Bea Benaderet

On the Town On the Town

Born: 1905
Decades Active:
                                     YES     YES     YES  
  1890    1900    1910    1920    1930    1940    1950    1960    1970    1980    1990    2000    2010  
Biography: Bea Benaderet only appeared in a relative handful of movies, usually in small parts, but as a voice actress she was one of the busiest people on radio and later in cartoons, and in the final eight years of her life she was a fixture on two hit rural comedies on the CBS network. Benaderet was born in New York City in 1906, the daughter of Samuel Benaderet, who had emigrated from Turkey, and the former Margaret O'Keefe. The family moved to San Francisco, and she studied voice and acting. She did stage and stock work while still in school and made her debut on radio when that medium was in its infancy. She did one-off work in various commercials and one-shot parts until 1936 when Orson Welles, appreciating her range and potential, hired her for a regular role on The Campbell Playhouse. Her big break, however, came when she was hired by Jack Benny for his radio show, on which she essayed numerous roles and, in fact, became something of the distaff answer to Mel Blanc, Benny's resident male vocal jack-of-all-trades. She became a ubiquitous presence on radio, on The Adventures of Ozzie & Harriet, The Great Gildersleeve, and Fibber McGee and Molly. Benaderet did a few film appearances, in small roles across the years (she can be spotted as a clerk in Alfred Hitchcock's Notorious), but it was her voice that kept her busiest, starting in 1940 with Tex Avery's excruciatingly funny The Bear's Tale. From 1943 onward, she worked in cartoon voice roles by the dozens, even as radio began to recede in importance with the advent of television.

DVDs that Bea Benaderet appeared in...

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