Frederick Roy Schiller (1958–1969) (divorced) (2 children) John F. Phillips (1976–2008) (divorced) (1 child)
Anne Langham Whitfield (August 27, 1938 – February 15, 2024) was an American actress on old-time radio, television, stage, and film. Her first name is sometimes seen spelled Ann.
Personal life
Whitfield was born in Oxford, Mississippi in 1938 and was the daughter of Richard N. Whitfield Jr. and Frances Turner Whitfield. Her father was director of bands at the University of Mississippi, and her mother was a speech teacher.[1] After moving to California, she attended Rosewood Avenue Public School.[2] By the time she was 17, she was studying at the University of California, Los Angeles, scheduling her classes around her work on radio programs.[3]
As a youngster, Whitfield "played child roles on practically every comedy and dramatic series originating in Hollywood".[3] Her radio debut came in September 1945, when she "stepped up on a box before an already lowered microphone in an NBC studio and said, 'I want another slice of bread'" for a commercial.[2] She became a member of the cast of One Man's Family when she was 7 years old.[3]
In 1960, she played the role of Trudy (working bar girl in the Long Branch) in the season-six episode "Don Matteo" in the TV Western Gunsmoke; then again in one of its 1966 episodes “Stage Stop” (S12E10) as “Lori Coombs”, an abused wife who later falls in love with a blind man after her husband is killed.
Whitfield played Claudia Barbour in the TV version of One Man's Family.[14] The casting was a change from Whitfield's role in the radio version of the program; in the story, Claudia was the mother of Penny, whom Whitfield played on radio.[15] She played the two roles concurrently during the TV series' single season on the air.[16] Whitfield also was featured in "The Case of the Ugly Duckling", "The Case of the Crafty Kidnapper", and "The Case of the Nautical Knot", episodes of Perry Mason (1964);[17] "The Storm Riders" on Cheyenne (June 24, 1956), and then subsequently in another episode, "The Young Fugitives" (October 23, 1961);[18] "Judgment at Hondo Seco" on Rawhide (October 20, 1961);[19] and "Harry, the Good Neighbor' on The New Phil Silvers Show (February 22, 1964). In the '60s, she was also active in series such as Adam-12, Emergency!, The New Interns, 77 Sunset Strip, Laramie, Hawaiian Eye, the Untouchables, Ben Casey, The Dakotas, 12 O'clock High, Peter Gunn, Manhunt, and the Johnny Carson Show. She played Jack Nicholson's girlfriend in Wells Fargo and Robert Redford's estranged wife in Tate – both superstars' first TV shows. Whitfield's all-time favorite role was as Sally Ellis, an Arkansas farm girl, in One Step Beyond (1960).[20]
^ abTerrace, Vincent (1999). Radio Programs, 1924–1984: A Catalog of More Than 1800 Shows. McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN978-0-7864-4513-4. pp. 231–232.
^ abSies, Luther F. (2014). Encyclopedia of American Radio, 1920–1960, 2nd ed.. McFarland & Co., Inc. ISBN978-0-7864-5149-4. p. 322.
^"Radio Reviews: NBC University Theatre". Variety. October 5, 1949. p. 31. ProQuest1285933060. With John McGovern, Jeffrey Silver, Anne Whitfield, Gale Borney, Ted Von Eltz, GeBe Pearson, Florence Ravenal, Marjorie Liszt, announcer, Don Stanley