fbpx
Wikipedia

Mary Livingstone

Mary Livingstone (born Sadya Marcowitz,[1][2] later known as Sadie Marks; June 25, 1905[3]–June 30, 1983) was an American radio comedienne and actress. She was the wife and radio partner of comedian Jack Benny.

Mary Livingstone
Livingstone in 1935
Born
Sadya Marcowitz

(1905-06-25)June 25, 1905
DiedJune 30, 1983(1983-06-30) (aged 78)
Occupation(s)Actress, comedian
TelevisionThe Jack Benny Program
Spouse
(m. 1927; died 1974)
Children1

Enlisted casually to perform on her husband's program, she proved a talented comedian. But she also proved one of the rare performers to experience severe stage fright years after her career was established, so much so that she retired from show business completely, after two decades in the public eye, almost three decades before her death and at the height of her husband and partner's fame.

Early life Edit

Livingstone was born Sadya Marcowitz in Seattle, Washington, but raised in Vancouver, British Columbia. Her father, David Marcowitz (or Markowitz), was a prosperous Jewish scrap metal dealer[3] from Romania. Her mother was Esther Wagner Marcowitz. They changed their surname to Marks several years after Sadya was born. Livingstone's brother, Hilliard Marks, was a radio and television producer who worked primarily for his future brother-in-law, Jack Benny.[4][5][6][2]

Livingstone first met her future husband, Jack Benny, in Vancouver at a Passover seder in her family home in 1922, when Benny was playing the Orpheum Theatre.[7] Benny accompanied his friend Zeppo (b. Herbert) Marx.[8]

Zeppo Marx took Benny to the home of David Marks, where they enjoyed a quiet and comfortable gathering. Marks's youngest daughter, Sadie (her name was anglicized), was very impressed by this comedian who played a violin as part of his act. By her own testimony she made up her mind that she would grow up and marry Jack Benny someday."
American National Biography[3]

Livingstone's birth name was anglicized from Marcovitz, not from Marx. Despite the two families' acquaintance, Livingstone was unrelated to the Marx Brothers.[6]

Courting Jack Benny Edit

 
Livingstone and Benny, 1939

In 1925, aged 20, Sadie visited California with her family while Jack Benny was in the same town for a show. Still nursing a small crush on the comedian, Sadie went to the theater to re-introduce herself to him. As he approached her in a hallway, she smiled and said, "Hello, Mr. Benny, I'm..." But he curtly cut her off with a "hello" and continued on his way down the hall without pausing; she learned much later that when Benny was deep in thought about his work, it was nearly impossible to get his attention.

They met again a year later, while she was said to be working as a lingerie salesgirl at a May Company department store in downtown Los Angeles[9] – and the couple finally began dating. Invited on a double-date by a friend who had married Sadie's sister, Babe, Benny brought Sadie along to keep him company. This time, the couple clicked: Jack was finally smitten with Sadie and asked her on another date. She turned him down at first, as she was seeing another young man, but Benny persisted. He visited her at the May Company almost daily and was reputed to buy so much ladies' hosiery from her that he helped her set a sales record; he also called her several times a day when on the road.[10]

Jack Benny married Mary Livingstone January 14, 1927, at the Clayton Hotel in Waukegan, Illinois, one week after proposing.[11][12][2]

Personal life Edit

 
Mary Livingstone and Jack Benny, 1960

Livingstone's brother, Hilliard Marks, was a radio and television producer who worked primarily for his brother-in-law, Jack Benny.[2]

Benny and Livingstone adopted a two-week old girl in 1934, whom they named Joanie. In Sunday Nights at Seven (1990), her father's unfinished memoir that she completed with her own recollections, Joan Benny revealed she rarely felt close to her mother, and the two often argued:

She had so many good qualities – her sense of humor, her generosity, her loyalty to her friends. She had a famous, successful, and adoring husband; she had famous, interesting, and amusing friends; she lived in luxury; she was a celebrity in her own right. In short, she had everything a woman could possibly want. When I think of her it's with sadness because I wish she could have enjoyed it all more.[13]

Lucille Ball referred to Livingstone as a "hard-hearted Hannah", and said that she exerted too much control over her husband's life.[14][15] George Burns, one of Jack Benny's closest friends, was not particularly fond of Livingstone. He believed that she intimidated her husband and was running his life. He also believed that Livingstone lacked talent.[16]

"Mary wasn't a bad person, she was just difficult, a little jealous and insecure. She didn't want to have better things than her friends had, particularly Gracie; she wanted to have the same things, but more of them. And bigger."[16]

Ostensibly Livingstone's best friend, Burns's wife Gracie Allen confided to a friend that "Mary Benny and I are supposed to be dearest of friends, but we're not. I love Jack and I can tolerate Mary, but there are some things about her I don't like". Allen went on to describe Livingstone's desire to one-up any purchase of luxury items. Burns noted that while their circle of friends found Livingstone challenging, there was also a sense of fierce loyalty between them.[16]

Performance career Edit

 
As part of Benny's vaudeville act; she was still known as Sadie at the time

Sadie took part in some of Jack's vaudeville performances but never thought of herself as a full-time performer, seeming glad to be done with it when he moved to radio in 1932. Then came the day he called her at home and asked her to come to the studio quickly. An actress hired to play a part on the evening's show didn't show up and, instead of risking a hunt for a substitute, Benny thought his wife could handle the part: a character named Mary Livingstone scripted as Benny's biggest fan.[17][5]

At first, it seemed like a brief role; she played the part on that night's and the following week's show before being written out of the scenario. But NBC received so much fan mail that the character was revived into a regular feature on the Benny show, and the reluctant Sadie Marks became a radio star in her own right.[18] Livingstone underwent a change, too, from fan to tart secretary-foil; the character occasionally went on dates with Benny's character but they were rarely implied to be truly romantically involved otherwise. The lone known exceptions were a fantasy sequence used on both the radio and television versions of the show, as well as during an NBC musical tribute to Benny, in which Mary admitted to being "Mrs. Benny".

"Chiss Sweeze" Edit

 
Mary Livingstone, 1940

Livingstone's "chiss sweeze sandwich" order in a lunch counter sketch was referred to for several years afterwards (episode 333; October 27, 1946). Another flubbed line was "How could you possibly hit a car when it was up on the grease rack?" Instead, she asked, "How could you possibly hit a car when it was up on the grass reek?" The following week, Benny devoted much of the show to poking fun at the tongue twister, chastising her for using the made-up phrase "grass reek". But Jack got his comeuppance later in the show, when the show's guest, the real-life Beverly Hills police chief, was talking about the strange call the department got the night before: two skunks fighting on someone's lawn. "And let me tell you," he said, "when they were done, did that grass reek!" Mary then took great satisfaction out of making Jack admit to the millions of listeners that "grass reek" did exist ("Boy did that grease rack!" "That's "grass reek!"" "Well make up your mind!").[19] It was also mentioned in a later show when, while Christmas shopping, Mary notices a toy gas station and says that it "even has a grease rack". This was a typical example of Benny's and Livingstone's (and the show's writers') ability to improvise comedy from un-scripted errors.

Mary's trademark gag on the radio show, other than beleaguering Benny, was to read letters from her mother (who lived in Plainfield, New Jersey), usually beginning with "My darling daughter Mary...". The letters often included comical stories about Mary's (fictional) sister Babe – similar to Sadie's real sister Babe in name only – who was so masculine she played as a linebacker for the Green Bay Packers and worked in steel mills and coal mines, or their ne'er-do-well father, who always seemed to be a half-step ahead of the law. Mother Livingstone, naturally enough, detested Benny and was forever advising her daughter to quit his employ.

Stage fright Edit

 
Radio cast photo

Never very comfortable as a performer despite her success, Livingstone's stage fright became so acute by the time the Benny show was moving toward television that she rarely appeared on the radio show in its final season, 1954–55.[20] When she did appear, the Bennys' adopted daughter, Joan, occasionally acted as a stand-in for her mother, or Mary's lines were read in rehearsals by Jack's script secretary, Jeanette Eyman, while Livingstone's prerecorded lines were played during live broadcasts.

Retirement Edit

Livingstone made few appearances on the television version – mostly in filmed episodes – and finally retired from show business after her close friend Gracie Allen did so in 1958. Her Washington Post obituary quoted Livingstone about her stage fright: "It ended up with every Sunday night being the most torturous day of the week," she once said. "TV was even harder; every week became a nightmare. I finally just told Jack I was going to quit or I was going to die."[21]

One of her final performances was as a mouse spoof of herself in The Mouse That Jack Built, a Merrie Melodies cartoon from 1959 lampooning the radio show. Her final performance as Mary Livingstone came on Benny's 1970 "20th Anniversary Special". When introducing her to the audience, Benny noted that it was her first time performing in fifteen years and the pre-recorded segment made references to her performance anxiety.[22][23]

Death Edit

After writing a biography of her husband, Livingstone – whose surname is often misspelled without the 'e', as with her star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her contribution to radio[24] – died from heart disease at her home in Holmby Hills on June 30, 1983, five days after her 78th birthday, though several outlets reported her age as 77.[18][5]

References Edit

Notes

  1. ^ "Washington, Birth Records, 1870-1935". Ancestry.com.
  2. ^ a b c d Fuller-Seeley, Kathryn (October 17, 2017). Jack Benny and the Golden Age of American Radio Comedy. Univ of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-29505-6.
  3. ^ a b c Douglas, George H. (2000). "Livingstone, Mary (1908–1983), wife and longtime collaborator of radio and television comedian Jack Benny". American National Biography. doi:10.1093/anb/9780198606697.article.1802390. ISBN 978-0-19-860669-7.
  4. ^ Ware, Susan; Stacy Braukman (February 2005). Notable American Women: A Biographical Dictionary Completing the Twentieth Century. Harvard University Press. pp. 388–389. ISBN 978-0-6740-1488-6.
  5. ^ a b c Ledbetter, Les (July 2, 1983). "Mary Livingstone, Radio Star with Husband. Jack Benny". The New York Times. Mary Livingstone, the widow of Jack Benny, who for decades on radio and television served as her husband's comedic foil, died after a short illness Thursday at her home in Holmby Hills, near Los Angeles. She was 77 years old.
  6. ^ a b According to the International Jack Benny Fan Club, International Jack Benny Fan Club, claims that Livingstone was related to the Marx Brothers or their uncle Al Shean of Gallagher and Shean are unfounded.
  7. ^ "Sadie Marks Historical Marker". Historical Marker Database.
  8. ^ Russwurm, Lani (February 17, 2014). Vancouver Was Awesome: A Curious Pictorial History. Arsenal Pulp Press. p. 113. ISBN 978-1-55152-526-6.
  9. ^ This story was retold in "How Jack Found Mary". The Jack Benny Program. Season 5. Episode 3. October 31, 1954. CBS.
  10. ^ Benny & Benny 1990, p. 32.
  11. ^ Meyers, Laura (February 1999). "Estates of Bliss". Los Angeles. pp. 26–27. Retrieved February 21, 2022.
  12. ^ "The Jack Benny Residence". Waukegan Historic Preservation Commission. Retrieved February 21, 2022.
  13. ^ Benny, Jack; Benny, Joan (1990). Sunday Nights at Seven: The Jack Benny Story. New York: Warner Books. p. 219. ISBN 978-0-4465-1546-7.
  14. ^ Brochu, Jim (1990). Lucy in the Afternoon: An Intimate Memoir of Lucille Ball. New York: William Morrow. pp. 212–214. ISBN 978-0-6880-8646-6.
  15. ^ Tucker, David C. (March 26, 2015). The Women Who Made Television Funny: Ten Stars of 1950s Sitcoms (reprint ed.). Jefferson, NC: McFarland. p. 15. ISBN 978-0-7864-8732-5.
  16. ^ a b c Burns, George (1991). Gracie : a love story. New York, N.Y.: Penguin. ISBN 0-451-16886-0. OCLC 23193049.
  17. ^ Benny & Benny 1990, p. 37.
  18. ^ a b "Mary Livingstone, Wife of Jack Benny, Dies in Calif. at 77". The Washington Post. July 1, 1983. Retrieved February 21, 2022. Mary Livingstone, 77, the wife and partner in comedy of the late Jack Benny, died today at her home here, apparently of a heart attack.
  19. ^ Benny & Benny 1990, p. 82.
  20. ^ Benny & Benny 1990, p. 75.
  21. ^ "Mary Livingstone, Wife of Jack Benny, Dies in Calif. at 77". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved September 30, 2022.
  22. ^ Jack Benny's Twentieth Anniversary Special (1970), retrieved December 20, 2022
  23. ^ papermoonloveslucy (July 2018). "JACK BENNY'S 20th ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL". Tumblr. Retrieved December 20, 2022.
  24. ^ "Mary Livingstone". Los Angeles Times Star Walk. Retrieved September 15, 2020.

External links Edit

mary, livingstone, other, people, with, similar, names, disambiguation, born, sadya, marcowitz, later, known, sadie, marks, june, 1905, june, 1983, american, radio, comedienne, actress, wife, radio, partner, comedian, jack, benny, livingstone, 1935bornsadya, m. For other people with similar names see Mary Livingstone disambiguation Mary Livingstone born Sadya Marcowitz 1 2 later known as Sadie Marks June 25 1905 3 June 30 1983 was an American radio comedienne and actress She was the wife and radio partner of comedian Jack Benny Mary LivingstoneLivingstone in 1935BornSadya Marcowitz 1905 06 25 June 25 1905Seattle Washington U S DiedJune 30 1983 1983 06 30 aged 78 Holmby Hills Los Angeles California U S Occupation s Actress comedianTelevisionThe Jack Benny ProgramSpouseJack Benny m 1927 died 1974 wbr Children1Enlisted casually to perform on her husband s program she proved a talented comedian But she also proved one of the rare performers to experience severe stage fright years after her career was established so much so that she retired from show business completely after two decades in the public eye almost three decades before her death and at the height of her husband and partner s fame Contents 1 Early life 2 Courting Jack Benny 3 Personal life 4 Performance career 4 1 Chiss Sweeze 4 2 Stage fright 4 3 Retirement 5 Death 6 References 7 External linksEarly life EditLivingstone was born Sadya Marcowitz in Seattle Washington but raised in Vancouver British Columbia Her father David Marcowitz or Markowitz was a prosperous Jewish scrap metal dealer 3 from Romania Her mother was Esther Wagner Marcowitz They changed their surname to Marks several years after Sadya was born Livingstone s brother Hilliard Marks was a radio and television producer who worked primarily for his future brother in law Jack Benny 4 5 6 2 Livingstone first met her future husband Jack Benny in Vancouver at a Passover seder in her family home in 1922 when Benny was playing the Orpheum Theatre 7 Benny accompanied his friend Zeppo b Herbert Marx 8 Zeppo Marx took Benny to the home of David Marks where they enjoyed a quiet and comfortable gathering Marks s youngest daughter Sadie her name was anglicized was very impressed by this comedian who played a violin as part of his act By her own testimony she made up her mind that she would grow up and marry Jack Benny someday American National Biography 3 Livingstone s birth name was anglicized from Marcovitz not from Marx Despite the two families acquaintance Livingstone was unrelated to the Marx Brothers 6 Courting Jack Benny Edit nbsp Livingstone and Benny 1939In 1925 aged 20 Sadie visited California with her family while Jack Benny was in the same town for a show Still nursing a small crush on the comedian Sadie went to the theater to re introduce herself to him As he approached her in a hallway she smiled and said Hello Mr Benny I m But he curtly cut her off with a hello and continued on his way down the hall without pausing she learned much later that when Benny was deep in thought about his work it was nearly impossible to get his attention They met again a year later while she was said to be working as a lingerie salesgirl at a May Company department store in downtown Los Angeles 9 and the couple finally began dating Invited on a double date by a friend who had married Sadie s sister Babe Benny brought Sadie along to keep him company This time the couple clicked Jack was finally smitten with Sadie and asked her on another date She turned him down at first as she was seeing another young man but Benny persisted He visited her at the May Company almost daily and was reputed to buy so much ladies hosiery from her that he helped her set a sales record he also called her several times a day when on the road 10 Jack Benny married Mary Livingstone January 14 1927 at the Clayton Hotel in Waukegan Illinois one week after proposing 11 12 2 Personal life Edit nbsp Mary Livingstone and Jack Benny 1960Livingstone s brother Hilliard Marks was a radio and television producer who worked primarily for his brother in law Jack Benny 2 Benny and Livingstone adopted a two week old girl in 1934 whom they named Joanie In Sunday Nights at Seven 1990 her father s unfinished memoir that she completed with her own recollections Joan Benny revealed she rarely felt close to her mother and the two often argued She had so many good qualities her sense of humor her generosity her loyalty to her friends She had a famous successful and adoring husband she had famous interesting and amusing friends she lived in luxury she was a celebrity in her own right In short she had everything a woman could possibly want When I think of her it s with sadness because I wish she could have enjoyed it all more 13 Lucille Ball referred to Livingstone as a hard hearted Hannah and said that she exerted too much control over her husband s life 14 15 George Burns one of Jack Benny s closest friends was not particularly fond of Livingstone He believed that she intimidated her husband and was running his life He also believed that Livingstone lacked talent 16 Mary wasn t a bad person she was just difficult a little jealous and insecure She didn t want to have better things than her friends had particularly Gracie she wanted to have the same things but more of them And bigger 16 Ostensibly Livingstone s best friend Burns s wife Gracie Allen confided to a friend that Mary Benny and I are supposed to be dearest of friends but we re not I love Jack and I can tolerate Mary but there are some things about her I don t like Allen went on to describe Livingstone s desire to one up any purchase of luxury items Burns noted that while their circle of friends found Livingstone challenging there was also a sense of fierce loyalty between them 16 Performance career Edit nbsp As part of Benny s vaudeville act she was still known as Sadie at the timeSadie took part in some of Jack s vaudeville performances but never thought of herself as a full time performer seeming glad to be done with it when he moved to radio in 1932 Then came the day he called her at home and asked her to come to the studio quickly An actress hired to play a part on the evening s show didn t show up and instead of risking a hunt for a substitute Benny thought his wife could handle the part a character named Mary Livingstone scripted as Benny s biggest fan 17 5 At first it seemed like a brief role she played the part on that night s and the following week s show before being written out of the scenario But NBC received so much fan mail that the character was revived into a regular feature on the Benny show and the reluctant Sadie Marks became a radio star in her own right 18 Livingstone underwent a change too from fan to tart secretary foil the character occasionally went on dates with Benny s character but they were rarely implied to be truly romantically involved otherwise The lone known exceptions were a fantasy sequence used on both the radio and television versions of the show as well as during an NBC musical tribute to Benny in which Mary admitted to being Mrs Benny Chiss Sweeze Edit nbsp Mary Livingstone 1940Livingstone s chiss sweeze sandwich order in a lunch counter sketch was referred to for several years afterwards episode 333 October 27 1946 Another flubbed line was How could you possibly hit a car when it was up on the grease rack Instead she asked How could you possibly hit a car when it was up on the grass reek The following week Benny devoted much of the show to poking fun at the tongue twister chastising her for using the made up phrase grass reek But Jack got his comeuppance later in the show when the show s guest the real life Beverly Hills police chief was talking about the strange call the department got the night before two skunks fighting on someone s lawn And let me tell you he said when they were done did that grass reek Mary then took great satisfaction out of making Jack admit to the millions of listeners that grass reek did exist Boy did that grease rack That s grass reek Well make up your mind 19 It was also mentioned in a later show when while Christmas shopping Mary notices a toy gas station and says that it even has a grease rack This was a typical example of Benny s and Livingstone s and the show s writers ability to improvise comedy from un scripted errors Mary s trademark gag on the radio show other than beleaguering Benny was to read letters from her mother who lived in Plainfield New Jersey usually beginning with My darling daughter Mary The letters often included comical stories about Mary s fictional sister Babe similar to Sadie s real sister Babe in name only who was so masculine she played as a linebacker for the Green Bay Packers and worked in steel mills and coal mines or their ne er do well father who always seemed to be a half step ahead of the law Mother Livingstone naturally enough detested Benny and was forever advising her daughter to quit his employ Stage fright Edit nbsp Radio cast photoNever very comfortable as a performer despite her success Livingstone s stage fright became so acute by the time the Benny show was moving toward television that she rarely appeared on the radio show in its final season 1954 55 20 When she did appear the Bennys adopted daughter Joan occasionally acted as a stand in for her mother or Mary s lines were read in rehearsals by Jack s script secretary Jeanette Eyman while Livingstone s prerecorded lines were played during live broadcasts Retirement Edit Livingstone made few appearances on the television version mostly in filmed episodes and finally retired from show business after her close friend Gracie Allen did so in 1958 Her Washington Post obituary quoted Livingstone about her stage fright It ended up with every Sunday night being the most torturous day of the week she once said TV was even harder every week became a nightmare I finally just told Jack I was going to quit or I was going to die 21 One of her final performances was as a mouse spoof of herself in The Mouse That Jack Built a Merrie Melodies cartoon from 1959 lampooning the radio show Her final performance as Mary Livingstone came on Benny s 1970 20th Anniversary Special When introducing her to the audience Benny noted that it was her first time performing in fifteen years and the pre recorded segment made references to her performance anxiety 22 23 Death EditAfter writing a biography of her husband Livingstone whose surname is often misspelled without the e as with her star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her contribution to radio 24 died from heart disease at her home in Holmby Hills on June 30 1983 five days after her 78th birthday though several outlets reported her age as 77 18 5 References EditNotes Washington Birth Records 1870 1935 Ancestry com a b c d Fuller Seeley Kathryn October 17 2017 Jack Benny and the Golden Age of American Radio Comedy Univ of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 29505 6 a b c Douglas George H 2000 Livingstone Mary 1908 1983 wife and longtime collaborator of radio and television comedian Jack Benny American National Biography doi 10 1093 anb 9780198606697 article 1802390 ISBN 978 0 19 860669 7 Ware Susan Stacy Braukman February 2005 Notable American Women A Biographical Dictionary Completing the Twentieth Century Harvard University Press pp 388 389 ISBN 978 0 6740 1488 6 a b c Ledbetter Les July 2 1983 Mary Livingstone Radio Star with Husband Jack Benny The New York Times Mary Livingstone the widow of Jack Benny who for decades on radio and television served as her husband s comedic foil died after a short illness Thursday at her home in Holmby Hills near Los Angeles She was 77 years old a b According to the International Jack Benny Fan Club International Jack Benny Fan Club claims that Livingstone was related to the Marx Brothers or their uncle Al Shean of Gallagher and Shean are unfounded Sadie Marks Historical Marker Historical Marker Database Russwurm Lani February 17 2014 Vancouver Was Awesome A Curious Pictorial History Arsenal Pulp Press p 113 ISBN 978 1 55152 526 6 This story was retold in How Jack Found Mary The Jack Benny Program Season 5 Episode 3 October 31 1954 CBS Benny amp Benny 1990 p 32 Meyers Laura February 1999 Estates of Bliss Los Angeles pp 26 27 Retrieved February 21 2022 The Jack Benny Residence Waukegan Historic Preservation Commission Retrieved February 21 2022 Benny Jack Benny Joan 1990 Sunday Nights at Seven The Jack Benny Story New York Warner Books p 219 ISBN 978 0 4465 1546 7 Brochu Jim 1990 Lucy in the Afternoon An Intimate Memoir of Lucille Ball New York William Morrow pp 212 214 ISBN 978 0 6880 8646 6 Tucker David C March 26 2015 The Women Who Made Television Funny Ten Stars of 1950s Sitcoms reprint ed Jefferson NC McFarland p 15 ISBN 978 0 7864 8732 5 a b c Burns George 1991 Gracie a love story New York N Y Penguin ISBN 0 451 16886 0 OCLC 23193049 Benny amp Benny 1990 p 37 a b Mary Livingstone Wife of Jack Benny Dies in Calif at 77 The Washington Post July 1 1983 Retrieved February 21 2022 Mary Livingstone 77 the wife and partner in comedy of the late Jack Benny died today at her home here apparently of a heart attack Benny amp Benny 1990 p 82 Benny amp Benny 1990 p 75 Mary Livingstone Wife of Jack Benny Dies in Calif at 77 Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved September 30 2022 Jack Benny s Twentieth Anniversary Special 1970 retrieved December 20 2022 papermoonloveslucy July 2018 JACK BENNY S 20th ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL Tumblr Retrieved December 20 2022 Mary Livingstone Los Angeles Times Star Walk Retrieved September 15 2020 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mary Livingstone Mary Livingstone at IMDb nbsp Mary Livingstone at AllMovie Mary Livingstone at the British Film Institute better source needed Mary Livingstone at Find a Grave nbsp Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Comedy nbsp Radio nbsp Television Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mary Livingstone amp oldid 1180468187, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.