TV Radio Mirror (Jul - Dec 1957)

Record Details:

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MASON <■■; BSSE Home much t family by the sea is a haven of peace, after many adventures and ragedy. Here Raymond relaxes, entertains his friends, shares kes with nephew and niece, Frank Vitti and Phyllis Zi Physically, Raymond Burr fits Erie Stanley Gardner's description to a T. Emotionally, he has lived the lives of ten exciting men By PAULINE TOWNSEND When mystery fans all over the country turn their television sets to CBS channels for the debut of the network's longheralded Perry Mason series, they will see in the title role a man whose life has been as colorful, as adventure -packed as that of Erie Stanley Gardner's famed fictional attorney sleuth himself. His name is Raymond Burr. He is forty-one, his 185 pounds tightly stretched along a massive six-foot-two frame. Piercing blue eyes challenge you from beneath expressive, dark eyebrows. He controls his voice in conversation (otherwise, it would boom at you). About his long and varied life, he talks easily and confidently. "I never doubted that I would succeed," he says, after recounting a series of moments in his life when he (Continued on page 74) Food once almost cut short Burr's career — he enjoys eating, is an excellent chef, now raises much of his menu ingredients.