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View Full Version : Lucille Ball Lovingly Remembered on Her 100th Birthday



Teh One Who Knocks
08-06-2011, 11:37 AM
By Stephen M. Silverman - People Magazine


http://i.imgur.com/4LTx3.jpg

Of course, Lucille Ball made us laugh. Think of the grape stomping. The chocolate factory. The Swiss cheese disguised in a baby blanket.

She even made us cry. Remember when she told Ricky they were having a baby?

Saturday marks what would have been the 100th birthday of everybody's favorite redhead, arguably the 20th century's most popular clown, unquestionably the Queen of Television.

And, as she herself well knew, given the hours of I Love Lucy reruns that kept generations glued to their TV sets, she was "the world's babysitter."

Born in Jamestown, N.Y., Lucille Désirée Ball was a hat model in New York before heading to Hollywood, where, despite making 50 films, studios never quite knew what to do with her. She gave her strongest dramatic performance in 1942, as a hard-boiled chorus girl opposite Henry Fonda's weak, love-struck busboy in the heartbreaking The Big Street.

But then TV called, and with her real-life husband, the handsome Cuban musician Desi Arnaz, history was made. Starting on Oct. 15, 1951, on Monday nights for six straight years, two-thirds of the nation's TV sets were tuned in to watch Lucy and Ricky Ricardo and their neighbors, Fred and Ethel Mertz.

On the night in January 1953 Lucy gave birth to the Ricardos' son Little Ricky, 90 percent of America's TV audience was watching, 44 million people.

And while Ball and Arnaz divorced in 1960 and she later starred on other, less amusing (yet still popular) sitcoms, Lucy was always a happy addition to the American household. Her death in 1989, at age 77, drew tributes from all corners.

When she was granted, posthumously, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest honor, Ball's citation read: "Her face was seen by more people more often than the face of any human being who ever lived. Who can forget Lucy? She was like everyone's next-door neighbor, only funnier. Lucille Ball was a national treasure who brought laughter to us all. Love Lucy? Sure. This nation is grateful to her, and we will miss her dearly."

AntZ
08-06-2011, 12:27 PM
Along with millions of other Americans, some of my earliest memories of tv as a child was "I Love Lucy".

I'll still never forget being in my little field office when I worked for the water district, I had my little black and white tv on and they cut in to say she was rushed to Ceders Sinai. A few minutes later the announcement, even all the Network News shows took over.

Noilly Pratt
08-07-2011, 05:16 PM
"Luuuucy...got some 'splainin' to do."

I don't think the UK members can fully grasp her impact. Truly a gifted performer.

deebakes
08-07-2011, 09:13 PM
i must be too young as this means almost nothing to me...

Hal-9000
08-07-2011, 09:25 PM
She was one the first female comedians to star in her own sitcom and like the article says...she made you laugh, cry etc.
The two couples portrayed typified Americana in the 50's....even with Lucy having a Latino husband.They were a hilarious couple :lol: