It’s 2026! And it’s a new month, so we are starting the year off with “Worth a Million.” This month we are learning about the careers of several of the cast members from How to Marry a Millionaire. This show debuted in 1957 and aired for two years. Up today is Lori Nelson.
📷imdb.com first season, How to Marry a Millionaire
According to imdb.com, the plot of the show is “Motherly Mike (Merry Anders), ditzy but sexy Loco (Barbara Eden), and sensible Greta (Lori Nelson) move to the big city to find themselves wealthy men to turn into husbands. After the first year Greta gets married with Gwen (Lisa Gaye) the new roommate in this syndicated series.”
In season two, Lori Nelson left the show. She felt she was the best actress in the series, and she did not like the development of her character. She claimed Anders got all the wisecrack dialogue while Eden was the sexy, bubbly star. So, the writers married Greta off to a gas station owner, and they moved to California. Lisa Gaye was then hired as Gwen to take her place.
Lori was born Dixie Kay Nelson in New Mexico in 1933. Her father managed a metal mine company there. At age two she appeared in local theater productions. She was voted Santa Fe’s most-talented and beautiful child and toured the state as “Santa Fe’s Shirley Temple.”
By the time she was four, her family was living in California. By the ripe old age of five, Nelson won the Little Miss American pageant, and she toured veterans’ hospitals, took roles in local theater productions, and modeled for photographers.
📷virtualhistory.com
When she was seven, she contracted rheumatic fever and was bedridden for four years. After she recovered, she continued her entertainment work and became Miss Encino at age 17.
While working as a model in 1950, Nelson signed a seven-year contract with Universal-International. Her film debut was in a western, Bend of the River.
She continued to appear in films throughout her career, taking roles in 24, with her last one being the uneventful The Naked Monster in 2005. I sometimes wonder how movies like this ever end up on the big screen before someone with a bit of common sense stops it. The description for this one, according to imdb.com is “A brain-dead sheriff, a stolid secret agent, and a sexy scientist team with a grumpy retired monster fighter to battle a 60-foot, three-eyed cross between a man and a dinosaur.” However, if you have seen this movie and want to make a case for it, I’d love to hear more about it.
Nelson transitioned to television with her role in How to Marry a Millionaire. After she left the show, she continued to take offers from a variety of series, 18 in all, including Wagon Train, Tales of West Fargo, and Bachelor Father, with Family Affair being her last television appearance in 1971.
📷vintagepaparazzi.com with Tab Hunter
Nelson began dating Tab Hunter in the fifties and their friends thought they would marry. In his autobiography, Hunter relayed that he almost married Nelson, but he was also involved with figure skater Ronald Robertson at the time and was struggling to determine his sexual identity. Nelson and Hunter ended their relationship, but they remained friends, and she guest starred in several episodes of The Tab Hunter Show.
In 1960 Nelson married composer Johnny Mann and the couple had two daughters before divorcing in 1973. In 1983 she married Joseph Reiner, a police officer. After 1971, she was only in a handful of movies and videos. I’m guessing she didn’t miss the limelight; she said she always preferred popcorn and peanut butter to champagne and caviar.
Nelson died at age 87 from Alzheimer’s disease. I don’t think Nelson had the career that she had envisioned for herself, but I’m grateful we have her as part of the history of this blog and How to Marry a Millionaire. The episodes I watched had some witty dialogue and fun plots.
Welcome to 2026! Our blog theme this month is “Worth a Million.” We are learning about the careers of several cast members from How to Marry a Millionaire. This show debuted in 1957 and aired for two years.
📷instagram Cast of season 2
The show was based on a movie that came out in 1953 starring Marilyn Monroe. The stars were Merry Anders, Barbara Eden, and Lori Nelson. Nelson was not happy with her role. She felt Anders got all the wisecrack comments as the smart girl and Eden got all the funny lines as the bombshell, while she was overlooked. There is a discrepancy whether she quit or was fired, but either way, she did not return for season two. Lisa Gaye was the new roommate Gwen Kirby, but hopefully she did not pay too much to sublet, because after thirteen episodes, the show was cancelled.
Like Jimmy Cross, who we learned about last week, Gaye never was part of another cast again, but she was busy during the sixties, amassing almost 100 credits. Her last appearance was on The Mod Squad in 1970, her only seventies appearance.
Gaye was born in Colorado in 1935. I’m sure she was influenced by both parents—her mother was an actress, and her father was an artist. In the late thirties, the family moved to Los Angeles. Gaye’s mother was determined to get all of her children an acting career after their daughter Teala was signed by Paramount. (Her siblings include Teala Loring (32 credits), Debra Paget (45 credits), and Frank Griffin (78 credits primarily for make-up).
Gaye made her first appearance at age 7, and by age 17, she was offered a seven-year contract with Universal. She jumped back and forth from movies to television during her career.
📷pinterest.com
Her other recurring role was as a model in Love That Bob. Lisa did an interview (http://www.westernclippings.com/interview/lisagaye) and she was asked about her favorite directors. I was surprised to read that she chose Bob Cummings. She said Bob not only starred in the show but often directed episodes. She said “He had terrific timing for comedy; he understood comedy. He knew what he wanted and sometimes there would be take after take until he got it right. He taught me a lot.” It surprised me because typically when I read comments about Cummings, they are more negative than positive.
For example, Julie Newmar didn’t feel that Cummings was the right actor for her costar on My Living Doll. She said that “They originally wanted Efrem Zimbalist Jr. It was not a flip part—it needed a straight actor who could play opposite this bizarre creature so the comedy would come off. That quality was lost when they hired Bob. The show could have been wonderful. I think it would have run for many seasons had they hired Efrem because he had the right qualities.”
I couldn’t find much about Gaye’s thoughts on How to Marry a Millionaire. She did mention that in the early days of television there often weren’t hairdressers or make-up artists, and the actors had to do that themselves.
📷imdb.com
In an interview for the Television Academy, Everett Greenbaum said How to Marry a Millionaire was the worst collaboration he ever did. He inherited a writing partner, Milt Pascal, and said they did not work the same way at all. For example, if there was a horse in the scene, Milt would say, “Let’s come up with three horse jokes to write the scene around.” Greenbaum then wrote his own script for the show. Since Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn had just done Desk Set and had a computer available, Greenbaum wrote an episode about the computer choosing dates for the girls.
Barbara Eden talked a bit about the show in her interview with the Academy also. She said it was her finishing school. She mentioned that she liked Lisa Gaye very much. She said it was a hard job though. They had to wear very high-heeled shoes and be on the set for thirteen hours a day.
Eden was asked why the series was cancelled. She thought it was because it was a syndicated show that was being filmed to transition to a fourth television network that Fox was trying to establish at the time. When it became obvious that there wasn’t going to be a fourth network, all those shows were canceled.
In 1955 Gaye married Bently Ware and they were together until his death in 1977.
📷imdb.com
Gaye’s career might have been much different in 1961. She auditioned for the role of Anita in the film version of West Side Story and was seriously considered for the part, but the role eventually went to Rita Moreno. She did have a film career, but her roles were not major ones and the movies were good, but not necessarily Oscar quality. She was in The Glenn Miller Story, Rock Around the Clock, and Shake, Rattle & Roll. In the Miller biopic, she was part of a screaming crowd, but she was able to use more skills in other movies. Gaye loved dancing and originally wanted to be a ballerina.
Gaye described what it was like to be at Universal at that time. She said it was the only studio where you were given lessons in drama, singing, dancing, fencing, horseback riding. She said, “it was awesome . . . and you got paid to learn.”
If Gaye wanted to talk about a day that might have changed her life, she might have mentioned a day in 1958. She said she was working with Steve McQueen on Wanted: Dead or Alive. As she tells the story, “We were shooting on the back lot and he asked me if I’d like a ride back to the soundstage, on his motorcycle. So, I certainly said ‘Sure.’ I made a big mistake by getting on his motorcycle. We went all over that lot, and not at a slow pace! He didn’t slow down—he was always on the cutting edge. We zoomed right up to the soundstage where the doors were closed. He had it arranged that someone inside would open them at the last minute, but I thought we were goners for sure. After that ride, I said, ‘Thank you,’ and never rode with him again.”
📷westernclippings.com
She also discussed another close call when she was appearing on The Wild Wild West in an episode titled “The Night of the Falcon.” She was supposed to ride a horse with the falcon. She declined. She said she would ride the horse or handle the falcon but not both. So, her stunt double was given the task. Gaye had to sit on a ladder, so it looked like she was on a horse. When she was sitting up there, she noticed the trainer looked rough and she assumed he had gone through a windshield because he had stitches all over his face. Her double was riding the horse with the bird when it screeched, causing the horse to rear up and throw her double. She later learned that the falcon attacked his trainer, chewing up his face.
While Gaye didn’t have a recurring role on Death Valley Days, she was on it more than any other actor, nine times. She said she liked the fact that the stories were all true. She had another close call on that series as well. She was on a horse when it was spooked and was dragged for some distance. There was a wrangler who was supposed to catch the horse if it took off, but the horse ran over the wrangler; luckily, she was full of mud but okay.
Lisa said in the late sixties her career seemed to hit a rock. She didn’t know why, but she never worked again. She said after her husband passed away, she went to Houston to help her daughter who had six kids. She said she became a receptionist at the local religious TV station for 19 years.
It’s too bad that Lisa’s career hit a wall, but it sounds like she enjoyed being able to help raise her grandchildren. After such a successful couple of decades, it’s hard to know why she suddenly was not receiving any offers.
It’s 2026! And it’s January, so we are starting the year off with “Worth a Million.” This month we are learning about the careers of several of the cast members from How to Marry a Millionaire. This show debuted in 1957 and aired for two years.
📷tmdb.com The first year cast of women
According to imdb.com, the plot is “Motherly Mike, ditzy but sexy Loco, and sensible Greta move to the big city to find themselves wealthy men to turn into husbands. After the first year Greta gets married with Gwen moving in as the new roommate in this syndicated series.”
The six members of the cast included Merry Anders (Mike), Lori Nelson (Greta), Barbara Eden (Loco), Jimmy Cross (Jesse), Lisa Gaye (Gwen), and Joseph Kearns (Mr. Tobey). During the past decade, we have learned a lot about Barbara Eden, best known as Jeannie in I Dream of Jeannie and Kearns who we remember as Mr. Wilson in Dennis the Menace. So, this month we are learning about the four remaining stars, and we begin today with Jimmy Cross.
📷imdb.com Cross as elevator attendant
Cross was born in 1907 in New York. At age 40, he married actress Peggy Ryan, but they divorced after the seven-year itch. Ryan was a popular face for a while. She and Donald O’Connor were supposed to be the next Judy Garland/Mickey Rooney couple. Ryan’s parents were Vaudeville dancers, and she was on stage by age two. She was an amazing dancer and singer. After she and Cross divorced, she tried another short-term marriage to Ray McDonald before meeting Eddie Sherman whom she was with for almost fifty years. You might remember her as Jenny, Steve McGarrett’s secretary on the original Hawaii Five-0.
On How to Marry a Millionaire, Cross played the elevator man, at age 50, who worked in the apartment building where the girls lived. He sometimes helps and sometimes hinders the trio with their get-rich-husband schemes.
This was the only series he costarred in, but he did show up on The Red Skelton Show 46 times.
Cross typically played a background role, often a bartender, drunk, or photographer. However, he was busy and appeared on almost every popular show during the sixties and seventies, garnering almost 100 credits during those decades. His last role was in BJ and the Bear in 1979, two years before his death.
📷thevalleytimes.com With Wife Peggy Ryan
Cross also had a decent movie career. Again, he was not front and center but had some fun parts and if you look quickly, you will see him in several popular movies including North by Northwest, Bells Are Ringing, Hello Dolly, and The Poseidon Adventure.
I wish I knew more about Cross. There just isn’t much information out there considering how long he worked in the entertainment industry. This is one of those cases where his work might have to speak for itself. That said, this show got a lot of good reviews when it came out and Cross, while not being a star, added a fun element to the episodes he was in.