Edith Meiser, Vivian Vance, Danny Kaye, and Eve Arden in the musical “Let's Face It” in 1941. Music and lyrics by Cole Porter, book by Herbert and Dorothy Fields.
seen from China

seen from Poland
seen from Sweden

seen from Australia
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Bangladesh
seen from Japan

seen from Germany

seen from Canada
seen from Italy
seen from Bulgaria

seen from United States

seen from Italy

seen from United States

seen from Japan
seen from Italy
seen from United States
Edith Meiser, Vivian Vance, Danny Kaye, and Eve Arden in the musical “Let's Face It” in 1941. Music and lyrics by Cole Porter, book by Herbert and Dorothy Fields.
Middle of the Night (1959) dir. Delbert Mann
Covers for issues #17-23 of the Sherlock Holmes series by Edith Meiser and Frank Giacoia (Eternity Comics 1989)
(via Film Noir Photos: Bevy of Beauties: Edith Meiser, Eve Arden & Vivian Vance)
Vivian Vance sings as Eve Arden looks on. “Let’s Face It”, starring Danny Kaye, Broadway 1941
Edith Meiser, Vivian, Danny Kaye, Eve Arden
Sorry, I don’t know who the two actors in the front are
EDITH MEISER
May 9, 1898
Edith Meiser was born on May 9, 1898 in Detroit, Michigan. She was an actress and an author who wrote mystery novels, stage plays, and numerous radio dramas. She is perhaps best known for bringing adaptations of Sherlock Holmes stories to radio in the 1930s. Lucy fans will remember her as Phoebe Littlefield in two episodes.
At Vassar College, Meiser began performing with the drama society. She made her Broadway debut in 1923 and went on to appear in over 20 Broadway shows, including the 1941 musical Let’s Face It! co-starring Vivian Vance (top right). The two introduced the Cole Porter song “A Lady Needs a Rest.”
She made her screen debut the same year (1941) in Go West Young Lady. She made her television debut in August 1949 on an episode of “Kraft Television Theatre”.
She appeared on “I Love Lucy” in “Lucy’s Schedule” (ILL S1;E33) filmed on April 28, 1952 and first aired on May 26, 1952. She played Phoebe Littlefield, wife of Alvin (Gale Gordon), owner of the Tropicana. Phoebe teams with Lucy and Ethel to turn the tables (literally) in a fast-paced dinner scene.
The Littlefields return in “Ricky Asks for a Raise” (ILL S1;E35). Phoebe arrives for opening night of the Tropicana with the new headliner Xaviar Valdez, just to find the club empty!
Her final screen role was playing Mrs. Hatchard on PBS’s Great Performances production of Edith Wharton’s “Summer” (1981).
She died on September 26, 1993 at age 95.
Death Catches Up with Mr. Kluck. Xantippe [Edith Meiser]. Garden City, New York: doubleday, Doran and Co. for The Crime Club, Inc, (1935). First edition stated. Original dust jacket.
“A ruthless satire of radio. Many prominent radio figures, thinly disguised, move through the pages of the book. With the carefully calculated murder, in the studio, of an important sponsor, during the broadcast of his company's hour. The author has long been prominently and closely associated with radio, both as a writer and producer. She was the originator and is the present author of the Sherlock Holmes' hour.”
On October 20, 1930, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes premiered on radio. William Gillette, the playwright and actor who embodied Holmes on stage, starred as the great detective for the inaugural broadcast - Edith Meiser’s adaptation of Conan Doyle’s “The Adventure of the Speckled Band.” The broadcast was performed at NBC’s Times Square studios in New York.