanaFrederica
Under the Yum Yum TreeDr. Irene Wilson
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad WorldMonica Crump
Love with the Proper StrangerBarbie
1964The Best ManMabel Cantwell
1966Made in ParisIrene Chase
The OscarTrina Yale
1967The Honey PotMerle McGill
1978Up in SmokeMrs. Tempest Stoner
1979RacquetLeslie Sargent
1980The Happy Hooker Goes HollywoodRita Beater
1982BoxofficeCarolyn
2003Herself


Television
1951–1952Three to Get Ready
1951Ernie in KovacslandHerself - Vocalista summer replacement show
1952Kovacs On the CornerHerself - Edythe Adams
, Philadelphia, 11:00 am until 11:30 on NBC-TV, canceled after three months
1952–1956The Ernie Kovacs ShowHerselfUnknown episodes
1955Appointment with Adventure
1956The Guy Lombardo Show
1957CinderellaFairy Godmother
1958The Garry Moore Show
The Gisele MacKenzie ShowHerself
The Pat Boone Chevy ShowroomHerself
The Dinah Shore Chevy ShowHerself
1959-premiereThe Art Carney Show
1960The Lucy–Desi Comedy HourHerself, along with husband Ernie Kovacs, as the Ricardos' neighborsEpisode: "Lucy Meets the Mustache"
1960–1961Take a Good LookpanelistUnknown episodes
1961The Spiral StaircaseBlanche
1963–1964Here's EdieHerself - Host / VocalistUnknown episodes
1968The Lucy ShowNanette JohnsonEpisode: "Mooney's Other Wife"
1970Don Adams Special: Hooray for HollywoodHerself
1971Love, American StyleMrs. WinslowEpisode: "Love and the Hotel Caper"
1972McMillan & WifeLouise MontgomeryEpisode: "Blues for Sally M."
1972Evil Roy SladeFlossie
1975 Episode: "The Return of Joe Forrester"
1976The PracticeCarlottaEpisode "Carlotta"
1976Kate RobertiEpisode: "Past Imperfect"
1976The Blue KnightTorchyEpisode: "A Slower Beat"
1978SuperdomeJoyce
The Eddie Capra MysteriesClaudia CarrollEpisode "How Do I Kill Thee?"
1979The SeekersFlora CatoMiniseries based on the novel by
Fast FriendsConnie Burton
Kate Loves a Mystery
1980Make Me an OfferFrancine Sherman
Portrait of an EscortMrs. Kennedy
A Cry for LoveTessie
DarlenePilot only
1981CBS Children's Mystery TheatreMadame ZeniaEpisode: "The Haunting of Harrington House"
1981Liz FullerEpisode: "The Man from Yesterday/World's Most Desirable Woman"
1981Vega$AngelaEpisode: "Sourdough Suite"
1982As the World TurnsRoseanneUnknown episodes
1983Shooting StarsHazel
1984Ernie Kovacs: Between the LaughterMae West
Murder, She WroteKaye SheppardEpisode: "Capitol Offense"
1985Trapper John, M.D.Edie MarksEpisode: "The Muddle of the Knight"
1987Adventures Beyond BeliefFlo
1989Jake Spanner, Private EyeSenior Club Member
1989-1990It's Garry Shandling's ShowClair King2 episodes
1990EdieEpisode: "La Place sans Souci"
1992Kids IncorporatedMs. CooperEpisode: "The Show"
1993Tales of the CityRuby MillerTV
2004Great Performances: Rodgers and Hammerstein's 'Cinderella'Fairy Godmother / HerselfTV series


Sources


External links

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
1s Time