Marilyn Erskine | |
---|---|
Born | Rochester, New York, U.S. | April 24, 1926
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1929–1972 |
Spouses | |
Children | 2 |
Marilyn Erskine (born April 24, 1926) is an American actress who started performing at the age of three on radio, and has since appeared in radio, theater, film and television roles from the 1920s through the 1970s.
Erskine was born in Rochester, New York on April 24, 1926, and was in show business from early childhood.[1] Erskine married Hollywood producer and director Stanley Kramer in May 1945. The marriage was annulled two months later. She later remarried, to insurance executive Charles Curland in 1955, and had two children. Their home in Brentwood, California was featured in an article in the Fall 1958 issue of Architectural Digest.[2]
Erskine started her performing career at the age of three years, appearing on a local radio show in Buffalo, New York.[3] She also appeared on the nationwide CBS radio show Let's Pretend sometime between 1929 and 1937, where children played all the roles in adaptions of fairy tales and other children's stories.[3] She played Gail Carver in the soap opera Lora Lawton, which ran on NBC 1943-1950[4]: 206 , Jane Brown on Young Widder Brown, which ran on NBC 1938-1956,[4]: 361 and Cherry Martin in The Romance of Helen Trent, which ran on CBS 1933-1960.[4]: 289 Erskine performed the role of Jane Baxter in Orson Welles's Mercury Theatre on the Air adaptation of Seventeen (October 16, 1938).
In 1945, Erskine was a member of the cast of the syndicated comedy Keeping Up with Wigglesworth.[4]
As a teenager, she appeared in at least nine Broadway productions in New York City:
As an adult, she appeared in at least one Broadway production in New York City and several Off-Broadway plays:
Erskine appeared in several Hollywood movies in the early 1950s:
She played herself in an MGM documentary Challenge the Wilderness (1951), on the production problems faced while filming Westward the Women. She was also one of the narrators for the MGM documentary The Hoaxters (1953), a short history of Communism.
Erskine appeared in almost every anthology drama series of the Golden Age of Television, from General Electric Theater to Westinghouse Studio One to Science Fiction Theater to Lux Video Theater to Climax!, appearing in over fifty different productions on thirty different series from 1949 to 1962. In her later career, after 1962, she primarily played roles on westerns and crime dramas.
She was co-starred on the television series The Tom Ewell Show, playing Tom's wife, Frances Potter.[7] This sitcom ran from September 1960 through May 1961 on CBS. She was a co-presenter for the Short Subject Awards category of the 26th Annual Academy Awards in 1954, and appeared as herself in the last episode of The NBC Comedy Hour June 10, 1956.
She made two guest appearances on Perry Mason starring Raymond Burr. In 1964 she played Susan Pelham in "The Case of the Careless Kidnapper," and in 1966 she played Mirabel Corum in "The Case of the Unwelcome Well." Her last role on television was in 1972, in the Ironside TV series, also starring Burr.