Paula Drew (born Tamara Victoria Dubin; 1925or1926 [1] ) is an American former actress, singer, and commercial spokesperson.
Drew was born in Detroit [2] as Tamara Victoria Dubin, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Dubin, a factory superintendent and a nurse, respectively. [3] Her father was from Bessarabia, and her mother was from Russia. [4] She had two brothers. [5] Drew graduated from Fordson High School and, while working as a secretary for an attorney, she took night classes at Fordson Junior college. [6] She began "singing seriously" when she was 14 years old. [5]
Drew sang in the chorus of the Civic Opera Company in Detroit until the company's producer promoted her to leading roles. She went on to perform in St. Louis Municipal Opera productions, including portraying Julie in Show Boat and Huguette in The Vagabond King . [3]
Drew moved to New York City, where she attended the Juilliard School [6] and worked as a model for John Robert Powers's agency, [2] specializing in modeling "high-style, sophisticated type clothes". [6] A lingering interest in performing led her to a job as a dancer at the El Morocco night club in New York, where a talent scout saw her and convinced her to take a Warner Bros. screen test. [6] That test resulted in a contract in 1945 [1] and an accompanying change from her birth name to her stage name. [3]
When Warner Bros. dropped her option after a few months, Drew worked in a drugstore in Los Angeles. That was where producer Walter Wanger saw her, and she soon had another contract. [6] Soon afterward, however, a "box-office crash" caused reduction of payrolls at Hollywood studios. [7] Wanger "went out of business", and she returned to her Detroit home. [7] By early 1950, however, her screen test had resurfaced, impressing producers who saw it. Eventually she signed another contract and was working for MGM by January 1950. [7]
Drew appeared in the films Slightly Scandalous (1946), [8] The Vigilantes Return (1947), [9] Watch the Birdie (1950), and Danger Zone (1951). [9] Her work on television included portraying Sharon Richard, the girlfriend of the main character on Front Page Detective . [10]
In 1954 Drew moved to Buffalo, New York, where she began making Milk for Health radio and television commercials. That stint lasted for eight years [2] ending in 1961, [2] and led to her becoming a member of the New York governor's Increased-Use-of-Milk Commission. In that role she traveled the world making lectures about the dairy situation [2] and learning about dairy techniques and milk-drinking habits in other countries. [11]
Drew was vice-president of Nevil Enterprises Inc., a plastic-manufacturing company based in Buffalo, [12] for six years, doing public relations. After that, she was secretary to the president of Woldman Drug Stores for six years. In the late 1970s, she returned to television in commercials for Tops Friendly Markets. [13]
Drew married Dr. Ira M. Altshuler, a psychiatrist, on May 4, 1949, [14] in Bowling Green, Ohio. [15] Forty-three days later he sued for divorce. [3]
In Buffalo she was a member of the Allentown Village Society, Inc., which put on an annual art festival in the Allentown neighborhood of Buffalo. [16]
Susan Hayward was an Academy Award-winning American film actress, best known for her film portrayals of women that were based on true stories.
Joan Geraldine Bennett was an American stage, film, and television actress. She was one of three acting sisters from a show-business family. Beginning her career on the stage, Bennett appeared in more than 70 films from the era of silent films, well into the sound era. She is best remembered for her film noir femme fatale roles in director Fritz Lang's films—including Man Hunt (1941), The Woman in the Window (1944), and Scarlet Street (1945)—and for her television role as matriarch Elizabeth Collins Stoddard in the gothic 1960s soap opera Dark Shadows, for which she received an Emmy nomination in 1968.
WMYD is a television station in Detroit, Michigan, United States, affiliated with The CW. It is owned by the E. W. Scripps Company alongside ABC affiliate WXYZ-TV. Both stations share studios at Broadcast House on 10 Mile Road in Southfield, while WMYD's transmitter is located on Eight Mile Road in Oak Park.
Peggie Castle was an American actress who specialized in playing the "other woman" in B-movies. Castle was Miss Cheesecake in 1949.
Fordson High School is a secondary school located in Dearborn, Michigan, United States in Metro Detroit. It was completed in 1928 on a 15-acre (61,000 m2) parcel of land which was then the village of Fordson, named for Henry Ford and his son Edsel Ford. It is a part of Dearborn Public Schools.
Betty Jane Bierce, better known by her stage name Jane "Poni" Adams, was an American actress in radio, film, and television in the 1940s and 1950s.
Juanita Hall was an American musical theatre and film actress. She is remembered for her roles in the original stage and screen versions of the Rodgers and Hammerstein musicals South Pacific as Bloody Mary – a role that garnered her the Tony Award – and Flower Drum Song as Madame Liang.
Paula Stone was an American theater and motion pictures actress from New York City.
Jennifer Gaylor Rignold is an English television announcer and ballerina who was an on-screen BBC Children's TV continuity announcer for the BBC Television Service between 1949 and 1953.
Leslie Banning was an American film actress. She was sometimes credited as Leslye Banning.
The 1949 Tulsa Golden Hurricane football team represented the University of Tulsa during the 1949 college football season. In their fourth year under head coach Buddy Brothers, the Golden Hurricane compiled a 5–5–1 record, 1–2–1 against conference opponents, and finished in fifth place in the Missouri Valley Conference.
Teresa Mara Levis, better known as Teresa Celli, was an American lyric soprano who apprenticed at La Scala before achieving recognition in films such as The Asphalt Jungle (1950) and Black Hand (1950).
Events from the year 1950 in Michigan.
Ruth Collins Sharp Altshuler was an American philanthropist living in Dallas, Texas. The Dallas Morning News wrote that she helped raise tens of millions of dollars for charity. Altshuler was the first woman to serve or chair several boards, including the Salvation Army Dallas Advisory Board, the board of Goodwill Industries, and the chair of the Board of Trustees of Southern Methodist University. She was also inducted into the Texas Woman's Hall of Fame.
Fordson Island is a 8.4-acre (3.4 ha) artificial island in the River Rouge, in southeast Michigan. It was created by the Ford Motor Company in 1918, while dredging the River Rouge, and the land was donated to Springwells Township by Henry Ford. It eventually became part of the City of Dearborn, which became aware of its existence in 1980; since its creation, it has been home to liquor smugglers, industrial facilities, several residents, a marina, and numerous abandoned watercraft. By the mid-1980s, the island was mostly uninhabited; in the early 2000s numerous abandoned vessels were dumped on its shores.
Maureen Catherine Cannon was an American singer and actress.
Ruth M. Erb Hoffman was an American artist and sculptor, based in Buffalo, New York.
Ethel Barrymore Colt was an American actress and producer and a soprano who sang in more than 100 concerts in the United States, Canada, and South America. She was a member of the ninth generation of the Barrymore acting family. Her obituary in The Washington Post described her as "a versatile and talented singer, actress and producer, playing dramatic roles on Broadway and in summer stock and singing in grand opera, operetta, musical comedy and on the concert stage."
The Singing Lady is an American children's television program that was broadcast on ABC August 12, 1948 - August 6, 1950.