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House Jameson

House Baker Jameson (December 17, 1902 – April 23, 1971)[1] was an American actor in the era of old-time radio and early television.

House Jameson
November 1944 photo from the radio program The Aldrich Family. From left: Dick Jones (Henry Aldrich), Katherine Raht (Mrs. Aldrich) and House Jameson (Mr. Aldrich).
BornDecember 17, 1902
Died (aged 68)
OccupationActor
Known forPlaying Sam Aldrich in The Aldrich Family
Spouse(s)Edith Taliaferro (1928(?) - 1958, her death)
Elizabeth Mears(? - 1971, his death)

Early years edit

Jameson was a native of Austin, Texas. He was named for Edward M. House, a political figure who was a friend of the family.[2] He graduated from Columbia University.[3] Jameson said that he knew at age 5 that he wanted to be an actor, when an aunt, who raised him after his father died, took him to see a performance of The Shepherd King. Jameson told TV Guide that after the family returned home, he "absolutely refused to go to bed until the family rustled up some costumes and re-enacted the play."[4]

Radio edit

Jameson broke into radio in the early 1930s, as an announcer with WEVD. Jameson admired a WEVD announcer named Roland Bradley in Chicago, and wrote him a letter telling him so. This led to a friendship and an invitation to occasionally pinch-hit as an announcer. Bradley left WEVD, and in 1934, Jameson was named chief announcer and dramatic director.[5][6]

Jameson soon became known for his leading roles in Renfrew of the Mounted and Crime Doctor.[3] Renfrew was an adventure story based on the novels and stories by Laurie York Erskine, and was aimed at a juvenile audience. Jameson played Inspector Douglas Renfrew, a Canadian Mountie, from 1936 to 1940.[7] The show was so popular at one point that, after a single offer of a photograph of Jameson in full Renfrew regalia, it received 17,000 requests.[8] In an episode of Behind the Mike, Jameson recounted the case of a boy who recovered from a serious illness after receiving a telegram and an autographed photo from "Renfrew." The boy's brother had contacted Jameson at home to ask for his assistance.[9]

Jameson appeared on Crime Doctor from 1940 to 1947, taking over the lead role of Dr. Benjamin Ordway (replacing Everett Sloane) in 1944.[10]

Jameson's best-known role was as father Sam Aldrich in the comedy The Aldrich Family.[4] In January 1953, newspaper columnist Richard Kleiner wrote about House Jameson, who played Mr. Aldrich in the radio comedy, "Mr. Jameson, a handsome, white-haired gentleman with a handsome white-haired mustache, is making a career out of being father to a perennial high school junior called Henry Aldrich."[11] He played that role on the radio program 1939 - 1953.[1] In 1968, Jameson noted that the show was popular with younger children and adults but teenagers did not like the show. Jameson said that working on the show was "the happiest acting experience" he ever had and he still missed it. He said that there was never any personality conflicts among the actors, crediting the leadership of its star, Ezra Stone. Jameson and Stone indicated that they developed a father/son relationship in real-life that continued after the show ended.[12]

Jameson's other roles in radio programs included those shown in the table below.

Jameson was also heard on Columbia Presents Corwin,[16] So This Is Radio,[16]: 622  Behind the Mike,[17] Americans At Work;[18] On Broadway, [19] Canary Christmas,[20] Eno Crime Clues,[21] Hilda Hope, M.D.,[13]: 151  Snow Village,[22] Betty and Bob,[23] Our Gal Sunday,[24] Mystery Theatre,[25] By Kathleen Norris,[13]: 57 Grand Central Station,[26] This Day Is Ours,[27] The Jack Benny Show,[28] A Special Announcement,[29] World Service,[30] Brave Tomorrow,[31] Words Without Music,[32] Voice of the Army,[33] New York Philharmonic Orchestra,[34] Cresta Blanca Carnival,[35] Ellen Randolph;[36] Nazi Eyes On Canada,[37] This Is War,[38] The Nightingale and the Rose (as Narrator),[39] American Portrait,[40] Building for Peace,[41] FBI In Peace and War,[42] Day of Reckoning (play),[43] Quaker World Service,[44] Colgate Theater of Romance,[45] Quick as a Flash,[10] The Radio Edition of the Bible,[46] The Eternal Light,[47] Radio Playhouse,[48] Hilltop House,[49] Pepper Young's Family,[50] Mrs. Wiggins Cabbage Patch, Portia Faces Life, The Kate Smith Show,[12] Suspense, X Minus One, and Cavalcade of America.[51]

Jameson was "greatly admired" by writer Norman Corwin, who "found him to be a reliable performer, a man of modesty, who had a sense of dignity, without being stiff." Jameson appeared in a number of Corwin's productions, as actor and narrator, including The Plot to Overthrow Christmas (as Santa Claus), They Fly Through the Air, Seems Radio Is Here To Stay, There Will Be Time Later, Log of the R-77, A Soliloquy to Balance the Budget, Descent of the Gods (as Apollo), Fragments From a Lost Cause, America at War, and A Program to Be Opened in a Hundred Years. In They Fly and Soliloquy, Jameson was the sole performer.[52] Corwin wrote several scripts with Jameson in mind. Jameson's voice was described as "a magnificently mellow instrument[,]" and Jameson was said to be "a master of language cadences" and to have "a fine gift for irony." The roles Corwin wrote for Jameson "tend[ed] toward an elaborate style, with an Olympian quality about them."[53] In a January 27, 1969, letter to Jameson, Corwin stated "[i]f I was the father of those breakthrough plays, you were the godfather. There might have been others who could have played Santa in The Plot as well as you, though for the life of me I cannot think who; but nobody - nobody- could have carried They Fly as you did." Corwin said They Fly was the play that made the biggest difference in his life, and told Jameson "[f]or that service alone, I would be eternally grateful to you. But it was, happily, not alone." Corwin told Jameson that he was a "rock." Corwin stated that "[k]nowing your rich mind and the grace and power of your art, I was emboldened to write for you as a composer writes for an instrumentalist whose range and qualities broaden his own by giving him the confidence to reach high."[54]

In 1943, Variety named Jameson as one of the top earners in radio, making $50,000 or more, per year.[55]

Jameson stated that he left the stage to work in radio because of the easier work schedule that enabled him to spend more time with his wife on their farm in Connecticut. He noted the minimal amount of time required to rehearse and perform a radio program, enabling him to work on several shows per week, and still keep a normal schedule.[56] Jameson estimated that he had done thousands of radio shows, many of which he had forgotten.[12]

Stage edit

Jameson made his first Broadway appearance in 1924, when he was cast as a spear carrier in the Theatre Guild production of Saint Joan.[57] Also in 1924, Jameson appeared on Broadway in the Grand Street Follies, satirizing Will Rogers. He was chosen for the role because of his Texas background. Jameson stated, however, that "[he] was a big-city boy from Texas and had hardly ever seen a lariat before." He said that he "rushed home, used a clothesline and practiced spinning a rope all night," to prepare for the part.[4] In 1925, Jameson co-starred in the original Garrick Gaieties, a music review by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart.[58] One of the sketches was a burlesque of They Knew What They Wanted, with Jameson playing Tony and impersonating Richard Bennett (actor).[59]

Later in 1925, Jameson toured for a year in the Julia Arthur production of Saint Joan, playing the role of Gilles De Rais. Hi Jameson then spent nearly a year in Chicago, and then joined the Toronto Theatre Guild in 1927/1928 for a similar length of time. In Toronto, he played in productions of A Kiss for Cinderella, The Second Mrs. Tanqueray, Diplomacy, What Every Woman Knows, Bunty Pulls the Strings, and Quality Street.[60] Several of the plays starred Jameson's wife, Edith Taliaferro, who was already a well-known stage actress, while Jameson appeared in supporting roles.[61]

For the 1928/1929 season, Jameson was a member of Minneapolis' Bainbridge Players. Taliaferro was a guest star during the same season.[62] In Minneapolis, Jameson and Taliaferro appeared in The Garden of Eden,[63] What Every Woman Knows,[64] Little Old New York,[65] Her Cardboard Lover, [66] A Kiss for Cinderella,[67] Broadway,[68] Wanted,[69] Two Girls Wanted,[70] The Mad Honeymoon,[71] Lulu Belle,[72] Baby Cyclone,[73] Behold the Bridegroom,[74] The Shannons of Broadway,[75] and If I Was Rich.[76]

In 1930, Jameson and Taliaferro toured Australia together for more than six months, with Taliaferro as the headliner and Jameson as the juvenile lead, appearing in Let Us Be Gay,[77] The Garden of Eden,[78] The Road to Romance,[79] Coquette,[80] and Peg O' My Heart.[81]

In 1931, Jameson and Taliaferro toured the Southern and Midwestern U.S., appearing in Private Lives, with Taliaferro again playing the lead female character and Jameson playing the supporting male character.[82][83]

In 1961–1962, Jameson co-starred in the national tour of Advise and Consent, playing Senator Seab Cooley, garnering excellent reviews. One critic said that Jameson deserved "top honors" for his portrayal, and that his "changes of mood, his rapid shifts of characterization fitting the part he defines were a joy to watch;"[84] while the Los Angeles Times said that he was a "real stand out."[85] Another critic said that "there was no moment when Jameson was on the stage that did not belong unquestionably to him. His is the timing and gratifying authority that comes of experience and understanding. . . Jameson was simply a wow from the moment of his first line to his last."[86]

Jameson's other Broadway credits include The Goat Song (1925), The Chief Thing (1925), An American Tragedy (1926), The Dark Hours (1932), We, the People (1932), In Time to Come (1941), The Patriots (1942), Requiem for a Nun (1959), The Great Indoors (1965), and Don't Drink the Water (1966).[87]

Film edit

Jameson was seen in The Naked City (1948),[51] Parrish (film) (1961),[88] Mirage (1965),[89] and The Swimmer (1968).[90]

Television edit

Jameson reprised his role of Sam Aldrich, Henry Aldrich's father, in the television version of The Aldrich Family (1949 - 1953).[91] According to Jameson, he was told that his white hair would not film well in those early days of television, because it "bounc[ed]," and he was advised to dye it blue. He came up with an alternative of using blue dusting powder from his make-up kit. Jameson noted that filming the TV series was much more time-consuming than working on the radio version, with many hours of rehearsals, lighting and scenic problems, and other "videosyncracies" to contend with.[56] Jameson told Richard Lamparski that the show "did not translate well to television," and he "didn't like it very much," believing that the program was "too literal" for television. He also cited the ever-changing cast.[12]

Jameson was also seen in Goodyear Television Playhouse (1956),[92] Macbeth (an episode of Hallmark Hall of Fame),[93] The Sacco-Vanzetti Story,[94] Robert Montgomery Presents,[95] The Telltale Clue (1954),[96] KSD Summer Theater (1955),[97] American Inventory (1955),[98] Westinghouse Studio One (1955 and 1957),[96] Way of the World (1955),[99] Modern Romances (1957),[100] The Edge of Night (as John Phillips) (1957-1958),[96] True Story (1958),[96] The Phil Silvers Show (1958 and 1959),[96] New York Confidential (TV series) (1959),[96] The United States Steel Hour (1959),[101] The Witness (TV series) (1960),[102] Naked City (TV series) (multiple episodes 1958–1963),[96] Route 66 (TV series) (1960),[96] The Play of the Week (1961),[96] DuPont Show of the Month (1961),[103] Car 54, Where Are You? (1961 and 1962),[96] Camera Three (1963),[104] Another World (TV series) (as Dr. Bert Gregory) (1964),[96] The Defenders (1961 TV series) (1964),[96] Search for Tomorrow (as Dr. Lawson),[105] The Trials of O'Brien (1965),[96] Lamp At Midnight and Barefoot in Athens (Hallmark Hall of Fame productions) (1966),[96] The Borgia Stick (TV Movie)(1967),[96] Dark Shadows (as Judge Crathorne) (1967),[96] Coronet Blue (1967),[96] The Doctors (1963 TV series) (as Nathan Bunker) (1967-1968),[96] Lamp Unto My Feet (Narrator)(1968),[106] and N.Y.P.D. (TV series) (1969).[96]

Professional organizations edit

Jameson was elected to The Lambs in 1936,[107] and was also a member of the Theatre Guild in New York City, The Players in New York City, the Actors' Equity Association,[3] and a charter member of the American Federation of Radio Artists (AFRA). He was elected President of the New York local of AFRA in 1945.[108]

Recognition edit

In 1942, Jameson's Sam Aldrich character was named "radio's outstanding father" by the National Father's Day Committee.[109] In 1989, Jameson was posthumously inducted as one of four charter members of the American Foundation for the Blind Talking Book Hall of Fame.[110]

Personal life edit

Jameson was married to actress Edith Taliaferro, who died in 1958,[103] and later to the former Elizabeth Mears.[3] Jameson and Taliaferro met and were married in Toronto.[111] Jameson and Taliaferro were married around 1928.[112]

For 35 years, he was a reader for the American Foundation for the Blind.[3]

Jameson died of cancer April 23, 1971, in Danbury, Connecticut.[1][2] At his request, no service was held. Cremation was in Mountain Grove Crematory in Bridgeport, Connecticut. He was survived by his wife.[3]

References edit

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house, jameson, house, baker, jameson, december, 1902, april, 1971, american, actor, time, radio, early, television, november, 1944, photo, from, radio, program, aldrich, family, from, left, dick, jones, henry, aldrich, katherine, raht, aldrich, aldrich, bornd. House Baker Jameson December 17 1902 April 23 1971 1 was an American actor in the era of old time radio and early television House JamesonNovember 1944 photo from the radio program The Aldrich Family From left Dick Jones Henry Aldrich Katherine Raht Mrs Aldrich and House Jameson Mr Aldrich BornDecember 17 1902Austin Texas USDiedApril 23 1971 aged 68 Danbury Connecticut USOccupationActorKnown forPlaying Sam Aldrich in The Aldrich FamilySpouse s Edith Taliaferro 1928 1958 her death Elizabeth Mears 1971 his death Contents 1 Early years 2 Radio 3 Stage 4 Film 5 Television 6 Professional organizations 7 Recognition 8 Personal life 9 ReferencesEarly years editJameson was a native of Austin Texas He was named for Edward M House a political figure who was a friend of the family 2 He graduated from Columbia University 3 Jameson said that he knew at age 5 that he wanted to be an actor when an aunt who raised him after his father died took him to see a performance of The Shepherd King Jameson told TV Guide that after the family returned home he absolutely refused to go to bed until the family rustled up some costumes and re enacted the play 4 Radio editJameson broke into radio in the early 1930s as an announcer with WEVD Jameson admired a WEVD announcer named Roland Bradley in Chicago and wrote him a letter telling him so This led to a friendship and an invitation to occasionally pinch hit as an announcer Bradley left WEVD and in 1934 Jameson was named chief announcer and dramatic director 5 6 Jameson soon became known for his leading roles in Renfrew of the Mounted and Crime Doctor 3 Renfrew was an adventure story based on the novels and stories by Laurie York Erskine and was aimed at a juvenile audience Jameson played Inspector Douglas Renfrew a Canadian Mountie from 1936 to 1940 7 The show was so popular at one point that after a single offer of a photograph of Jameson in full Renfrew regalia it received 17 000 requests 8 In an episode of Behind the Mike Jameson recounted the case of a boy who recovered from a serious illness after receiving a telegram and an autographed photo from Renfrew The boy s brother had contacted Jameson at home to ask for his assistance 9 Jameson appeared on Crime Doctor from 1940 to 1947 taking over the lead role of Dr Benjamin Ordway replacing Everett Sloane in 1944 10 Jameson s best known role was as father Sam Aldrich in the comedy The Aldrich Family 4 In January 1953 newspaper columnist Richard Kleiner wrote about House Jameson who played Mr Aldrich in the radio comedy Mr Jameson a handsome white haired gentleman with a handsome white haired mustache is making a career out of being father to a perennial high school junior called Henry Aldrich 11 He played that role on the radio program 1939 1953 1 In 1968 Jameson noted that the show was popular with younger children and adults but teenagers did not like the show Jameson said that working on the show was the happiest acting experience he ever had and he still missed it He said that there was never any personality conflicts among the actors crediting the leadership of its star Ezra Stone Jameson and Stone indicated that they developed a father son relationship in real life that continued after the show ended 12 Jameson s other roles in radio programs included those shown in the table below Program RoleBrave Tomorrow Whit Davis 13 Crime Doctor Dr Ordway 14 Inner Sanctum Mystery Host 13 163 Renfrew of the Royal Mounted Renfrew 15 Young Widder Jones Brown Herb Temple 13 361 Jameson was also heard on Columbia Presents Corwin 16 So This Is Radio 16 622 Behind the Mike 17 Americans At Work 18 On Broadway 19 Canary Christmas 20 Eno Crime Clues 21 Hilda Hope M D 13 151 Snow Village 22 Betty and Bob 23 Our Gal Sunday 24 Mystery Theatre 25 By Kathleen Norris 13 57 Grand Central Station 26 This Day Is Ours 27 The Jack Benny Show 28 A Special Announcement 29 World Service 30 Brave Tomorrow 31 Words Without Music 32 Voice of the Army 33 New York Philharmonic Orchestra 34 Cresta Blanca Carnival 35 Ellen Randolph 36 Nazi Eyes On Canada 37 This Is War 38 The Nightingale and the Rose as Narrator 39 American Portrait 40 Building for Peace 41 FBI In Peace and War 42 Day of Reckoning play 43 Quaker World Service 44 Colgate Theater of Romance 45 Quick as a Flash 10 The Radio Edition of the Bible 46 The Eternal Light 47 Radio Playhouse 48 Hilltop House 49 Pepper Young s Family 50 Mrs Wiggins Cabbage Patch Portia Faces Life The Kate Smith Show 12 Suspense X Minus One and Cavalcade of America 51 Jameson was greatly admired by writer Norman Corwin who found him to be a reliable performer a man of modesty who had a sense of dignity without being stiff Jameson appeared in a number of Corwin s productions as actor and narrator including The Plot to Overthrow Christmas as Santa Claus They Fly Through the Air Seems Radio Is Here To Stay There Will Be Time Later Log of the R 77 A Soliloquy to Balance the Budget Descent of the Gods as Apollo Fragments From a Lost Cause America at War and A Program to Be Opened in a Hundred Years In They Fly and Soliloquy Jameson was the sole performer 52 Corwin wrote several scripts with Jameson in mind Jameson s voice was described as a magnificently mellow instrument and Jameson was said to be a master of language cadences and to have a fine gift for irony The roles Corwin wrote for Jameson tend ed toward an elaborate style with an Olympian quality about them 53 In a January 27 1969 letter to Jameson Corwin stated i f I was the father of those breakthrough plays you were the godfather There might have been others who could have played Santa in The Plot as well as you though for the life of me I cannot think who but nobody nobody could have carried They Fly as you did Corwin said They Fly was the play that made the biggest difference in his life and told Jameson f or that service alone I would be eternally grateful to you But it was happily not alone Corwin told Jameson that he was a rock Corwin stated that k nowing your rich mind and the grace and power of your art I was emboldened to write for you as a composer writes for an instrumentalist whose range and qualities broaden his own by giving him the confidence to reach high 54 In 1943 Variety named Jameson as one of the top earners in radio making 50 000 or more per year 55 Jameson stated that he left the stage to work in radio because of the easier work schedule that enabled him to spend more time with his wife on their farm in Connecticut He noted the minimal amount of time required to rehearse and perform a radio program enabling him to work on several shows per week and still keep a normal schedule 56 Jameson estimated that he had done thousands of radio shows many of which he had forgotten 12 Stage editJameson made his first Broadway appearance in 1924 when he was cast as a spear carrier in the Theatre Guild production of Saint Joan 57 Also in 1924 Jameson appeared on Broadway in the Grand Street Follies satirizing Will Rogers He was chosen for the role because of his Texas background Jameson stated however that he was a big city boy from Texas and had hardly ever seen a lariat before He said that he rushed home used a clothesline and practiced spinning a rope all night to prepare for the part 4 In 1925 Jameson co starred in the original Garrick Gaieties a music review by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart 58 One of the sketches was a burlesque of They Knew What They Wanted with Jameson playing Tony and impersonating Richard Bennett actor 59 Later in 1925 Jameson toured for a year in the Julia Arthur production of Saint Joan playing the role of Gilles De Rais Hi Jameson then spent nearly a year in Chicago and then joined the Toronto Theatre Guild in 1927 1928 for a similar length of time In Toronto he played in productions of A Kiss for Cinderella The Second Mrs Tanqueray Diplomacy What Every Woman Knows Bunty Pulls the Strings and Quality Street 60 Several of the plays starred Jameson s wife Edith Taliaferro who was already a well known stage actress while Jameson appeared in supporting roles 61 For the 1928 1929 season Jameson was a member of Minneapolis Bainbridge Players Taliaferro was a guest star during the same season 62 In Minneapolis Jameson and Taliaferro appeared in The Garden of Eden 63 What Every Woman Knows 64 Little Old New York 65 Her Cardboard Lover 66 A Kiss for Cinderella 67 Broadway 68 Wanted 69 Two Girls Wanted 70 The Mad Honeymoon 71 Lulu Belle 72 Baby Cyclone 73 Behold the Bridegroom 74 The Shannons of Broadway 75 and If I Was Rich 76 In 1930 Jameson and Taliaferro toured Australia together for more than six months with Taliaferro as the headliner and Jameson as the juvenile lead appearing in Let Us Be Gay 77 The Garden of Eden 78 The Road to Romance 79 Coquette 80 and Peg O My Heart 81 In 1931 Jameson and Taliaferro toured the Southern and Midwestern U S appearing in Private Lives with Taliaferro again playing the lead female character and Jameson playing the supporting male character 82 83 In 1961 1962 Jameson co starred in the national tour of Advise and Consent playing Senator Seab Cooley garnering excellent reviews One critic said that Jameson deserved top honors for his portrayal and that his changes of mood his rapid shifts of characterization fitting the part he defines were a joy to watch 84 while the Los Angeles Times said that he was a real stand out 85 Another critic said that there was no moment when Jameson was on the stage that did not belong unquestionably to him His is the timing and gratifying authority that comes of experience and understanding Jameson was simply a wow from the moment of his first line to his last 86 Jameson s other Broadway credits include The Goat Song 1925 The Chief Thing 1925 An American Tragedy 1926 The Dark Hours 1932 We the People 1932 In Time to Come 1941 The Patriots 1942 Requiem for a Nun 1959 The Great Indoors 1965 and Don t Drink the Water 1966 87 Film editJameson was seen in The Naked City 1948 51 Parrish film 1961 88 Mirage 1965 89 and The Swimmer 1968 90 Television editJameson reprised his role of Sam Aldrich Henry Aldrich s father in the television version of The Aldrich Family 1949 1953 91 According to Jameson he was told that his white hair would not film well in those early days of television because it bounc ed and he was advised to dye it blue He came up with an alternative of using blue dusting powder from his make up kit Jameson noted that filming the TV series was much more time consuming than working on the radio version with many hours of rehearsals lighting and scenic problems and other videosyncracies to contend with 56 Jameson told Richard Lamparski that the show did not translate well to television and he didn t like it very much believing that the program was too literal for television He also cited the ever changing cast 12 Jameson was also seen in Goodyear Television Playhouse 1956 92 Macbeth an episode of Hallmark Hall of Fame 93 The Sacco Vanzetti Story 94 Robert Montgomery Presents 95 The Telltale Clue 1954 96 KSD Summer Theater 1955 97 American Inventory 1955 98 Westinghouse Studio One 1955 and 1957 96 Way of the World 1955 99 Modern Romances 1957 100 The Edge of Night as John Phillips 1957 1958 96 True Story 1958 96 The Phil Silvers Show 1958 and 1959 96 New York Confidential TV series 1959 96 The United States Steel Hour 1959 101 The Witness TV series 1960 102 Naked City TV series multiple episodes 1958 1963 96 Route 66 TV series 1960 96 The Play of the Week 1961 96 DuPont Show of the Month 1961 103 Car 54 Where Are You 1961 and 1962 96 Camera Three 1963 104 Another World TV series as Dr Bert Gregory 1964 96 The Defenders 1961 TV series 1964 96 Search for Tomorrow as Dr Lawson 105 The Trials of O Brien 1965 96 Lamp At Midnight and Barefoot in Athens Hallmark Hall of Fame productions 1966 96 The Borgia Stick TV Movie 1967 96 Dark Shadows as Judge Crathorne 1967 96 Coronet Blue 1967 96 The Doctors 1963 TV series as Nathan Bunker 1967 1968 96 Lamp Unto My Feet Narrator 1968 106 and N Y P D TV series 1969 96 Professional organizations editJameson was elected to The Lambs in 1936 107 and was also a member of the Theatre Guild in New York City The Players in New York City the Actors Equity Association 3 and a charter member of the American Federation of Radio Artists AFRA He was elected President of the New York local of AFRA in 1945 108 Recognition editIn 1942 Jameson s Sam Aldrich character was named radio s outstanding father by the National Father s Day Committee 109 In 1989 Jameson was posthumously inducted as one of four charter members of the American Foundation for the Blind Talking Book Hall of Fame 110 Personal life editJameson was married to actress Edith Taliaferro who died in 1958 103 and later to the former Elizabeth Mears 3 Jameson and Taliaferro met and were married in Toronto 111 Jameson and Taliaferro were married around 1928 112 For 35 years he was a reader for the American Foundation for the Blind 3 Jameson died of cancer April 23 1971 in Danbury Connecticut 1 2 At his request no service was held Cremation was in Mountain Grove Crematory in Bridgeport Connecticut He was survived by his wife 3 References edit a b c DeLong Thomas A 1996 Radio Stars An Illustrated Biographical Dictionary of 953 Performers 1920 through 1960 McFarland amp Company Inc ISBN 978 0 7864 2834 2 P 139 a b House Jameson actor dies The Lowell Sun Massachusetts Lowell United Press International April 25 1971 p 54 Retrieved June 12 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp a b c d e f House Jameson Ex Actor Dies The Bridgeport Post Connecticut Bridgeport April 24 1971 p 31 Retrieved June 12 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp a b c In the Cast House Jameson TV Guide 1 13 p 12 June 26 1953 25 Apr 1945 Page 25 The Pittsburgh Press at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 14 Studio Notes The New York Sun June 16 1934 p 29 Dunning John On the Air The Encyclopedia of Old Time Radio p 574 9 Jun 1940 Page 14 The Ogden Standard Examiner at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 09 03 Copyright 2016 J David Goldin radiogoldindex com Retrieved 2016 09 03 a b 2 Nov 1941 Page 30 The Pittsburgh Press at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 09 05 Kleiner Richard January 18 1953 Makes Career Out Of Henry Aldrich The Times Recorder Ohio Zanesville NEA p 8 Retrieved June 12 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp a b c d Lamparski Richard November 20 1968 Whatever Became of Henry Aldrich interview a b c d e Terrace Vincent 1999 Radio Programs 1924 1984 A Catalog of More Than 1800 Shows McFarland amp Company Inc ISBN 978 0 7864 4513 4 P 50 Crime Bureau Harrisburg Telegraph Pennsylvania Harrisburg February 8 1947 p 17 Retrieved June 12 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Ethel Clarks Radio Flashes The Ogden Standard Examiner Utah Ogden June 9 1940 p 14 Retrieved June 12 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Dunning John 1998 On the Air The Encyclopedia of Old Time Radio Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 507678 3 P 164 Copyright 2016 J David Goldin radiogoldindex com Retrieved 2016 09 03 The Radio Annual 1939 archive org Retrieved 2016 09 01 Radio Daily Jan Mar 1938 archive org Retrieved 2016 09 01 Variety Radio Directory archive org Retrieved 2016 09 01 Copyright 2016 J David Goldin radiogoldindex com Retrieved 2016 08 21 Variety Vol 148 December 1942 Compilation of Published Sources MyHeritage www myheritage com Retrieved 2016 08 20 Variety Motion Pictures Vaudeville Theater Film Industry Trade Magazine New York NY Vol 136 1939 Compilation of Published Sources MyHeritage www myheritage com Retrieved 2016 08 20 Variety Motion Pictures Vol 143 July 1941 New York NY Compilation of Published Sources MyHeritage www myheritage com Retrieved 2016 08 20 Variety Vol 151 September 1943 Compilation of Published Sources MyHeritage www myheritage com Retrieved 2016 08 20 3 May 1940 Page 9 The Des Moines Register at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 21 The Radio Annual 1940 archive org Retrieved 2016 09 01 2 Nov 1941 Page 30 The Pittsburgh Press at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 09 05 5 Aug 1940 Page 21 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 21 Variety Weekly American entertainment magazine July 1947 Compilation of Published Sources MyHeritage www myheritage com Retrieved 2016 08 20 Variety Weekly American entertainment magazine November 1943 Compilation of Published Sources MyHeritage www myheritage com Retrieved 2016 08 20 Variety Weekly New York NY Vol 132 1938 Compilation of Published Sources MyHeritage www myheritage com Retrieved 2016 08 20 Broadcasting Magazine July 2 1945 Compilation of Published Sources MyHeritage www myheritage com Retrieved 2016 08 20 19 Apr 1942 Page 69 St Louis Post Dispatch at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 21 Variety Weekly American entertainment magazine January 1943 Compilation of Published Sources MyHeritage www myheritage com Retrieved 2016 08 20 15 Jul 1941 Page 12 The Greenville News at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 09 05 3 Oct 1942 Page 4 The Winnipeg Tribune at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 21 Variety Motion Pictures Vol 145 February 1942 New York NY Compilation of Published Sources MyHeritage www myheritage com Retrieved 2016 08 20 25 Apr 1942 Page 10 The Decatur Herald at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 09 05 RADIO APR 20 21 NY PM Daily April 21 1946 12 Apr 1947 Page 8 The Post Standard at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 21 15 Jun 1958 Page 48 Lubbock Avalanche Journal at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 21 20 Mar 1943 Page 2 Poughkeepsie Journal at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 09 05 27 Apr 1949 Page 20 Janesville Daily Gazette at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 21 26 Sep 1944 Page 2 The Mason City Globe Gazette at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 21 3 Jun 1953 Page 7 The Eagle at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 21 Copyright 2016 J David Goldin www radiogoldindex com Retrieved 2016 08 21 13 Dec 1953 Page 32 St Louis Post Dispatch at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 21 The Times 26 Sep 1948 page Page 21 Retrieved 15 October 2016 28 Oct 1955 Page 4 The Daily Notes at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 21 a b Inside Radio The Times Recorder Ohio Zanesville September 19 1948 p 31 Retrieved June 12 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Bannerman Leroy 1986 Norman Corwin and Radio The Golden Years United States of America The University of Alabama Press pp 37 138 233 234 235 236 237 239 ISBN 0 8173 0274 3 Barnouw Erik 1945 Radio Drama in Action Twenty Five Plays of a Changing World Rinehart and Co Inc p 205 ISBN 978 1434421197 Langguth A J 1994 Norman Corwin s Letters United States Barricade Books Inc pp 287 ISBN 0 9623032 5 9 Variety Weekly American entertainment magazine April 1943 Compilation of Published Sources MyHeritage www myheritage com Retrieved 2016 08 20 a b Jameson House August 3 1950 Buffalo Courier Express Guest column by House Jameson p 22 28 Mar 1952 Page 33 Detroit Free Press at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 06 Internet Broadway Database IBDB Columbia Daily Spectator 5 August 1925 Columbia Spectator spectatorarchive library columbia edu Retrieved 2016 09 03 16 Aug 1930 Page 10 The Sydney Morning Herald at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 14 The Varsity September 29 1927 March 16 1928 archive org Retrieved 2016 09 03 Garden of Eden Edith Taliaferro s Shubert Play The Minneapolis Star No p 4 May 26 1928 Edith Taliaferro in The Garden of Eden The Minneapolis Star No 12 May 28 1928 Theatres Shubert The Minneapolis Star No 12 May 21 1928 Little Old New York at Shubert Tomorrow The Minneapolis Star No p 4 June 2 1928 Taliaferro Engagement is Extended The Minneapolis Star No p 5 June 9 1928 Vaudeville Houses Offer Big Attractions for the Week The Minneapolis Star No p 5 June 16 1928 Edith Taliaferro Has Big Role in Initial Offering at Shubert The Minneapolis Star No p 4 September 1 1928 Dawn at Metropolitan Shubert Offers Wanted The Minneapolis Star No p 4 September 8 1928 Cohan Play at Met Two Girls Wanted Shubert Bill The Minneapolis Star No September 22 1928 Rose Marie Returns to Charm Theater Goers The Minneapolis Star No p 4 September 29 1928 Lulu Belle Is Bainbridge Offering at Shubert The Minneapolis Star No p 4 October 20 1928 Three Road Attractions in One Week Is Record The Minneapolis Star No p 4 November 28 1928 Behold the Bridegroom is Shubert Offering The Minneapolis Star No p 4 November 10 1928 The Shannons of Broadway Is Offering at Shubert The Minneapolis Star No p 4 November 17 1928 If I Was Rich Gives Edith Taliaferro Big Role The Minneapolis Star No p 4 December 8 1928 9 May 1930 Page 7 The Sydney Morning Herald at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 22 23 Jun 1930 Page 6 The Sydney Morning Herald at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 22 3 Nov 1930 Page 11 The Age at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 22 25 Aug 1930 Page 6 The Sydney Morning Herald at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 22 17 Nov 1930 Page 10 The Age at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 22 16 Jul 1931 Page 6 Corsicana Daily Sun at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 22 4 Dec 1931 Page 35 Green Bay Press Gazette at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 22 26 Dec 1961 Page 10 The Morning News at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 24 8 Apr 1962 Page 372 The Los Angeles Times at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 24 14 Mar 1962 Page 10 Lubbock Avalanche Journal at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 24 House Jameson search Playbill Vault Retrieved 12 June 2016 4 Mar 1962 Page 64 Lubbock Avalanche Journal at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 24 Gregory Peck in a Jam St Louis Post Dispatch No P 3F May 28 1965 Headed Home Detroit American No 12 July 13 1968 Terrace Vincent 2011 Encyclopedia of Television Shows 1925 through 2010 McFarland amp Company Inc ISBN 978 0 7864 6477 7 P 23 TV listing Daily Capital Journal Oregon Salem June 30 1956 p 13 Retrieved June 13 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Oliver Wayne November 29 1954 Macbeth Production Noteworthy on TV The Corpus Christi Caller Times Texas Corpus Christi Associated Press p 24 Retrieved June 12 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Friday The Times Record New York Troy May 28 1960 p 46 Retrieved June 12 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp KVAL TV VHF 13 The Oregon Statesman Oregon Salem August 22 1955 p 11 Retrieved June 12 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s House Jameson IMDb Retrieved 2016 08 20 House Jameson KSD Summer Theater My Dear Emily 9 4 55 on Newspapers com The Decatur Daily Review 4 September 1955 p 16 Retrieved 2016 08 20 18 Dec 1955 Page 48 Independent Press Telegram at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 20 Clipping from The Morning Call Newspapers com Newspapers com Retrieved 2017 04 19 21 Jan 1957 Page 37 Detroit Free Press at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 21 19 Nov 1959 Page 10 The Baytown Sun at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 20 10 Nov 1960 Page 23 The Courier Journal at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 20 a b Actress Dies Wellsville Daily Reporter New York Wellsville Associated Press March 3 1958 p 1 Retrieved June 13 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp 23 Jun 1963 Page 87 Independent Press Telegram at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 21 LaGuardia Robert 1983 Soap World United States Arbor House pp 290 ISBN 0 87795 482 8 Lewiston Evening Journal Google News Archive Search news google com Retrieved 2016 08 22 The Lambs the lambs org The Lambs Inc 6 November 2015 Member Roster J Retrieved January 10 2022 Jameson AFRA N Y Prexy Billboard January 20 1945 photo caption Kingsport Times Tennessee Kingsport June 21 1942 p 11 Retrieved June 12 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp 15 Jan 1989 Page 95 The Courier Journal at Newspapers com Retrieved 2016 08 13 Along the Airialtos His Second Honeymoon Movie and Radio Guide 10 24 38 March 28 1941 Wolters Larry March 14 1953 Father Aldrich in Harem Class Has 4 TV Wives The Chicago Tribune Portals nbsp Radio nbsp Texas Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title House Jameson amp oldid 1132017552, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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