Sarajane Wells (born Sara Jane Wells, December 8, 1913[1][2] - January 10, 1987[3]) was an award-winning American actress who was active in old-time radio and later became an educator.
Wells was a native of Owensboro, Kentucky,[4] the daughter of Clark and Martha Wells.[5] When she was young, she and her family moved to Chicago.[4] There she took classes in acting and attended Senn High School.[3] She was designated as one of four outstanding seniors at Senn, where her activities included being a member of the Senn Players and the Honor Society.[6] For two years she studied at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago,[3] and she graduated from Northwestern University in 1938. She acted on radio while she was a student,[4] and she performed with the Players' Guild of Evanston.[7]
Wells moved to Hollywood in the 1940s, but after the growth of television resulted in the elimination of serial programming on radio, she returned to Chicago. She worked for the Chicago Historical Society, first as an associate and later as its director of education. Wells's efforts for the society increased activities for young people, particularly with hands-on exhibits and programs oriented to children.[3] Those activities included Museum Mornings on Saturdays during the school year[13] and weekly summer programs that dramatized people and events from history and literature.[14] She also provided narration to accompany many exhibits.[3]
Wells was educational consultant for filmstrips about Chicago for the Society for Visual Education and the International Film Bureau.[15]
Personal life and death
Wells was involved in a variety of civic activities in Chicago, including being chair of the Old Town Bal Masque, the Old Town art Center, and the School of the Old Town Art Center. She was a member of the boards of the Lincoln Park Conservation Association and the Old Town Triangle Association.[3]
Wells was married to Oliver Mahan, a sales manager for American Airlines.[12] On March 12, 1942, she married actor Dolph Nelson in Chicago.[16] She died from complications of Alzheimer's disease on January 10, 1987, in a nursing home in Chicago, aged 73.[3]
↑ "United States Social Security Death Index," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J18B-L31: 9 January 2021), Sarajane Wells, Jan 1987; citing U.S. Social Security Administration, Death Master File, database (Alexandria, Virginia: National Technical Information Service, ongoing).
↑ "Marriages". Billboard. April 11, 1942. p.28. Retrieved March 3, 2023.
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