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The Guiding Light 1956

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-1/1/56 thru 1/31/56. Elsie continues to cause havoc in the Bauer home. Jim quits Cedars and Dick thinks Lila is a bad influence on him. Dick lays into Laura for her controlling machinations and says he is no longer her son. Laura asks Marie for help to win back Dick and Marie refuses. After the eye doctor gives Marie a good report and tells her she no longer needs to be in California, Marie has to decide whether to go back to NYC and it causes her to face whatever feelings she has for Dick. Bert strikes up a friendship with Marie to get the scoop on the Dick/Kathy situation. Mike becomes defiant as his hatred for his grandmother and baby brother grows. He resents Elsie’s favoritism towards Ed. 

-2/2/56 thru 2/28/56. Marie starts to paint Mike’s portrait. Mike becomes more neurotic and defiant. Jim proposes to Lila but she doesn’t want to ever get married. Papa sternly rebukes Elsie for trying to mother Ed and for rejecting Mike. Papa tells Bill that Elsie should move out. Bert tries to get Mike to stop seeing an older friend, Jock Baker. Papa puts the foot down with Bill to put the foot down with Bert to put the foot down with Elsie. Mike runs away from home. Marie uses a charcoal sketch she had made of Mike to give to the police to aid in their search for him. The police question Jock Baker. 

-3/1/56 thru 3/31/56. The Bauers are frantic because Mike is missing and Bert fears the worst. Though Jock had withheld the information from the police due to his promise to Mike not to say anything, he tells his dad that Mike ran away due to his grandmother. Mike is lost in the Sierra foothills as Bert starts to feel guilty for the way she treated him. Bill blames Elsie’s favoritism of Ed over Mike and his own passivity about the situation. Marie remembers Mike talking about wanting to go camping in the Sierra foothills and informs the police. Mike is found by a search team and taken to the hospital where he asks to see Papa Bauer. Meta stops Elsie from going to the hospital and lays into her for how she’s treated Mike, blaming Elsie for Mike’s running away from home. Bill wants to introduce a bachelor work associate named Mark Holden to Meta. 

-4/2/56 thru 4/30/56. Elsie is moving back to Arizona. She and Mike make amends first. Bill brings Mark with him to Elsie’s going away dinner. Jim and Marie make Lila go for a chest x-ray even though she’s scared of the results. The results come back that Lila has tuberculosis. Meta is mad at Bill because she thinks he is trying to set her up with Mark. Since Lila’s sister died in a TB sanitarium, Lila is scared to go to one. Jim gets Lila to  check into the TB quarantine wing of Cedars for 6 months to a year so that Jim can keep an eye on her. Dan Clark, who Kathy has been seeing in New York City while staying with Helen, proposes but Kathy declines.

-5/1/56 thru 5/31/56. Lila gets scared and stir crazy in quarantine and starts to freak out. Helen tries to get Kathy to send Meta a Mother’s Day card. Kathy remembers old resentments towards Meta and admits her fears that Robin is starting to treat Kathy the way Kathy treated Meta. Jim figures out that Lila’s cynicism about marriage comes from her blaming her brother-in-law for her sister’s death. Laura comes back to town and tries to reconcile with Dick. Mark and Meta both agree to enjoy each other’s companionship but leave marriage off the table. Papa thinks Meta should marry Mark but Meta tells him she’s not interested in marrying anyone after Joe. Papa and Meta visit the graves of Mama Bauer and Joe on Memorial Day. Bert hopes Mike never has to go to war.

-6/1/56 thru 6/29/56. Marie leaves to go visit Mrs. Laury in NYC and her family in Iowa, not sure if she’ll come back to Los Angeles. Papa also goes to NYC to visit Trudy and Clyde. Marie visits Kathy in New York and they discuss the past and which of them might want to be with Dick. Bill, Meta and a tearful Bert, who realizes her son is growing up and leaving her for the first time, say goodbye to Michael as he gets on the train to summer camp on his own. 

-7/2/56 thru 7/31/56. Mark tells Meta that if he ever did get married it would be with someone like her, if not her. Meta tells Marie that she knows how she feels about Dick and Marie confesses. Dick tries to find out why Lila has had an emotional setback this month and Lila admits July was when she lost her sister and her fear is overtaking her. Bert learns that her mother has met a man and may marry again. Meta, after hearing the news that Elsie is open to remarriage, decides to finally get rid of Joe’s old chair. Mark proposes to Meta and she accepts. 

-8/1/56 thru 8/31/56. Bill regrets introducing Mark and Meta as he thinks Mark is toying with her. He also thinks that Elsie's new fiancé, Albert, might be after Elsie’s money. Mark flies to New York City to see his brother Fred and then to Colorado to see his sister Alice to let them know of his plans to marry Meta. Both of them give him their blessing. Mike comes back from camp and isn’t happy that Meta is marrying Mark because he doesn’t like Mark. Elsie comes to Los Angeles with her new fiance, Albert Franklin. Mark has decided he doesn’t like Kathy even before he’s met her. Mark and Meta set a wedding date for Christmastime. Last aired radio episode on August 31, 1956.

-9/3/56 thru 9/28/56. Albert assures the Bauers that he’s not after Elsie’s money. Papa thinks Mark is selfish and worries that Mark doesn’t love Meta the way she loves him. This causes Meta to have doubts about her future with Mark. Kathy comes back home and meets Mark. Kathy learns that Mark and Meta are engaged but thinks they are all wrong for each other. Mark and Meta start getting edgy with each other and they feel a rift between them. Meta debates whether to invite Clyde and Trudy to her wedding. She doesn’t think Trudy wants anything to do with the Bauers and that Clyde is encouraging the separation. Meta is missing Joe. Mark and Meta’s plans to take Kathy out to dinner are disrupted by Meta catching a cold. Meta suggests they go on without her but is secretly disappointed when Mark doesn’t protest the idea. Mark and Kathy get to know each other better at dinner. In a sign of how things have changed over the years, Bert warns Meta about Kathy. Dan Clark heads to California to pursue Kathy, despite his mother’s warnings that he’s wasting his time. 

-10/1/56 thru 10/31/56. Lila is elated that she’s about to be released from the hospital after six months of quarantine. Albert and Elsie are married. Dan picks up on Kathy’s feelings for Mark and urges her to go back to New York with him. Mark doesn't think Kathy should marry Dan and wants to talk to her about it. Papa and Meta wonder why he cares so much about the subject. Lila comes home. Kathy tries to justify her feelings for Mark to Dan. Jim wants to move back to Chicago to take over his father’s practice since he’s had a stroke and he wants Lila to go back with him as his wife. Dick and Kathy have dinner where he tells her he’s figured out she’s in love with Mark. Dick is in a car accident and hurt his right arm. Jim fears Dick’s right hand is permanently damaged. Kathy gets histrionic, worrying and feeling guilty about Dick and rushes to the hospital to see him. Dan suggests she’s overreacting to try and repress her feelings for Mark.

-11/1/56 thru 11/30/56. Mark and Kathy have a harder time fighting their feelings for each other. Dan cryptically tells Meta that he’s sorry Kathy ever came back to California and tells Meta to open her eyes, leaving Meta confused about the meaning. Mark says he can’t go through with marrying Meta since he loves Kathy. He wants to tell Meta about Kathy but Kathy doesn’t want the whole truth to come out now. Lila is still reluctant to marry but Jim patiently says he’ll wait for her. Everybody is keeping the news that he won’t be able to be a surgeon anymore from Dick. Before he leaves California, Dan tells Meta that Kathy is in love with Mark. Meta is in denial at first but then remembers all the clues she ignored. Mark comes over to tell the truth to Meta  but Meta says she already knows and had known, subconsciously, for some time. Bill and Bert learn the truth from Kathy and are outraged. Bill and Papa try to comfort a despondent Meta. Bill and Bert break the news about Meta and Mark to Albert and Elsie on Thanksgiving. Bill is worried and sad for Meta, who had cancelled Thanksgiving over at her place. Jim leaves Los Angeles to move to Chicago but not before stopping by to give some encouragement to Dick, who is facing the reality that he won’t be able to perform surgery again. Bert tells Kathy that Bill hates Mark now. Kathy implores Bert to not judge Mark and reminds Bert of Bill’s affair with Gloria. Meta laments to Dick that she’s lost so much. Dick says that she’s lost Chuckie and Joe but she hasn’t lost Mark because she never really had him. 

-12/3/56 thru 12/31/56. Kathy thinks Robin doesn’t like her and Helen thinks Kathy has spoiled Robin. Helen is hurt when she tells her that Mark is going to adopt Robin and give her the name Holden instead of Lang. Lila stops by the hospital to say goodbye to Dick as she moves back home to make amends with her family. She assures Dick that if and when she sorts out her past, she will be ready to go to Jim and marry him. Dick meets Dr. Paul Fletcher, a young doctor from Chicago who is finishing up his residency at Cedars and is planning on staying and taking over Jim’s old office. The two will be rooming together as they are now both interns, Dick having to go into internal medicine now that his surgery career is over. Dick is not looking forward to it since he doesn’t like Paul but Paul is hoping Dick will teach him about bedside manner, something Dick has and Paul lacks. Kathy thinks Robin’s illness is psychosomatic because Robin doesn’t want to meet Mark. She fears she built up Bob too much in Robin’s mind. Jim calls Dick with the news that he and Lila got married while she was visiting him in Chicago over Christmas. Dick and Paul see in the year 1957 while on duty at the hospital. 

-12/25/56. Papa, Meta, Bill, Bert, Mike, Albert and Elsie gather at Meta’s house to celebrate Christmas. Everyone is worried about Meta being depressed.


Edited by Reverend Ruthledge

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3 minutes ago, Reverend Ruthledge said:

You're very welcome. Yes, the radio show ended in 1956.

Thanks. It feels appropriate that the show ended on Christmas.

(was this still Irna?)

If I ever find any of my old scans again of magazine picture stories from these years (I think there may have been one or two) I will add it in one of these threads.

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10 minutes ago, DRW50 said:

Thanks. It feels appropriate that the show ended on Christmas.

(was this still Irna?)

If I ever find any of my old scans again of magazine picture stories from these years (I think there may have been one or two) I will add it in one of these threads.

Actually, the radio show didn't end on Christmas. It was on another date. I can't remember the exact date but I think it was around September of 1956.

Yes, Irna still wrote the show throughout 1956. Agnes Nixon didn't take the reigns until 1958.

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10 minutes ago, Reverend Ruthledge said:

Actually, the radio show didn't end on Christmas. It was on another date. I can't remember the exact date but I think it was around September of 1956.

Yes, Irna still wrote the show throughout 1956. Agnes Nixon didn't take the reigns until 1958.

Thanks.

Irna must have been run ragged doing both shows those few years...

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1 minute ago, DRW50 said:

Thanks.

Irna must have been run ragged doing both shows those few years...

Well, as a writer, it wouldn't make much difference to her. She used the same script but would just write in different stage directions for TV and radio. What must've been overwhelming for her was writing both The Guiding Light and As the World Turns simultaneously in 1956 and 1957.

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38 minutes ago, DRW50 said:

If I ever find any of my old scans again of magazine picture stories from these years (I think there may have been one or two) I will add it in one of these threads.

That would be cool. Thanks!

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November 1956 Radio TV Mirror

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past few years. Nina has helped greatly."

Mrs. Lipton is the former Nina Foch - and still Nina Foch, the actress. When she catches Jim disappearing, she laughs him right out of it. He says, "I have an insincere smile that I use when I'm lost - you know I'm thinking about something else. Maybe Nina says something and I give her this smile. Well, she knows what it means and she mimics me. And she won't quit. I gave up smoking for gumchewing and, when I get lost, I get to chewing pretty hard - and she mimics this, too. She keeps it up for ten minutes or more. S Until she gets me laughing. And then, she mimics my laugh!"

The Liptons have been married since June 12, 1954, and they have a good marriage. Both are artists and individualists, but they make a successful go of their marriage. "Nina has her day, too," Jim notes. "She doesn't get lost as I do, but she can blow up like a summer storm. She can have an emotional explosion which stuns me - and then, a minute later, be as happy as a lark. Of course, I'm in favor of the explosion. Nina was too shy when we first married. She gave in too easily. I was always saying, 'Now are you sure you want to go there?'"

Jim puts as much thought into his marriage as he does into his career. And most of the time his motor is running. He usually has a half-dozen projects going. During the past year, he continued his studies, finished an original play, adapted a Moliere play and then it. He's been Dick Grant in both the radio and TV versions of The Guiding Light. Nina also leads a hectic life, "Sometimes we don't see each other to talk to until weekends," Jim says ruefully. "Or we may meet at a class in the evening and say 'good morning' for the first first time."

Jim's schedule is a full one. He is at the TV studio at 8:45 A.M. for The Guiding Light rehearsals. The show goes on at 12:45. He's off the air at one, of course. But, until just recently, there was then a mad dash to rehearse and broadcast the radio version of The Guiding Light. At this writing, a good part of his afternoon is still devoted to TV rehearsals for the next day's show. In the evenings, there are voice lessons with Arthur Lessac, fencing lessons, ballet, gymnastics, and modern dance. He will probably run into Nina at the ballet class, or at 11:30 P.M. in Harold Clurman's acting workshop. They are at Clurman's until two in the morning. It makes for a frenetic life, but things are accomplished - and the marriage works.

"I figure a good marriage has two possibilities," he says. "There is one in which one person, usually the man, calls all the turns and the wife keeps up the home. Or there is our kind, where we are making a continual and conscious effort to live equally and share the burdens. What I mean is: Whoever gets out of bed last in the morning makes it. At dinner time, we work together in the kitchen, eat and clean up together."

They have been living in a two-and-a-half-room apartment at Seventy-second Street and Park Avenue. Any way you look at it, Park Avenue is a far cry from Jim's beginning. "As a kid," Jim recalls, "I lived in a tough neighborhood. The school I went to was the second toughest in all of Detroit. We had thievery. Sluggings. Knifings. It was tough."

Jim was born in Detroit, September 9, 1926. His parents separated when he was three. He was raised wholly by his mother. She is a college graduate who then taught grade school and worked as a librarian. "She is a splendid woman," Jim says. "I am very indebted to her. She was the good influence in my life."

Because his mother worked, Jim was alone much of the time. She provided him with books, but it didn't keep him out of the streets. "The gangs did a lot of fighting," he remembers. "My behavior wasn't the best. However, I drew the line at dishonesty." This wasn't easy during Depression days, for Mrs. Lipton and son were poor as church mice. They lived on skimpy rations. They had no luxuries.

The summer he was thirteen, Jim Lipton got his first job. He worked in a photo-engraving plant at twelve dollars a week. He washed photographic glass in nitric acid. This turned his hands yellow - but that was nothing compared to the pain when he frequently cut his hands on chipped or broken pieces of glass and the acid got into the wound. Another chore was to sweep up. He was at this job, near the end of the summer, when his job vanished. He was sweeping up the floor - and suddenly there was no floor. The plant had blown up. Luckily for Jim, he wasn't hurt.

"That was the year we moved, too," he recalls. "To a very small apartment, but in a better neighborhood. We had been living with my grandparents, and it was the first year my mother and I had any kind of privacy. when Christmas came, I insisted that we had to have a tree. Well, there was only a quarter for the tree, so I put off shopping until late Christmas Eve, when prices came down."

He had acquired one string of six lights, one box of small colored balls and one box of icicles. What Jim got for his quarter was a tree that stood about six-feet high with five or six branches - and about as many needles to each branch. This he took home and, together with his mother, he hung the balls and draped the tinsel. They strung the lights vertically, straight up the trunk.

"Mother and I played it straight, too. We both admired the tree and said, 'How wonderful!' Christmas morning, one of my uncles came over and we showed him the ridiculous-looking tree. He said nothing. He sat down. His mouth was working and he was trying to control himself, but he couldn't. He burst out laughing. He was staring at the tree and laughing. Then I laughed and so did Mother. We laughed till we fell out of our chairs."

From the age of ten, Jim's ambition was to be a lawyer. That year, his mother had been ill. He was sent away, to spend the summer with an uncle in California. The uncle was an attorney and - compared with Jim's Detroit home - lived in great luxury. So Jim decided he, too, would study law. In grade and high schools, however, he worked in dramatic productions. Ernie Ricca, now a New Yorker and director of The Romance of Helen Trent, was head of production at Detroit's WWJ. He heard Jim, who was sixteen, on a high-school radio show and invited him to audition for professional work. Within a year, Jim was making about sixty dollars a week as the nephew of The Lone Ranger.

Continuing his radio work, Jim enrolled in an accelerated pre-legal course at Wayne University and was a sophomore when he enlisted as an air cadet. That was during World War II. Jim was still a cadet when the war ended a year later, and he was discharged before winning his wings. "I went back to Detroit for a week," he remembers. "Just one week. I couldn't stay there much longer. There were too many unpleasant memories. So I went on to New York." That was in December of 1945. He auditioned for radio work and tried to enroll at Columbia University in a pre-law course. Columbia, overcrowded with New York veterans, turned him down. But, within two weeks, he had three substantial roles in network daytime dramas. He had a part in Just Plain Bill and the romantic lead in both David Harum and The Strange Romance of Evelyn Winters.

"It was another year," Jim says, "before I completely gave up the idea of studying law. It was about 1947 that I became earnest about the theater. I began to cut down on my radio work so that I could study acting. I studied with Stella Adler, a wonderful teacher. I studied French three evenings a week for two years. The study still goes on and I've been getting the equivalent of a college education. For example, I have a list of classics to be read. I'm working down that list. I haven't read a contemporary book in a couple of years."

Jim Lipton has been succeeding as an actor. He has also made two movies. In 1950, he went to Greece to play the lead in the film, "Wheel of Fire," and followed this up with another, "The Big Break" - in which he was on the screen for all but three minutes. On Broadway, he has played in Lillian Hellman's "The Autumn Garden" and has held the lead in "Dark Legend." He has been Dr. Grant in The Guiding Light for four years. He's played in about every night-time TV dramatic show.

He met Nina on a TV set. "That was the production of "The Skin of Our Teeth.' Of course, I couldn't help noting the particulars about Nina. She's a beauty. Blue-eyed. Blond. Pale skin. A beautiful figure. But she's a fine actress, and then it was all business. We just worked together."

It was thirteen months before they met again. Nina was out of the city frequently. When Jim finally got through on the phone, she had a bad cold. A few days later, he phoned again. She still had the cold but allowed Jim to call. Another couple of dates and there was a spark. Time passed and the spark flamed and they married. The double-ring ceremony took place on a Saturday in Brooklyn.

"I was working on The Guiding Light until late Friday," Jim recalls, "and then I had five days off. We wanted to marry on Saturday but couldn't find a judge to perform the ceremony. Most of them seem to play golf on Saturday. Finally, our attorney found a judge in Brooklyn who had a late date to tee off."

Nina has said that Jim impressed her from the very beginning with his thoughtfulness. He didn't merely bring flowers. He first spun them into a gilded bird cage which held a colorful toy bird. And usually there was a reason behind the gift. Nina, although she has lived in the United States since she was eight, was born in Leyden, Holland. Her mother was an American actress and musical comedy star; her father, a distinguished Dutch musical conductor. In tribute to Nina's Dutch ancestry, Jim gave her colorful old Dutch maps.

It's impossible to move a foot, anywhere in the apartment, without finding something intriguing to catch the eye. For example, in the living room there are a fork and spoon framed behind glass and hung on the wall - the utensils came from the personal table of George Bernard Shaw. The fork and spoon are ringed by original Daumier lithographs. There are a couple of plaques. One is Nina's Academy Award nomination. The other belongs to Jim and is the TV RADIO MIRROR AWARD for Favorite Daytime Actor. (Nina wears the gold medal which came with this Award, on her bracelet.) There is a scrawny but beautiful candelabra which holds fifteen candles. There is a Venetian map which is 400 years old. The walls are covered with maps, prints, mementoes and paintings - some by Nina. Jim brought a vase from Greece that is 2500 years old and it is on the shelf of a French cabinet which dates back to 1640. In the casement of the window above the cabinet is a plant that stands better than five feet tall.

"That's a fatshedera - and Nina's pride," Jim explains. "When she goes away for a time, she makes me solemnly swear that I will water it daily. You see, Nina has never had luck with plants. This is the first that insisted on growing, and she has become close to it. Once there was soil lice in the plant, and as much as the lice upset her, she stood by the plant and refused to throw it out. We finally killed the lice without harming the plant."

Their apartment is about six floors above the street. The walls are white with a touch of pink. The carpeting is green. Generally speaking, the apartment is furnished with antiques - English, Italian, French. Although it is as handsome as it is intriguing, the Liptons are getting crowded. In the bedroom, for example, is a stack of cartons that reaches to the ceiling.

"That was my Christmas gift to Nina," Jim explains. "I gave her a complete darkroom. Rather the equipment for a darkroom. It's never been unpacked except to look at, for there's no place to set it up."

Because they are crowded, they will be moving into a larger apartment - in a building now nearing completion. It will have an extra bedroom which Jim will use for his writing. And it will have a larger kitchen, important for Nina.

"She is an excellent cook," Jim says. "You can tell that with just a glance at her spice and condiment shelf. I like to help in the kitchen and she is teaching me. She calls me her second chef. I'm allowed to slice onions, shell peas, stir things, turn the meat over and baste. I am permitted to make only mashed potatoes by myself."

On Nina's recent Hollywood trip, she spent four months working in Cecil B. DeMille's "The Ten Commandments." Jim was home on the range alone. As a matter of fact, the day after Nina flew out, a delivery boy came calling with a gift from her. IT was a cookbook for Jim, inscribed, "Now you're on your own." And he did prepare many of his own meals while she was away. He even invented a few recipes involving peanut butter - peanut butter spread over a steak before broiling, or peanut butter baked on corn on the cob. Nina was a little horrified at some of these experiments.

"We used to talk to each other every night," Jim says. "We always try to, wherever we are. When Nina was in California, we talked an hour to an hour-and-a-half every evening. Came to hundreds of dollars each month. But, after all, if a marriage is going to succeed, you can't let distance keep you apart."

This is one aspect of their lives which makes for problems. Jim stays close to New York, but Nina must go out of the city for weeks or months at a time - with a show, to make a picture or a personal appearance, to work in a summer theater. So it's hard to plan for the larger home they want, the children they hope to have. But anyone who knows Jim and Nina Lipton also knows that these problems will be worked out, too - in the same spirit of romance and understanding which has already marked their courtship and marriage in the hectic world of show business.

Edited by DRW50

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August 1956 Radio TV Mirror

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happened at the office today. He wanted someone he could love as an equal - a partner he could team up with in the Battle of Manhattan.

"Together," Lynne explains, "we do the best we can. It isn't he alone doing the best he can, while I just do the housework. It's both of us. We each have our own existence, and each respects the other's privacy. This doesn't mean that we're less in love. It merely means that we don't intend to engulf each other."

If this sounds suspiciously like living apart, a visit to the Taylors in their comfortable Manhattan apartment offers quick reassurance. Obviously, no two people ever got more enjoyment out of "living apart" - together. Although you've come to get Lynne's story - and although Tom withdraws to a far corner of the living room determined not to interfere - it isn't possible. They're so much a team, you can't talk to one without involving the other. And Lynne's story wouldn't be complete, not without Tim's story, too...

"I'm a native New Yorker," Lynne starts out, waiting for the customary exclamation of surprise. It doesn't come. "But I was born right here in New York," she continues, and looks to Tim for help. And that's how the other half of the team gets involved. He knows, from his own experience, that a surprisingly large percentage of actors were born "right here in New York," and each thinks it's unusual.

And so, like a lot of other actresses, Lynne was born in New York City. Her father, Louis L. Rogers, is a stock broker. She studied art at the High School of Music and Art, developing a talent which was to come in handy for her role as the artist in The Guiding Light. "When the script called for Dick Grant to sit for his portrait," she recalls, "everyone was surprised that I could actually fill in the canvas myself."

At Queens College, however, the artist decided to become an actress. She majored in English, speech and dramatics, doing stock at the Provincetown Playhouse. She also managed to graduate magna cum laude. At Columbia University, Lynne started to work for her master's degree in Drama and Comparative Dramatic Literature. Transferring to the Yale Drama School, she was about to return for the second year when she landed the role of Myriam in Light of the World, based on the New Testament.

"After a year, the show was replaced by a quiz program," Lynne says it with a dead-pan expression - it's the only comment she can think of. "That was 1950," she remembers. "Then CBS assigned me to be an actress-at-large on the Stork Club show. I was to be there just in case - you know, in case I were needed or some of the guests didn't show up."

A year later, CBS hired Tim to be a writer on the same show. "They wanted me," he says, "it would be a short job - only three or four weeks. I was to do a preliminary interview of the guests, then draw up a list of ten questions. These were copied on little pieces of paper and pasted to coffee pots for Sherman Billingsley to read off."

And that's where they met - in the famed Cub Room of the Stork Club. Not the real Cub Room, of course, but the television studio designed to look like it. "We said hello," Lynne recalls. "Both of us were left-handed - so there we were, with things in common." That was the start.

They had time to discover even more things in common, for Tim lasted thirteen weeks - a record for writers on the show. Then Igor Cassini, who conducts a similar television program, hired Tim to be a writer for him. Tim, in turn, hired Lynne to be "his Girl Friday." They worked together until the summer, when Cassini and Tim hied themselves to Europe to interview assorted celebrities.

In a way, Lynne didn't mind. Proximity had made them very close, but Tim seemed shy of marriage. She knew that the cure was to "give him a lot of freedom, make him miss you." It worked, too. Tim now confesses that he "wrote more to her" than he ever wrote for the show.

Professionally, however, that summer was "a bleak period" for Lynne. But then, after weeks of discouragement and making the rounds, it happened.

In this case, because Kermit Bloomgarden was the producer, Lynne thought she was trying out for a role in his stag production of "Autumn Garden." Instead, she found that she was auditioning for the road company of "Death of a Salesman."

But that was the same afternoon Tim's boat arrived from Europe. He was "really mad" when Lynne wasn't at the dock to meet him. They got together, however. Explanations were made. And they had a proper reunion. But they also had prolonged farewell. Lynne's contract called for one year with "Death of a Salesman."

By the time Lynne returned from her tour, Tim was ready with his proposal. Only they couldn't get married. They didn't have an apartment. And that's how they happened to have a June wedding. It wasn't sentiment. Once again, it was circumstance. It took them six months to find a place to live.

As it turned out, however, it was well worth the wait. Their apartment is only two-and-a-half rooms, but that's more than most New Yorkers dare hope for of heaven on earth. It's in an old, white brownstone off the lower part of Fifth Avenue. The rooms are enormous, with twelve-foot-high ceilings. There are fireplaces in both the living room and bedroom. And what's more - "Eugene O'Neill once lived here."

The wedding should have been romantic. They drove out to Greenwich, Connecticut, a lovely town where Tim had once worked as a reporter. But the Justice of the Peace was nervous. He had only married three couples before. Well, the bride and groom were nervous, too. They had never been married before at all.

Here Lynne was, promoting to "honor and obey" - as though her life were her own to do with as she pleased. She was an actress. It was enough being at the beck and call of producers without having a husband to obey as well. How could she possible handle two careers?

And Tim, reaching in his pocket for the wedding ring, felt that he was giving up his freedom forever. With this ring, he would be chained to those two-and-a-half rooms - in sickness and in health, till death do us part.

It wasn't death that parted them. Once again, it was circumstance. They were married on June 7,1953. On June 30th, Lynne had to leave for the Lakeside Theater in Putnam, Connecticut, where she had a ten-week contract.

The Taylors can tell the story now, laughing at their early doubts. Lynne has proven she can handle two careers with equal success - both as Lynne Rogers on television and as Mrs. Tim Taylor in private life. As for Tim, sitting beside her on the sofa- he's been in those same two=and-a-half rooms for three years now, without once looking for the nearest exit.

"And we owe it all to that ten-week separation," Lynne says. "It was the best thing that could have happened to us."

It gave us time to think things over," Tim adds. "I know I'd be there in the apartment. I'd be conscious of things - a perfume bottle, a summer dress among the clothes in the closet - things I took for granted. Then, all of a sudden, I'd realize: Someone else lives here, too."

Lynne describes these ten weeks as "sort of a limbo period." It gave her a chance to "go into marriage kind of gradually." For example, she suddenly realized that a married woman doesn't go out with other men. She wasn't forbidden to do so. It just came over her that she didn't want to. It had more meaning, she found, seeing the one man she was married to rather than the many men who were just friends.

It was the same with cooking. Suddenly, she realized that she wanted to cook for Tim. She started collecting cook books. "And once she made her mind up to it," Tim admits, "she became good at it."

As a team, they also found that they could help each other. Tim, who periodically makes a round of the night clubs for his weekly column, declares that Lynne is "better than a tape recorder."

Tim, in turn, helps Lynne by cueing her in her parts. But, more important, he has built up her self-confidence. It seems incredible that anyone as pretty as Lynne, from insecurity. Her face is heart-shaped, with the look of a happy Valentine. Her auburn hair fairly cries out for color television. But the forehead! It's dangerously high for an ingenue. Not that being bright is any handicap for an actress, but Lynne looks every bit as intelligent as she is.

Tim has made her understand that youth alone has been her handicap. She has a poise and intelligence far beyond her years. Just right for a leading lady, but not for an ingenue. And one day, Tim predicts, Lynne will graduate into stardom.

A glance at the record proves that Tim is right. In her five seasons of stock, Lynne has played such unusual roles as the heroines in "Bell, Book and Candle," "A Streetcar Named Desire, "Dark of the Moon," and "The Sea Gull." And last January, when she became Marie Wallace on The Guiding Light, she was taking on the difficult role of a young artist who suddenly found herself going blind.

But, most of all, they have helped each other by "just being there." "Home," says Tim, "is where you can be who you are." But it's one thing being yourself, it's quite another being by yourself. It's nice to have someone to make plans with. Speaking of plans, Lynne says: "We'd like to go to Europe and we'd like to have a family."

It's also nice to have someone to play chess with. And, when you glance at the chess set, sitting on top of a handsome mosaic table, Lynne suddenly laughs. That table was almost the occasion of their one and only fight.

"That's my contribution to the do-it-yourself craze," Lynne explains. "I made it all myself, and gave it to Tim last Christmas as a present, I did all the work at a friend's house. Every day, I'd be out for a couple of hours, trying to get it done in time. And then I got sore. He wasn't the least bit concerned about where I was disappearing every day. Not once did he ask me where I'd been!"

But Tim was merely sticking to the team rule, to respect each other's privacy. As Lynne now understands: "This doesn't mean that we're less in love." It has made them more in love than ever.

Edited by DRW50

  • Member

May 1956 TV Radio Mirror. This was one of their award issues. James Lipton was runner up for most popular daytime actor, radio and TV (radio was won by Sandy Becker, TV by Terry O'Sullivan).

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  • Member

February 1956 Radio TV Mirror

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April 1956 Radio TV Mirror

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Edited by DRW50

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