Playing female lead in When a Girl Marries on radio
Spouse
Guy Sorel (January 13, 1945 - ?)
Mary Jane Higby (May 29, 1909 – February 1, 1986)[1] was an American actress in the era of old-time radio and the early years of television. She is best known for her 18 years in the leading role on When a Girl Marries.[2]
Early years
The daughter of vaudevillian parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Higby[3] (known professionally as the Higby Players) Mary Jane Higby was born in St. Louis, Missouri, "between a matinee and an evening performance."[4] According to a newspaper photograph's caption, "literally she was carried on the stage by her theatrical parents as a prop when she was only 2."[5]
Perhaps her earliest public performance occurred when she was 5 years old. An article in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in 1914 listed Higby as one of "a number of helpful children [who] will give a performance for the benefit of the Post-Dispatch Pure Milk and Free Ice Fund."[6] A later article cited Higby as one of two "little performers" who were "brought out repeatedly for their excellent work."[7]
Radio
Higby's radio debut came in 1932 "in singing and dramatic roles."[8] In 1936, she played Desdemona in a production of Shakespeare's Othello on KECA in Los Angeles, California.[9] She also participated in network radio that year as a part of the cast of Death Rides the Highways on NBC.[10]
Higby's signature role was portraying Joan Davis, the female lead on When a Girl Marries, a part she played for 18 years.[1] Her other roles in radio programs included Cynthia in The Romance of Helen Trent[11] and various supporting parts in Perry Mason[12]
Higby "had a Hollywood career as a child actress,"[16] primarily acting in silent films for which her father was the director.[2] As an adult, looking back on her cinematic experience as a child, Higby said, "... the movies frightened me. I was, it seems, always being kidnaped, riding runaway horses or, generally speaking, being yanked around."[17]
In 1968, Cowles Publishing Company published Tune in Tomorrow, Higby's account of her life in radio's golden age. A reviewer called the book "a fast, bouncy, information-loaded" description of the era—one that focused on "actors, actresses, sponsors, engineers, agents, writers, sound men, on everything and everybody who made pre-TV radio tick" rather than on herself.[19]
Personal life
Higby married actor Guy Sorel[16] on January 13, 1945, in New York City, New York.[17]
References
^ abDeLong, Thomas A. (1996). Radio Stars: An Illustrated Biographical Dictionary of 953 Performers, 1920 through 1960. McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN978-0-7864-2834-2. P. 129.
^ abReinehr, Robert C. and Swartz, Jon D. (2008). The A to Z of Old-Time Radio. Scarecrow Press, Inc. ISBN978-0-8108-7616-3. P. 126.