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Gertrude Berg

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Occupation
  
Actress, screenwriter

Role
  
Actress

Years active
  
1929–1961

Spouse
  
Lewis Berg (m. 1918–1966)


Children
  
2

Books
  
Molly and me

Name
  
Gertrude Berg

Plays
  
Gertrude Berg FileGertrude Berg Molly Goldberg 1951JPG Wikimedia Commons

Full Name
  
Tillie Edelstein

Born
  
October 3, 1899 (
1899-10-03
)

Died
  
September 14, 1966, Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States

Movies and TV shows
  
The Goldbergs, Mrs. G. Goes to College, Milton Berle's Buick Hour #4

Similar People
  
Cedric Hardwicke, N Richard Nash, Dore Schary

487: Actress Gertrude Berg 'Molly Goldberg' Silver Medal


Mae Questel, Gertrude Berg, Mary Wickes--Gentleman Caller, 1962 TV


Gertrude Berg (October 3, 1899 – September 14, 1966) was an American actress, screenwriter and producer. A pioneer of classic radio, she was one of the first women to create, write, produce and star in a long-running hit when she premiered her serial comedy-drama The Rise of the Goldbergs (1929), later known as The Goldbergs. Her career achievements included winning a Tony Award and an Emmy Award, both for Best Lead Actress.

Contents

Gertrude Berg Gertrude Berg America Listen to Your Bighearted Jewish

Life and career

Gertrude Berg Gertrude Berg YooHoo Mrs Goldberg and the Re

Berg was born Tillie Edelstein in 1899 in the East Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City, to Jacob and Diana Edelstein, natives of Russia and England, respectively. Berg's chronically unstable mother, Dinah, grieving over the death of her young son, experienced a series of nervous breakdowns and later died in a sanitarium.

Gertrude Berg Gertrude Berg YooHoo Mrs Goldberg

Tillie, who lived with her family on Lexington Avenue, married Lewis Berg in 1918; they had two children, Cherney (1922–2003) and Harriet (1926–2003). She learned theater while producing skits at her father's Catskills Mountains resort in Fleischmanns, New York.

Gertrude Berg Gertrude Berg Travalanche

After the sugar factory where her husband worked burned down, she developed a semi-autobiographical skit, portraying a Jewish family in a Bronx tenement, into a radio show. Though the household had a typewriter, Berg wrote her script by hand, taking the pages this way to a long-awaited appointment at NBC. When the executive she was meeting with protested that he could not read what Berg had written, she read the script aloud to him. Her performance not only sold the idea for the radio program but also got Berg the job as the lead actress on the program she had written. Berg continued to write the show's scripts by hand in pencil for as long as the program was on the air.

Gertrude Berg Gertrude Berg Travalanche

On November 20, 1929, a 15-minute episode of The Rise of the Goldbergs was first broadcast on the NBC radio network. She started at $75 a week. Less than two years later, in the heart of the Great Depression, she let the sponsor propose a salary and was told, "Mrs. Berg, we can't pay a cent over $2,000 a week." Berg's husband, Lewis, who became a successful consulting engineer after the loss of his job which prompted her to write the initial radio script, refused to be photographed with his wife for publicity purposes, as he felt this was infringing on her success.

Berg became inextricably identified as Molly Goldberg, the bighearted matriarch of her fictitious Bronx family who moved to Connecticut as a symbol of Jewish-American upward mobility. She wrote practically all the show's radio episodes (more than 5000) plus a Broadway adaptation, Me and Molly (1948). It took considerable convincing, but Berg finally prevailed upon CBS to let her bring The Goldbergs to television in 1949. Early episodes portrayed the Goldberg family openly and personally struggling to adapt to American life. Just as Berg stated in her autobiography, she chose to depict her Jewish grandfather's worship to America and the new world in her first radio broadcast show. Her characters Molly, Jake, Sammy and Rosie emphasized her day to day stories of Jewish immigration to America.

Immigrant life and the Goldberg family struggle were familiar and relatable to many families during this point in American history. Radio seemed to lend a hand to new settlers and produced a common place to tie patriotism and families together. The program's victory is largely because of the familiar feelings of the American people portrayed in the program's scripts. The first season script was later published into a book form.

Berg won the first ever Emmy Award for Lead Actress in a Comedy Series her debut year on the network—her twentieth consecutive year of playing the role—and the show stayed in production for five years.

The Goldbergs ran into trouble in 1951, during the McCarthy Era. Co-star Philip Loeb (Molly's husband, patriarch Jake Goldberg) was one of the performers named in Red Channels: The Report of Communist Influence in Radio and Television and blacklisted as a result. Loeb resigned rather than cause Berg trouble. He reportedly received a generous severance package from the show, but it didn't prevent him from sinking into the depression that ultimately drove him to suicide in 1955. The Goldbergs returned a year after Loeb departed the show and continued until 1954, after which Berg also wrote and produced a syndicated film version. The show remained in syndicated reruns for another few years, after one year of production and 39 episodes (it aired on some stations as Molly). The series is currently seen on the Jewish Life Television (JLTV) cable network.

In 1959, Berg won the Tony Award for Best Actress for her performance in A Majority of One. She made guest appearances on The Martha Raye Show and The Pat Boone Chevy Showroom. On February 6, 1958, she appeared on NBC's The Ford Show, Starring Tennessee Ernie Ford. In 1961, Berg won the Sarah Siddons Award for her work in Chicago theatre. Berg also published a best-selling memoir, Molly and Me, in 1961.

That same year, she made a last stab at television success in the Four Star Television situation comedy, Mrs. G. Goes to College (retitled The Gertrude Berg Show at midseason). Her costars were Cedric Hardwicke, Mary Wickes and Marion Ross. Berg played a 62-year-old widow who enrolls in college. The actress was also the "mystery guest'" on the series What's My Line three times. The first time she appeared was May 9, 1954. She signed in as Gertrude Berg, however, the show used her alias of Molly Goldberg. She also appeared May 8, 1960, and October 1, 1961.

Berg was also a songwriter. Country music singer Patsy Cline sang Berg's composition "That Wonderful Someone" on Cline's 1957 debut album.

Biographies

A biography of Berg, Something on My Own: Gertrude Berg and American Broadcasting, 1929–1956, by Glenn D. Smith, Jr. (Syracuse University Press) appeared in 2007. Aviva Kempner's 2009 documentary, Yoo-Hoo, Mrs. Goldberg, deals with Berg's career, and to an extent, her personal life.

Death

Berg died of heart failure on September 14, 1966, aged 66, at Doctors Hospital in Manhattan. She is buried at Clovesville Cemetery in Fleischmanns, New York. Her husband, Lewis, died in 1985 at age 87.

References

Gertrude Berg Wikipedia