Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Betty Luster

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Years active
  
1938–1956

Movies
  
Mr. B Natural

Died
  
May 25, 2011

Role
  
Television actress

Name
  
Betty Luster


Betty Luster wwwmst3kinfocomwpcontentuploads201110luste

Spouse
  
Edmund “Ned” Prentis III (m. ?–1997)

People also search for
  
Edmund “Ned” Prentis III, Marvin David, Phil Patton

Betty Luster (27 April 1922 – 25 May 2011) was an American television actress, singer and dancer, whose career was active in the 1940s and 1950s. The role for which she is best remembered today was at one time her most obscure: her portrayal of Mr. B Natural in the short film of the same name, made famous after its inclusion in a 1991 episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000.

Contents

Betty Luster Betty Luster profile Famous people photo catalog

Career

Betty Luster was the winner of the first Miss Lake Mowhawk contest in 1937.

Her earliest known stage performances were as a showgirl with the Dorchester Hale dance troupe in London in October 1938. She made a series of appearances on BBC television in 1939.

Later she was a dancing girl in the 1940 Broadway production of Irving Berlin's Louisiana Purchase. and she was a chorus girl at the Beachcomber in Miami Beach in 1946 and/or 1947. In the late 1940s, she performed on the operatic stage in Philadelphia.

Luster served as co-hostess of the 1950 CBS game show Sing It Again, a progenitor to Name That Tune, wherein contestants would attempt to identify songs from just a few notes. Her other television appearance was as a regular on the 1951 NBC variety show Seven at Eleven.

Luster again appeared on Broadway as "Sebena" in a production of The Wayward Saint. The show ran at the Cort Theatre from February 17 to March 6, 1955.

Mr. B Natural

In 1956, Luster took the title role in a film sponsored by the musical instrument manufacturer C.G. Conn to promote to schoolchildren an interest in music. Mr. B Natural told the story of a "hep pixie" who helps junior high school student Buzz Turner awaken the "spirit of music" inside of him, through the purchase and practice on a Conn brand trumpet.

The short remained an obscure classroom reel until 1991 when it was brought to the attention of HBO, which was seeking content for its new cable network, Comedy Central. Mr. B Natural was licensed for use by Best Brains' movie-spoofing vehicle Mystery Science Theater 3000, and was broadcast nationally on November 30, 1991 accompanying the feature War of the Colossal Beast. Due to this exposure, the short, and the Mr. B Natural character, have become recognized as kitsch icons.

Mr. B Natural is Luster's last known role. Luster retired from dancing after her marriage to Edmund Astley "Ned" Prentis, III (b. New York City, 12 September 1923, d. Delray, FL, 11 August 1997) and she "joined him at becoming an expert in big-game fishing, big-game hunting and world-class croquet."

References

Betty Luster Wikipedia