Ray Heatherton (June 1, 1909 – August 15, 1997) was an American singer, Broadway theatre performer, and a New York City television personality in the early days of the medium.
During his high school years, he continued to find outlets for his singing talents, performing with bands at various local functions and winning a radio talent contest sponsored by the manufacturer of radio sets, Atwater Kent. His first appearance on Broadway theatre was in The Garrick Gaieties, a revue which opened at the Guild Theatre on June 4, 1930, three days after his 21st birthday. During this time, Heatherton also attended Columbia University.
Shortly afterward, Ray Heatherton's singing talents came to the attention of the era's best-known radio bandleader-songwriter, Paul Whiteman. Whiteman hired the young man to become a featured vocalist on his 1929–30 CBS radio program The Old Gold Hour. Heatherton continued to sing on the show, while also performing in the musical Midnight Frolics at Broadway's New Amsterdam Theatre.
Following his father's death during the Depression, he was temporarily forced to leave show business to work for the New York Telephone Company. His affection for performing, however, inspired him to continue auditioning for radio assignments and he was eventually able to return as a singer on numerous radio musical variety series, and also found opportunities to perform in nightclubs and theater. In the late 1930s, he became a bandleader with his own orchestra which made recordings and performed at New York's Biltmore Hotel.
In 1938 Heatherton recorded two discs of songs for children on the Decca Records label, and in 1939 twice performed on the then-experimental medium of television, appearing on NBC's New York station W2XBS (now WNBC) in Gilbert and Sullivan's Pirates of Penzance (as Frederic) and H.M.S. Pinafore (as Ralph Rackstraw).
Heatherton was commissioned and rose to the rank of Captain. He served as Special Services officer of the 9th Marine Aircraft Wing at Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point North Carolina p. 193 Possemato, Paul M., Johnston J. William & Johnston, D. Michael Heroes and Teachers AuthorHouse, 2008p.157 Capeci Jr., Dominic J. Detroit And The "Good War": The World War II Letters of Mayor Edward Jeffries and Friends University Press of Kentucky, 13 Jan 2015 as well as Guam and Okinawa.p. 251 DeLong, Thomas A. The Mighty Music Box: The Golden Age of Musical Radio Amber Crest Books, 1980
Every weekday afternoon and evening, as well as on Saturday afternoons, Ray Heatherton and his comedy assistants Chick Darrow, who played "The Topsey-Turvey Auctioneer", and Milt Moss would entertain and inform their studio audiences and kids at home with games, songs, stories, craftmaking, hobbies, comedy, puppet skits, magic tricks, interviews with guest performers and personalities, and informational segments. As with virtually all children's shows of the 1950s and 60s, the format was structured so that the live segments were interspersed with cartoons—in this case, primarily the theatrical Terrytoons and the first made-for-TV animated series Crusader Rabbit. At the same time, Heatherton hosted other radio and TV series, including a radio edition of The Merry Mailman which was heard on the Mutual Radio Network Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings, and Saturday and Sunday afternoons from 1953 to 1955. Heatherton's gentle personality and pleasant singing voice and endearingly cheerful and reassuring demeanor made him one of the most beloved and recognizable regional personalities.
Heatherton was able to clear his name of the defamation and went on to host two more programs for WOR-TV: The Ray Heatherton Theater, a combination live-action and film musical anthology series for teens, and The Cartoon Parade, both of which were seen during the remainder of the station’s 1956 season. He remained on the air for another year and a half, but no longer had a daily venue. Starting Saturday-Sunday, September 8–9, 1956 until Sunday, April 13, 1958, he served as the “sea captain” host-performer on the weekend evening edition of The Popeye Show on another New York independent station, WPIX Channel 11 which, along with another New York independent, WNEW Channel 5 was, during the 1950s and 60s, the station with the greatest number of “kiddie shows” on its broadcast schedule. At this point, he left television for three years and, between 1958 and 1961, drawing on his public recognition and good will he had engendered over the years, was able to launch a new career as head of public relations for Franklin National and Citibank.
During this time, Heatherton appeared at many New York area venues, including Freedomland U.S.A. in The Bronx, to meet and entertain children. He appeared at Freedomland during 1962. Chick Darrow also appeared at the park on numerous occasions. Both are mentioned in the book Freedomland U.S.A.: The Definitive History (Theme Park Press, 2019).
Following intermittent job opportunities, Heatherton returned to radio in the late 1960s as the host/performer and interviewer of the nationally syndicated talk/variety program Ray Heatherton's Breakfast Club.
Ray is the grandfather of Dana Fujiko Heatherton, who was 2009–2010 Nisei Week Queen for Los Angeles.[1]
In July 1975, Ray and Joey had a brief moment of network glory with their own CBS-TV variety program, Joey and Dad.
Heatherton's last regular TV series was another talk/variety show, this time aimed at "mature" adults and senior citizens, A New Day's Dawning. The series was seen locally in New York on New York City Board of Education's TV station WNYE Channel 25 and in national syndication between 1983 and 1985. Dick Heatherton who, from the mid-1970s to the late 1980s was a drive-time DJ on one of New York's top FM broadcasting stations, WCBS-FM, worked on his father's final TV effort by signing on as the show's producer.
On Thursday night, October 11, 1984, Ray Heatherton appeared for the last time on WOR-TV, Channel 9 during the station's evening-long celebration of its 35th anniversary on the air. Four years later, on Thursday, September 29, 1988, he made his final TV appearance on a very similar program, WPIX-TV, Channel 11's day-long celebration and retrospective of its 40 years on the air, "WPIX at 40". Following this last appearance, Ray Heatherton began showing signs of Alzheimer's disease. He retained the positions he held since the mid-1980s on the boards of directors of the Long Island Lighting Company (LILCO) and the Garden City Hotel, but he no longer served by the early 1990s.
In 1993, Heatherton was admitted to the Actors' Fund Home in Englewood, New Jersey, where he spent the last four years of his life. Despite the debilitating effects of the disease, he still made appearances and greeted fans at some local functions nearby. Ray Heatherton died two and a half months after his 88th birthday.
Broadway shows, recordings and pre–World War II television
Single film appearance and war service in the Marines
Early television and The Merry Mailman
Career setback and continued work
1960s and the return of The Merry Mailman
Family, later work, illness, and death
External links
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