R.I.P Barbara Billingsley

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  • Jesus H Christ
    Full On Cocktard
    • Jun 2007
    • 48

    R.I.P Barbara Billingsley

    Barbara Billingsley, mother on ‘Leave it to Beaver’, dies

    LOS ANGELES — Barbara Billingsley, who gained supermom status for her gentle portrayal of June Cleaver, the warm, supportive mother of a pair of precocious boys in "Leave it to Beaver," died Saturday. She was 94.

    Billingsley, who had suffered from a rheumatoid disease, died at her home in Santa Monica, said family spokeswoman Judy Twersky.

    When the show debuted in 1957, Jerry Mathers, who played Beaver, was 9, and Tony Dow, who portrayed Wally, was 12. Billingsley’s character, the perfect stay-at-home 1950s mom, was always there to gently but firmly nurture both through the ups and downs of childhood.

    Beaver, meanwhile, was a typical American boy whose adventures landed him in one comical crisis after another.

    Billingsley’s own two sons said she was pretty much the image of June Cleaver in real life, although the actress disagreed.

    "She was every bit as nurturing, classy, and lovely as ’June Cleaver’ and we were so proud to share her with the world," her son Glenn Billingsley said Saturday.

    She did acknowledge that she may have become more like June as the series progressed.

    "I think what happens is that the writers start writing about you as well as the character they created," she once said. "So you become sort of all mixed up, I think."

    A wholesome beauty with a lithe figure, Billingsley began acting in her elementary school’s plays and soon discovered she wanted to do nothing else.

    Although her beauty and figure won her numerous roles in movies from the mid-1940s to the mid-1950s, she failed to obtain star status until "Leave it to Beaver," a show that she almost passed on.

    "I was going to do another series with Buddy Ebsen for the same producers, but somehow it didn’t materialize," she told The Associated Press in 1994. "A couple of months later I got a call to go to the studio to do this pilot show. And it was ’Beaver.’"

    Decades later, she expressed surprise at the lasting affection people had for the show.

    "We knew we were making a good show, because it was so well written," she said. "But we had no idea what was ahead. People still talk about it and write letters, telling how much they watch it today with their children and grandchildren."

    After "Leave it to Beaver" left the air in 1963 Billingsley largely disappeared from public view for several years.

    She resurfaced in 1980 in a hilarious cameo in "Airplane!" playing a demur elderly passenger not unlike June Cleaver.

    When flight attendants were unable to communicate with a pair of jive-talking hipsters, Billingsley’s character volunteered to translate, saying "I speak jive." The three then engage in a raucous street-slang conversation.


    "No chance they would have cast me for that if I hadn’t been June Cleaver," she once said.

    She returned as June Cleaver in a 1983 TV movie, "Still the Beaver," that costarred Mathers and Dow and portrayed a much darker side of Beaver’s life.

    In his mid-30s, Beaver was unemployed, unable to communicate with his own sons and going through a divorce. Wally, a successful lawyer, was handling the divorce, and June was at a loss to help her son through the transition.

    "Ward, what would you do?" she asked at the site of her husband’s grave. (Beaumont had died in 1982.)

    The movie revived interest in the Cleaver family, and the Disney Channel launched "The New Leave It to Beaver" in 1985.

    The series took a more hopeful view of the Cleavers, with Beaver winning custody of his two sons and all three moving in with June.

    In 1997 Universal made a "Leave it to Beaver" theatrical film with a new generation of actors. Billingsley returned for a cameo, however, as Aunt Martha.

    "America’s favorite mother is now gone," Dow said in a statement Saturday. "I feel very fortunate to have been her "son" for 11 years. We were wonderful friends and I will miss her very much."

    In later years she appeared from time to time in such TV series as "Murphy Brown," ”Empty Nest" and "Baby Boom" and had a memorable comic turn opposite fellow TV moms June Lockhart of "Lassie" and Isabel Sanford of "The Jeffersons" on the "Roseanne" show.

    "Now some people, they just associate you with that one role (June Cleaver), and it makes it hard to do other things," she once said. "But as far as I’m concerned, it’s been an honor."

    In real life, fate was not as gentle to Billingsley as it had been to June and her family.

    Born Barbara Lillian Combes in Los Angeles on Dec. 22, 1915, she was raised by her mother after her parents divorced. She and her first husband, Glenn Billingsley, divorced when her sons were just 2 and 4.

    Her second husband, director Roy Kellino, died of a heart attack after three years of marriage and just months before she landed the "Leave it to Beaver" role.

    She married physician Bill Mortenson in 1959 and they remained wed until his death in 1981.
    "If your child needs a role model and you're not it, you're both fucked".-George Carlin
  • chefcraig
    DIAMOND STATUS
    • Apr 2004
    • 12172

    #2
    Wow, the original MILF has passed on. Never before had a woman worn pearls while cooking pot roast with such class on national tv. Eddie Haskell sends his regrets, as do I.

    RIP, Mrs. Cleaver.









    “The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge.”
    ― Stephen Hawking

    Comment

    • Diamondjimi
      DIAMOND STATUS
      • May 2004
      • 12086

      #3
      Enjoyed Leave It To Beaver as a kid. Still watch it once in a while....

      R.I.P.
      Trolls take heed...LOG OUT & FUCK OFF!!!

      Comment

      • Diamondjimi
        DIAMOND STATUS
        • May 2004
        • 12086

        #4
        Enjoyed Leave It To Beaver as a kid. Still watch it once in a while....

        R.I.P.
        Trolls take heed...LOG OUT & FUCK OFF!!!

        Comment

        • sadaist
          TOASTMASTER GENERAL
          • Jul 2004
          • 11625

          #5
          That sucks. The milk & cookies mom to most people in our generation. To top it off, we just lost Tom Bosley (Mr. C) from Happy Days. Really making me feel old.
          “Great losses often bring only a numb shock. To truly plunge a victim into misery, you must overwhelm him with many small sufferings.”

          Comment

          • FORD
            ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

            • Jan 2004
            • 58759

            #6
            The real 50's TV mom and the fake 50's TV dad (from the 70's) within 24 hours. That's just weird.......

            And these celebrity deaths always come in threes, so someone from a 60's TV show is gonna be next....
            Eat Us And Smile

            Cenk For America 2024!!

            Justice Democrats


            "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

            Comment

            • FORD
              ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

              • Jan 2004
              • 58759

              #7
              **Update** .... oops, looks like this week's celebrity death trifecta will NOT be three "classic" TV parents after all.

              Your third unlucky sweepstakes winner for the week: Bob Guccione Sr. of Penthouse magazine.


              Bob Guccione, Penthouse publisher, dies
              Photo
              11:30pm EDT

              WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Bob Guccione, who brought full frontal nudity to men's magazines and built a multimillion dollar publishing empire on the success of his flagship magazine, Penthouse, died on Wednesday, according to his family. He was 79.

              Guccione died in Plano, Texas, of cancer after a long illness, his family said in a statement e-mailed to Reuters. His wife, April Dawn Warren Guccione, and two of his children were at his side.

              Seen as an upstart rival to Playboy's Hugh Hefner as the leading publisher of skin magazines, Guccione aggressively challenged his rival while trying to keep Penthouse legitimate.

              The financial success of Penthouse's mix of racy photographs, investigative reporting, science fiction and sexual advice columns allowed Guccione to launch other magazines, most notably the glossy science publication Omni.

              He also published Forum, Variations and Penthouse Letters, pocket-sized magazines based on some of the most popular Penthouse columns.

              Guccione also owned one of the largest mansions in Manhattan. But he eventually lost his Penthouse empire due to Reagan-era censorship, a series of extravagant business failures and the Internet onslaught of free pornography.

              He earned world headlines and sent Penthouse sales rocketing with publication of nude photographs of Miss America, Vanessa Williams, in 1984 and of rock queen Madonna in 1985.

              In July 1988 and again in January 1989, Penthouse rocked the worldwide television ministry of Jimmy Swaggart with "confessions" from women who said they acted out pornographic fantasies for Swaggart. The preacher was defrocked by his denomination.

              Guccione portrayed himself as a conservative workaholic, belying the racy reputation inspired by his magazines and his stock uniform of a shirt open to the waist and gold chains draped around his neck.

              "No one has ever been in my swimming pool without a bathing suit," he once said.

              The son of a successful accountant, Guccione was born in the New York borough of Brooklyn, grew up in suburban New Jersey but left the United States after high school to practice painting first in Rome and, three years later, in London.

              IMMEDIATE CRITICISM

              While there, he held a variety of jobs, working as a cook, actor and private eye before launching Penthouse in 1965.

              With its frontal pictures of naked women, the magazine drew immediate criticism that only spurred its popularity.

              In 1969, Penthouse invaded the United States and challenged Playboy with more sexually explicit stories and photographs, many taken by Guccione himself in soft-focus. The magazine also was among the first to run a column for Vietnam veterans.

              By 1974, Guccione's annual personal income from Penthouse was estimated at $6 million.

              In the mid-1970s, Guccione briefly published Viva, a failed competitor to the popular Cosmopolitan magazine for women. In 1979, Guccione produced the sex-filled, and ill-fated, motion picture "Caligula."

              The Williams pictures cost the first black Miss America her crown but made her a household name. The Madonna photos, taken years before when she was a model, sparked a bitter fight between Penthouse and Playboy, each claiming their pictures were sexier and rushed them into print in July of 1985.

              In 1984, Guccione pumped an estimated $16 million into a still-born company meant to develop a portable nuclear reactor.

              He had five children by two former wives. He married Kathy Keeton, a former exotic dancer, in 1987, after living with her for 23 years.

              (Reporting by Philip Barbara; Editing by Doina Chiacu)
              Eat Us And Smile

              Cenk For America 2024!!

              Justice Democrats


              "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

              Comment

              • FORD
                ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

                • Jan 2004
                • 58759

                #8
                **Update** .... oops, looks like this week's celebrity death trifecta will NOT be three "classic" TV parents after all.

                Your third unlucky sweepstakes winner for the week: Bob Guccione Sr. of Penthouse magazine.



                Bob Guccione, Penthouse publisher, dies
                Photo
                11:30pm EDT

                WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Bob Guccione, who brought full frontal nudity to men's magazines and built a multimillion dollar publishing empire on the success of his flagship magazine, Penthouse, died on Wednesday, according to his family. He was 79.

                Guccione died in Plano, Texas, of cancer after a long illness, his family said in a statement e-mailed to Reuters. His wife, April Dawn Warren Guccione, and two of his children were at his side.

                Seen as an upstart rival to Playboy's Hugh Hefner as the leading publisher of skin magazines, Guccione aggressively challenged his rival while trying to keep Penthouse legitimate.

                The financial success of Penthouse's mix of racy photographs, investigative reporting, science fiction and sexual advice columns allowed Guccione to launch other magazines, most notably the glossy science publication Omni.

                He also published Forum, Variations and Penthouse Letters, pocket-sized magazines based on some of the most popular Penthouse columns.

                Guccione also owned one of the largest mansions in Manhattan. But he eventually lost his Penthouse empire due to Reagan-era censorship, a series of extravagant business failures and the Internet onslaught of free pornography.

                He earned world headlines and sent Penthouse sales rocketing with publication of nude photographs of Miss America, Vanessa Williams, in 1984 and of rock queen Madonna in 1985.

                In July 1988 and again in January 1989, Penthouse rocked the worldwide television ministry of Jimmy Swaggart with "confessions" from women who said they acted out pornographic fantasies for Swaggart. The preacher was defrocked by his denomination.

                Guccione portrayed himself as a conservative workaholic, belying the racy reputation inspired by his magazines and his stock uniform of a shirt open to the waist and gold chains draped around his neck.

                "No one has ever been in my swimming pool without a bathing suit," he once said.

                The son of a successful accountant, Guccione was born in the New York borough of Brooklyn, grew up in suburban New Jersey but left the United States after high school to practice painting first in Rome and, three years later, in London.

                IMMEDIATE CRITICISM

                While there, he held a variety of jobs, working as a cook, actor and private eye before launching Penthouse in 1965.

                With its frontal pictures of naked women, the magazine drew immediate criticism that only spurred its popularity.

                In 1969, Penthouse invaded the United States and challenged Playboy with more sexually explicit stories and photographs, many taken by Guccione himself in soft-focus. The magazine also was among the first to run a column for Vietnam veterans.

                By 1974, Guccione's annual personal income from Penthouse was estimated at $6 million.

                In the mid-1970s, Guccione briefly published Viva, a failed competitor to the popular Cosmopolitan magazine for women. In 1979, Guccione produced the sex-filled, and ill-fated, motion picture "Caligula."

                The Williams pictures cost the first black Miss America her crown but made her a household name. The Madonna photos, taken years before when she was a model, sparked a bitter fight between Penthouse and Playboy, each claiming their pictures were sexier and rushed them into print in July of 1985.

                In 1984, Guccione pumped an estimated $16 million into a still-born company meant to develop a portable nuclear reactor.

                He had five children by two former wives. He married Kathy Keeton, a former exotic dancer, in 1987, after living with her for 23 years.

                (Reporting by Philip Barbara; Editing by Doina Chiacu)
                Eat Us And Smile

                Cenk For America 2024!!

                Justice Democrats


                "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

                Comment

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