- Arlene Francis
Infobox actor
name = Arlene Francis
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birthname = Arlene Francis Kazanjian
birthdate = birth date|1907|10|20|mf=y
birthplace =Boston, Massachusetts
deathdate = death date and age|2001|5|31|1907|10|20|mf=y
deathplace =San Francisco, California
othername =
yearsactive =
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tonyawards =Arlene Francis (born Arline Francis Kazanjian;
October 20 1907 -May 31 2001 ) was an American actress,radio talk show host, andgame show panelist. She is known for her long-standing role as a panelist on thetelevision game show "What's My Line? ", on which she regularly appeared for twenty-five years, from 1950 through the mid-1970s. Always dressed and coiffed meticulously, Arlene invariably wore her trademark simple gold necklace with heart pendant.Heritage and early life
Francis was born on
October 20 ,1907 inBoston, Massachusetts , the daughter of Leah (née Davis) and Aram Kazanjian. [ [http://www.filmreference.com/film/10/Arlene-Francis.html Arlene Francis Biography (1908-2001)] ] Her Armenian father was studying art inParis at age 16 when he learned that both his parents were dead in one of theHamidian massacres perpetrated by theOttoman Empire inAnatolia between 1894 and 1896. (Genocide committed by the Ottoman Empire was unknown to many Americans for nearly a century.) He then immigrated to the United States and became a portrait photographer, opening his own studio inBoston in the early 20th century. He was an early practitioner of body paint, often photographing young women after painting on them. Later in life, when his daughter was at the height of her fame, Mr. Kazanjian painted canvasses of dogwoods, "rabbits in flight" and other forces of nature, selling them at auction in New York. [ Pages 11 to 13 in "Arlene Francis: A Memoir" by Arlene Francis with Florence Rome. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1978. ]"I think I was about seven years old," Arlene, an only child, wrote in her 1978 autobiography, "when Father decided that New York offered greater opportunities for success, and we moved from Boston into that flat [in
Washington Heights, Manhattan ] . It was a good move professionally, and when he decided to specialize in children's photographs, he became very successful indeed, one of the best known in his field." [ Page 14 in "Arlene Francis: A Memoir" by Arlene Francis with Florence Rome. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1978. ] Except for sojourns in the Los Angeles area, Arlene remained a New Yorker after she "was about seven years old" until her son moved her to aSan Francisco nursing home in 1993. [ Liz Smith reported Arlene's cross-country move in Liz's New York Newsday column in 1993. ]Career
After attending
Finch College , Francis had a broad and varied career as an entertainer. She was an accomplished actress with 25 Broadway plays to her credit, from "La Gringa" in 1928 to "Don't Call Back" in 1975. She also performed in many local theatre andoff-Broadway plays.Francis was a well known
New York City radio personality, having hosted several radio programs, including a long-running midday chat show on WOR-AM. In the 1940s, she emceed a network radio game show, "Blind Date," which she also hosted on television from 1949 to 1952. She was one of the regular contributors toNBC Radio 's "Monitor" in the 1950s and 1960s.Francis was a regular panelist on the game show "What's My Line?" throughout almost its entire network run on
CBS from 1950 to 1967, and she also appeared in the show's revival as a syndicated show the following year. She joined the original show on its second episode in 1950 and remained a panelist until the end of the syndicated version of the program in 1975. The original show, which featured guests whose occupation, or "line," the panelists were to guess, became one of the classic television game shows, noted for the urbanity of its host and panelists. Francis also appeared on many other game shows, including "Match Game ", "Password" and other programs produced byMark Goodson andBill Todman .Francis was a pioneer for women on television, one of the first women to host a program that was not musical or dramatic. From 1954 to 1957 she was host and editor-in-chief of "Home,"
NBC 's ambitious hour-long daytime magazine program oriented toward women, which was conceived by network presidentPat Weaver as a complement to the network's "Today" and "Tonight" programs.Newsweek magazine put her on its cover as "the first lady of television." She also hosted "Talent Patrol" in the mid 1950s.She acted in several films, debuting in the role of a prostitute in "Murders in the Rue Morgue" (1932). (She got that role after traveling to Los Angeles with her mother, who had a friend who knew
David Selznick very well. Francis' only acting experience at that point was in a small Shakespearean production in the convent school from which she had recently graduated. Her "La Gringa" on Broadway might have preceded that first trip to Hollywood, but she omitted this theatrical "debut" from her autobiography entirely. [ Pages 18 - 19 in "Arlene Francis: A Memoir" by Arlene Francis with Florence Rome. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1978. ] )In the 1960s, Arlene Francis appeared in "
One, Two, Three " (1961), directed byBilly Wilder and filmed on location inMunich , "The Thrill of It All " (1963), and in the television version of the play "Laura" (1968), which she had played on stage several times. Her final film performance was in the Billy Wilder film "Fedora" (1978).Francis wrote an
autobiography in 1978 entitled "Arlene Francis: A Memoir" with help from a longtime friend, Florence Rome. She also wrote "That Certain Something: The Magic of Charm" in 1960 and a book/cookbook, "No Time for Cooking," in 1961.She died on
May 31 2001 in San Francisco at the age of 93 after a long bout withAlzheimer's disease andcancer .Personal life
Francis was married twice, first to Neil Agnew from 1935 to 1945. He worked in the Sales Department of
Paramount Pictures , which necessitated frequent business trips during which Francis stayed home alone. According to the "Los Angeles Times " obituary of Francis (6/02/01), that marriage ended in divorce. In her 1978 autobiography, she writes poignantly of this experience. "Having made the actual physical break, it was easier for me than I had thought to explain to Neil some of what I felt, what I had been feeling for so long a time. Not all, of course. There were areas which I couldn't discuss even then, which would be too hurtful to him, I felt. I saw him fairly often, and he courted me as though we had just met, but I was building up strengths which enabled me to resist not only his blandishments (including a lovely little house which he bought in New York as an enticement to get me to change my mind) but those of my parents, who also would have given anything to see me go back to the status which had been quo." [ Page 59 of "Arlene Francis: A Memoir" by Arlene Francis with Florence Rome. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1978. ]Francis' second marriage was to actor/producer
Martin Gabel from 1946 until his death onMay 22 ,1986 , of a heart attack. He was a frequent guest panelist on "What's My Line?". The couple, who often exchanged endearments on the show, had a son,Peter Gabel , bornJanuary 28 1947 , a law academic formerly associated withNew College of California in San Francisco and currently associate editor of "Tikkun". He was at his mother's side when she died.References
External links
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9505E6DC1F3CF932A35755C0A9679C8B63 Arlene Francis, Actress and TV Panelist, dies at 93]
* [http://www.arlenefrancis.com/index3.html A Tribute To Arlene Francis]
*imdb|0290086
*findagrave|5860864|Arlene FrancisPersondata
NAME= Francis, Arlene
ALTERNATIVE NAMES= Kazanjian, Arlene Francis
SHORT DESCRIPTION=Actor
DATE OF BIRTH= 1907-10-20
PLACE OF BIRTH=Boston, Massachusetts
DATE OF DEATH= 2001-5-31
PLACE OF DEATH=San Francisco, California
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