TV PILOTS/DEVELOPMENT SCORECARD: Follow
the action during upfront season
But Davis, who
died Sunday at age 88, was active in TV, film and stage for more than 15 years
before she donned the blue uniform to become housekeeper Alice Nelson on the
enduring ABC sitcom. When “Brady Bunch” began, Davis received equal billing
with stars Florence Henderson and Robert Reed, who were lesser known to TV.
SEE ALSO: Ann B.
Davis, Alice on ‘Brady Bunch,’ Dies at 88
Here are a few
things most “Brady Bunch” fans probably don’t know about Davis ’ career, gleaned from the pages of
Variety.
Always a cut up: Davis hosted the ninth annual American Cinema
Editors awards fete at the Beverly Hills Hotel in 1959.
In 1960 she made
her Broadway debut replacing Carol Burnett as the star of “Once Upon a
Mattress.”
After she won her
second consecutive Emmy in 1959, Davis ’ twin sister Harriet wired her the
message: “One of us was bound to have twins.”
In 1963, she
starred in pilot, “Get With It,” that was a spinoff of the NBC military-school
comedy “McKeever & the Colonel.” The “wacky WACS” project, as Variety
dubbed it, didn’t get picked up but it did send Davis to the hospital during filming for a
strained arch due to “prolonged marching scenes,” as she told Army Archerd.
She did an awful
lot of regional theater, night club dates and summer stock in the 1960s.
Milwaukee, Palm Beach, Indianapolis, Chicago, Porterville Calif., San Diego,
Traverse City, Mich., Harrison, Maine, Erie, Pa. — Davis was all over the map.
She opened a stint
in “Arsenic and Old Lace” at Santa Barbara ’s Lobero Theater on the same day her
father died in 1964.
She co-starred
with John Forsythe, later of “Dynasty” fame, and Elsa Lanchester, aka “Bride of
Frankenstein,” in the short-lived 1965-66 NBC comedy “The John Forsythe Show,”
about an Air Force major who inherits a girls school.
In 1969 she
co-starred with Louis Gossett Jr., William Windom and Bill Bixby in a
“Hollywood Television Theater” one-shot production of the Hugh Wheeler play
“Big Fish, Little Fish” for L.A. pubcaster KCET.
“The Brady Bunch”
was originally titled “The Brady Brood.” Davis ’ casting notice in the show ran in the
Oct.3, 1968, edition of Daily Variety, which misspelled Robert Reed’s surname
as “Reid.” And one bonus
item:
In the
spring of 1969, a few months before “Brady Bunch”
premiered, Davis co-starred in the edgy satire “The Chronicles of Hell” by
playwright Michel de Ghelderode for L.A. Repertory Theater.
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