TV Radio Mirror (Jan - Jun 1963)

Record Details:

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WJtty I htzkd to get '". ''"V '* 77T He just didn't like what the town was doing to his family — and to him. Grimly, Ernie Ford explained: "When your sons start thinking of you as a show-business personality rather than a father, you're in trouble." And so — even though it meant giving up a top-rated TV show — Ernie got his wife and two sons out of Hollywood last year. He found a brandnew ranch house set on some fifteen acres of rolling hill country near San Francisco, in a place called the Portola Valley. It's four hundred miles from Hollywood. "It feels like three thousand," Ernie says with relief. Although he's on TV again — and on a daily show, at that — he's arranged things so that he only has to work three days a week. The rest of the time he spends with Betty and their boys — Buck is twelve now, and Brion's nine. It's made all the difference in the world. "We've slowly become the Fords again," Ernie said. "We've got enough acreage now to raise cattle," he explained, "and Buck has a calf that he's raising for his project this year. The boy paid for it out of his own savings, and it's coming along pretty good." The fatherly pride was evident as he spoke. "He keeps his own books and pays his bills, and when he sells we'll see how he comes out." It was easy to see that Ernie confidently expected Buck to come out ahead. But then the whole family has come out ahead in (Continued on page 82) fflfai I % f^Ht It tl I I '■'■ t » if itum