Radio-TV mirror (July-Dec 1954)

Record Details:

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No other deodorant gives you so much... 3«55^*?Si£? '*& .--£%&-■ plus tax/Af an 5 &W cent stores • STOPS PERSPIRATION ODOR .... instantly • HANDY STICK FORM .... no mess, no waste • SURE PROTECTION, all day long • THRIFTY. ... big stick lasts for months • GENTLE, HARMLESS to skin or clothes • DAINTY greaseless, never sticky • FRAGRANT and luxurious as a lipstick ...for so little! Information Booth Young For His Age Dear Editor: I have heard that Eli Mintz is much younger than the role he plays as Uncle David in The Goldbergs. Can you tell me something about him? A. G., Kearny, N. Y. Austrian-born Eli Mintz, who plays the sixty-five-year-old Uncle David in The Goldbergs, is actually in his early forties, but he has been portraying old men since he was fourteen. One of ten children of a poor tailor who also loved the drama and possessed a fine singing voice, Eli was born Edward Satz, then changed his name to Eli Mintz to avoid trading on the reputation of his brother, the late Ludwig Satz, a leading figure in the Jewish theater in the United States. While struggling for a stage career in Europe, Eli worked as a bookkeeper, attended a school for waiters, set up his own newspaper kiosk, and sold rare first editions of books. He arrived in this country in 1927 and went to work as a pleater. He was singled out of 200 aspirants at an audition given by actorimpresario Maurice Schwartz and then began appearing in New York's Second Avenue theaters. Later, he' acted on radio and toured the country several times. At the end of one tour, he found himself in Los Angeles, where he worked for two and a half years as a presser in a dress factory until he had saved enough money to return to New York. Then he met Gertrude Berg and was cast as Uncle David in her Broadway production of "Molly and Me." When the beloved Goldberg family was brought to television, Eli remained with them. He is married now and lives in New York with his wife and their eight-yearold daughter. Eli Mintz Marvin Kaplan Bard Of Brooklyn Dear Editor: I would like to know more about Marvin Kaplan who plays Alfred Prinzmetal on Meet Millie over CBS-TV. E. W., Holcomb, N. Y. At twenty-five, Marvin Kaplan, who never intended to be an actor, is a veteran of ten movies and several plays. Born in Brooklyn, Marvin entered New York University as a pre-med student, planning to follow in the path of his doctor-father. He transferred to Brooklyn College, then taught English long enough to know he "hated it." After working as a bookkeeper and a script reader, Marvin headed for the West Coast where, to help further his writing ambitions, he organized a little theater group at the University of Southern California. Katharine Hepburn saw him in a Moliere drama and cast him in a supporting role in her film, "Adam's Rib." Marvin's been an actor ever since and particularly enjoys playing Millie's poet friend because it's the closest he's come so far to his dream of being a writer. Change Of Mind Dear Editor: I would like to know more about Ned Wever, who plays Dr. Anthony Loring on NBC's Young Widder Brown. C. F., Aliquippa, Pa. When Ned Wever was offered his first radio acting assignment twenty-one years ago, he had completed almost ten years on Broadway and had close to thirty shows to his credit. He turned down the radio job, then changed his mind a year later to go on to twenty years of radio-acting fame. In all that time, he went only one week (Continued on page 18)