Radio-TV mirror (July-Dec 1954)

Record Details:

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rare occasion indeed when Arnold and I can get David, Deborah and "Ihurber" to sit so stil Neither of us likes the other to wear hats. MM arriage can be fun He may be brash on the Berle show, but Arnold was really a bashful suitor — and proved to be the most considerate husband in the world 32 Our treasured moments are simple ones: Searching for ducks in the brook near home; telling funny stories and making big promises to encourage eating; and (right) our fondest treasure, Bessie— Mrs. William Hand— the children's nurse. By MRS. ARNOLD STANG Considering that my husband, Arnold Stang, makes his living as a comedian, I suppose it was . not so suprising that, when he introduced me to his mother, her first words were, "Oh, yes. You're the girl who cries at the train!" Although I am no longer classed as a perennial weeper, that statement held a lot of truth for too long a time. But, in order to explain, I'll have to go back eight years to when Arnold and I first met. It was the summer of 1946 and I was a reporter on the Brooklyn Eagle. I had arranged to interview "Mr." Stang and, after he met me at the office, we went to lunch and, over chicken croquettes and iced coffee, I got all the necessary particulars about Arnold Stang, comedian. (We (Continued on page 89) Arnold is seen on The Buick-Berle Show, over NBC-TV, every other Tuesday, 8 P.M. EST, for the Buick Div. of General Motors. Don't let Arnold and Milton Berle fool you with their arguing on TV . . . they're really the best of friends. Our home-which we're still remodeling-is truly our castle, the source of our happiest moments