View Full Version : Actress Gale Storm Dies at 87


Zoneboy
06-28-2009, 04:43 PM
Link (http://www.victoriaadvocate.com/news/2009/jun/28/bc-ca-obit-storm1st-ld-writethru/?entertainment&national-entertainment)


LOS ANGELES (AP) — Gale Storm, whose wholesome appearance and perky-personality made her one of early television's biggest stars on "My Little Margie" and "The Gale Storm Show," has died at age 87.

Storm, who had been in failing health in recent years, died Saturday at a convalescent hospital in Danville, said her son, Peter Bonnell.

Before landing the starring role in "My Little Margie" in 1952, Storm starred in numerous B movies opposite such stars as Roy Rogers, Eddie Albert and Jackie Cooper. After her last TV series, "The Gale Storm Show," ended in 1960 she went on to a successful singing career while continuing to make occasional TV appearances.

Storm was a Texas high schooler named Josephine Owaissa Cottle when she entered a talent contest for a radio show called "Gateway to Hollywood" in 1940. She was brought to Los Angeles for the finals, where her wholesome vivacity won over the radio audience and she was awarded a movie contract.

The contest's male winner was a lanky would-be actor named Lee Bonnell, who would later become her husband.

Given the quirky name Gale Storm, she went from contracts with RKO to Monogram to Universal, appearing in such low-budget films as "Where Are Your Children?" with Cooper and "Tom Brown's School Days" with Freddie Bartholomew.

She was often cast in westerns as the girl the cowboy left behind, and appeared in such B-movie oaters as "The Dude Goes West" with Albert, "The Kid from Texas" with Audie Murphy and "The Texas Rangers" with George Montgomery.

"I was really scared of horses," she admitted in 2000. "I only rode them because that's what you had to do."

She appeared in three Republic westerns with Rogers and recalled that his horse Trigger did what he could to cause her trouble. As she would smile and ride alongside Rogers while the king of the cowboys crooned a song, Trigger (out of camera range) would lean over and bite her horse's neck.

With her movie roles diminishing in the early 1950s, Storm followed the path of many fading movie stars of the day and moved on to television.

"My Little Margie" debuted on CBS as a summer replacement for "I Love Lucy" in 1952. It quickly became an audience favorite and moved to its own slot on NBC that fall.

The premise was standard sitcom fare: Charles Farrell was a business executive and eligible widower, Storm was his busybody daughter who protected him from predatory women.

The year after "My Little Margie" ended its 126-episode run in 1955, she moved on to "The Gale Storm Show," which lasted until 1960. This time she played Susanna Pomeroy, a trouble-making social director on a luxury liner.

Storm, who had taken vocal lessons, sang on her second series, and three of her records became best sellers: "I Hear You Knocking," ''Teenage Prayer" and "Dark Moon."

She appeared only sporadically on TV after "The Gale Storm Show," guest starring on such programs as "Burke's Law," ''The Love Boat" and "Murder, She Wrote."

Her fans were surprised to read in her 1980 autobiography, "I Ain't Down Yet," that she was an alcoholic.

"I had hidden it socially, never drank before a performance," she said. After being treated in three hospitals, she found one that helped her break the habit.

Born April 5, 1922, in Bloomington, Tex., Storm was only 13 months when her father died. Her mother supported five children by taking in sewing.

A lifelong Christian, Storm and Bonnell named their sons after the Biblical figures Philip, Peter and Paul and their daughter after her TV character Susanna.

Bonnell died in 1987, and in 1988 Storm married former TV executive Paul Masterson. He died in 1996.

Mr. Television
06-28-2009, 04:49 PM
Oh God...you have to be kidding me? What is it with all these deaths? Gale Storm was really a TV Legend. It's too bad her shows aren't rerunned that much or she'd be more popular. I haven't seen MLM since the early '80's. I've never seen The Gale Storm Show.. R.I.P. Miss Storm. :(

Scoobiedoo30
06-28-2009, 04:59 PM
R.I.P.

MickeyMac
06-28-2009, 05:39 PM
I got a chance to see My Little Margie not too long ago and was wondering what Gale Storm was up to.

The bad news continues. R.I.P. Hopefully this is it for a while. Too many people died this week.

DLevine2
06-28-2009, 05:42 PM
There's been too many deaths the last week of the month of June.

R.I.P.- Gale:( :rip:

catlover79
06-28-2009, 06:28 PM
:rip:

dakert
06-28-2009, 10:16 PM
RIP Gale Storm

Marvo301
06-28-2009, 11:11 PM
:rip: Gale Storm. I remember the Cunningham family on Happy Days gathering around their television to watch "My Little Margie".

Mr. Television
06-28-2009, 11:13 PM
I've been listening to some of her songs over on youtube. She had a very nice voice.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RSkBll8bFs8&feature=related

catlover79
06-29-2009, 08:40 AM
I'll have to check out those DVDs. She was a very pretty lady.

tv star collector
06-29-2009, 01:44 PM
She was a very funny actress and an excellent vocalist. I have one of her
gospel albums. She is missed by all who have seen (or heard) her work.

cmjohnson87
06-29-2009, 03:02 PM
There is also a delightful 7 part interview from 1999 with Gale Storm on youtube that is an utter delight to watch.

Jude The Obscure
06-29-2009, 04:03 PM
Yes, indeed her death is sad and hopefully her work will find someway of keeping her legacy alive.

I remember watching Margie on the old CBN cable network. I have never seen The Gale Storm Show--from what I read on GS's website, the shows may no longer exist in a playable state. That is sad too.

comedyfreak
06-30-2009, 05:53 AM
That's really sad the classic stars are passing away.:(

ponytail
06-30-2009, 06:35 AM
That is sad. I remember watching her show. I always thought she was such a pretty woman.

TV_on_the_Porch
06-30-2009, 03:51 PM
The Gale Storm Show has seen the light of day once in the last 30 years that I'm aware of: WKBD 50 in Detroit did their Celebration of Television lineup for a couple of summers in the late 70s. The Gale Storm Show was part of the 1978 edition if I remember correctly, being referred to as "the Love Boat of the 50s" which it really was.

MickeyMac
06-30-2009, 05:23 PM
The Gale Storm Show has seen the light of day once in the last 30 years that I'm aware of: WKBD 50 in Detroit did their Celebration of Television lineup for a couple of summers in the late 70s. The Gale Storm Show was part of the 1978 edition if I remember correctly, being referred to as "the Love Boat of the 50s" which it really was.


We used to get WKBD here when I was a kid but in 1978 I think we only had five stations and that wasnt one of them.

bossradio93
06-30-2009, 07:32 PM
We used to get WKBD here when I was a kid but in 1978 I think we only had five stations and that wasnt one of them.


I remember seeing My Little Margie Saturday (or Sunday) nights at 7:00pm on KBSC-TV (now KVEA) Channel 52, like WKBD, was a Kaiser Broadcasting-owned station and I haven't seen the series in over 30 years.

Probably WKBD didn't have much of a strong signal back then since most UHF stations at the time operated at 200kw or almost up to 1,000kw compared to many operating at 2MW (Megawatts*) or more starting in the early to mid '70s.

*One kilowatt = 1,000 watts. One megawatt = 1 million watts.

TV_on_the_Porch
07-02-2009, 12:42 AM
WKBD was carried on many cable systems, including the one in my town (across the state) from the beginning in 1976 until it was dropped for some reason sometime in the early 80s.