Lisa Gaye: Avoiding Horses and Motorcycles

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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.”

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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.

Celebrating National Minnesota Day with Marion Ross

For those of you who are big fans of the “National Day of” calendars, you know that there are celebrations for National State Days. In my blog this month, we are learning about celebrities from those National State Days. We begin with National Minnesota Day and one of the stars born there is Marion Ross.

Marion was born in Watertown, MN in 1928. She moved from Waconia to Wilmar and then to Albert Lea. She must have always had stars in her eyes because at age 13 she changed the spelling of her name from Marian to Marion because she thought it would look better on a marquee. After her sophomore year in high school, she enrolled at the MacPhail Center for Music in Minneapolis. A year later, her family moved to California where she graduated from Point Loma High School.

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Ross was named Most Outstanding Actress at San Diego State University; however, her major was archeology. After graduating in 1950, she did some summer theater in California and then began auditioning for films. The year she graduated, she eloped with Freeman Morse. They were married for 18 years.

Marion was successful in her movie career. Her first film was Forever Female with Ginger Rogers and William Holden in 1953. She would appear in 26 movies including The Glenn Miller Story and Sabrina. Ross recalled her time in Hollywood. She says it was a great time to be an actor. “All the stars ate in the studio’s dining room. Marlene Dietrich would come swooping into the room, and a hush would fall over the place. Those early days in Hollywood were just so thrilling, almost more than I could bear.”

Ironically, her first television role on Calvacade of America also took place in 1953. She would go on to have an amazing television career with more than 140 different roles on the small screen. While most of her appearances in the fifties were on the drama shows or westerns, she did show up on Life with Father as an Irish maid from 1953-55. She also was a teacher on The Donna Reed Show.

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Ross on Perry Mason

The sixties found her primarily on dramas such as Outer Limits, Dr. Kildare, and The Fugitive. However, she also received recurring roles on three series: The Gertrude Berg Show, Mr. Novak, and Paradise Bay. She was Mary Morgan on Paradise Bay, a soap opera set in California. Although the show was only on for a year, she appeared on 158 episodes before it ended.

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Her last role of that decade landed her on The Brady Bunch. When the kids get sick, Mike calls the boys’ male doctor and Carol calls the girls’ female doctor.  Instead of choosing one, they decide to keep seeing their same patients.

The early seventies kept Ross busy on shows such as Hawaii Five-0, Love American Style, and Marcus Welby. In 1974 that Love American Style skit led to the show Happy Days where Marion reprised her role as Marion Cunningham. She continued her role as biological mother to Richie and Joanie (and poor Chuck occasionally) and as a surrogate mother to Fonzie for eleven years.

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In May of 2020, Ross did an interview on TVLine.com with Matt Webb Mitovich. He asked if she had a favorite episode from the show. She said there were two that were definitely favorites. One was when Marion gets mad at the family because they expect so much. She stood up for herself, told Howard he could have his food and took it out uncooked and put it in front of them, then storms out the door and went to work at Arnold’s. Her other favorite was the scene when she did the tango with Fonzie. She said Henry Winkler caught on right away but she had to work with a coach for a week to get it down right.

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She also discussed the softball team Garry Marshall put together to keep everyone out of trouble in the off season. She said they played all over the US and continued, “And then at one point, we were invited to go to Europe. We went to Germany and played softball with the US infantry which was incredible. And then once our show was totally over, after we did our last show at Paramount, we all got on a plane at the crack of dawn and flew to Okinawa and played softball with the US infantry there.” She played rover but said she could hit. Her strategy was to hit the ball and then run with her arms raised up.  Everyone was so afraid of hitting “the old lady” she would make it on first base.

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After the demise of Happy Days, Marion wasn’t content to sit back and enjoy life. She continued her television appearances and from 1984-2018 you could catch her on a variety of shows including Night Court, MacGyver,Grey’s Anatomy, and Hot in Cleveland. She had recurring roles on another six series. She played several different women named Emily on The Love Boat, as the iron-willed Jewish matriarch on Brooklyn Bridge, mean Grandmother Forman on That Seventies Show, Drew’s mother on The Drew Carey Show, Marilyn Gilmore on The Gilmore Girls, and Ida Holden on Brothers and Sisters.

Marion was also able to get back on the stage. She took roles in “Arsenic and Old Lace”, “Steel Magnolias”, “Long Day’s Journey into Night”, “The Glass Menagerie”, “Pippin”, and “Barefoot in the Park.” She also toured the country in a one-woman show as poet Edna St. Vincent Millay in “A Lovely Light.”

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In 2008 the Albert Lea Civic Theater in Albert Lea, Minnesota changed the name of its venue to the Marion Ross Performing Arts Center. Marion retired in 2018. She could then concentrate on some of her hobbies which include gardening, reading, spending time with family, watching movies, listening to the radio, praying, and singing. Marion’s two children are also in the entertainment business, Jim as an actor and Ellen Kreamer as a writer/producer on many shows including Friends and one of my recent favorites, Trial & Error.

In 2018 Ross published her memoir, My Days, Happy & Otherwise. The book is described as “funny, poignant, and revealing.” It features Garry Marshall’s final interview, a foreword from Ron Howard, conversations with her own children, and her entire story.

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With the Covid pandemic continuing, Ross is happy to be spending her time at her California home being in her garden and spending time with family. As she put it, “It is such a wonderful time to bond and connect with family even if we are not together. I also have been calling friends to see how they are and have a little chat.”  Some good motherly advice for all of us.

The Alliterative Harry Morgan (Famous for saying Horse Hockey and Beaver Biscuits as Colonel Potter)

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When it comes to prolific actors in television and film, few people can equal Harry Morgan’s career. Known for his deadpan delivery, he was in more than 100 films. He also starred in 11 television series and appeared on 6 TV Guide covers.

 

Born Harry Bratsberg in 1915, he grew up in Muskegon, Michigan. His parents came from Norway and Sweden.  Harry went to the University of Chicago, planning on becoming an attorney but got interested in acting instead. In 1937, he began appearing with stock companies, followed by Broadway roles.

Harry Morgan From 'December Bride'

 

His first wife was Eileen Detchon who he was married to from 1940 until her death in 1985. Her photo appears on Colonel Potter’s desk on M*A*S*H. They had four sons: Christopher, Charley, Paul and Daniel. Morgan remarried in 1986 and was married to Barbara Bushman until his death.

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He was signed by Twentieth Century Fox in 1942. His screen debut was The Shores of Tripoli under the name Henry Morgan. Later that year he appeared in Orchestra Wives and a few years later was in The Glenn Miller Story with Jimmy Stewart. In 1943, he starred with Henry Fonda in the highly acclaimed The Ox-Bow Incident.

 

In 1954, he was offered the role of Pete Porter in December Bride which ran until 1959. In the show, he complained about his wife Gladys a lot, but we never meet her. When the show ended, he starred in a spin-off Pete and Gladys from 1960-1962. Pete Porter is an insurance salesman. His scatter-brained, but beautiful, wife is played by Cara Williams.

 

The next year he was cast in The Richard Boone Show from 1963-1964. This was an anthology series which Richard Boone hosted.  A cast of 15 actors appeared in different roles each episode. Morgan appeared in all 25 episodes. The show never captured viewers, probably because it was on against Petticoat Junction.

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Almost immediately upon its ending, he was again cast in a television show with a role on Kentucky Jones during 1964 and 1965. Kentucky Jones is a veterinarian and former horse trainer.  He and his wife adopted a Chinese boy named Dwight Eisenhower “Ike” Wong. After his wife’s death, the local Asian community and handyman Seldom played by Morgan helps him raise Ike.

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Morgan had a couple of years of guest starring in shows such as The Wackiest Ship in the Army and Dr. Kildare, and then he was cast in Dragnet from 1967-1970. He and Jack Webb were friends before the show and continued to be best friends throughout Harry’s life. Webb had directed the previous Dragnet show in the 1950s and revived the show in 1967, convincing his friend to play the role of Officer Joe Gannon who helped Sergeant Joe Friday (Webb) solve crimes in Los Angeles.

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Between 1970 and 1972 he would show up in The Partridge Family in two different roles and Love American Style among other shows. 1972 would find him starring in another show, Hec Ramsey, until 1974. This show reunited Morgan with Richard Boone who starred in it and Jack Webb who produced it. Ramsey was a western detective who preferred to solve crimes with his brain rather than his gun. The show only lasted for ten episodes.

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From 1974-1983, he was cast in his most famous role, that of Colonel Potter on M*A*S*H. A military hospital staff treating soldiers during the Korean war rely on laughter to get through the gruesome work. The show combined heartache and joy to tell the story of the 4077th. When the show was cancelled, Harry continued the role in the spin-off, After M*A*S*H from 1983-1985.

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On M*A*S*H Morgan painted the portraits attributed to Colonel Potter. He won the Emmy for Outstanding Supporting Actor in 1980, receiving 11 nominations overall during the run of the show.

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His description of Colonel Potter was: He was firm. He was a good officer, and he had a good sense of humor. I think it’s the best part I ever had. I loved playing Colonel Potter.”

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When asked if he was a better actor after working with the show’s talented cast, Morgan responded, “I don’t know about that, but it’s made me a better human being.

 

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Morgan also appeared in several Disney movies during the 1970s, including The Barefoot Executive, Snowball Express, Charley and the Angel, The Apple Dumpling Gang, The Cat from Outer Space, and The Apple Dumpling Gang Rides Again.

In 1986 he was cast in Blacke’s Magic. The show featured a magician and his father, a con man, who solve crimes. Unfortunately, like many of the shows he was a part of, this one only lasted 15 episodes. When it ended in 1987, Harry was immediately given a role in You Can’t Take It with You where he appeared on three episodes during 1987 and 1988. Morgan starred as Martin; the show was based on the original play, but the television series was set in the 1980s.  Although Morgan was only in three episodes, he was in the majority of them, because the entire show consisted of four episodes.

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In the 1980s, he appeared in commercials for ERA realty and Toyota.

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During the late 1980s and early 1990s, he appeared in six different shows, with recurring roles on The Simpsons and Third Rock from the Sun. In 1996 he retired.

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In 2006, Morgan was inducted into the Hall of Great Western Performers at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum.

 

Many of his western films were done with James Stewart. They did five films together, and Morgan says Stewart was one of the nicest men he ever met and extremely professional.

 

In addition to Jack Webb, he was good friends with Tim Conway and Don Knotts.

A very interesting man, in his spare time, he enjoyed golfing, fishing, travel, spending time with his family, reading, raising horses, horse riding, painting, and poetry.

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He died in 2011 from pneumonia.

Following Morgan’s death, Mike Farrell, who played B.J. Hunnicutt, starring with Morgan in M*A*S*H, released the following statement:

“He was a wonderful man, a fabulous actor and a dear and close friend since the first day we worked together. As Alan [Alda] said, he did not have an unadorable bone in his body . . . He was a treasure as a person, an imp at times, and always a true professional. He had worked with the greats and never saw himself as one of them. But he was . . . He was the rock everyone depended on and yet he could cut up like a kid when the situation warranted it. He was the apotheosis, the finest example of what people call a ‘character actor’. What he brought to the work made everyone better. He made those who are thought of as ‘stars’ shine even more brightly . . . The love and admiration we all felt for him were returned tenfold in many, many ways. And the greatest and most selfless tribute to the experience we enjoyed was paid by Harry at the press conference when our show ended. He remarked that someone had asked him if working on M*A*S*H had made him a better actor. He responded by saying, ‘I don’t know about that, but it made me a better human being.’ It’s hard to imagine a better one.”

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