MYSTERY GUEST: Helen Hayes ["First Lady of the American Theater"; also film and TV actress] PANEL: Arlene Francis, Martin Gabel, Dorothy Kilgallen, Bennett Cerf
The horse tail lady's segment was hilarious! 🐎🐎🐎🐎
Arlene turned her head so she could peek through the space between the mask and her nose. She admitted to doing that in a TV interview on CBC television in Canada.
I was never impressed by Helen Hayes as an actress, whose abilities seemed average to me.
kHgFs874TSU&t=3m15s 3:15 THAT is one huge honker and abnormally large ears!
I believe her father was President Rutherford B. Hayes
Sometimes I think the panelists cheat! 😂
Bennet Cerf quickly mentioned that Michael Romanoff was in the process of writing his memoirs. Anyone know of such a memoir/book exists…I’ve been searching the internet high and low!?
Three ways to spread information: Telegraph, telephone, tell Phyllis Cerf.
Wow. Helen's son couldn't be there bc he had an exam at Harvard, and not bc he was in rehab. How things have changed.
Dano's mom
If I were producing a revival of "What's My Line?", I wouldn't reveal contestants' occupations to viewers until either a panelist guessed the contestant's occupation or until the contestant has stumped the panel.
Amazingly, John Charles Daly was both anchorman of ABC's television evening newscast and head of it's news division between 1953 and 1960, while hosting "What's My Line?".
dorothy was pretty fancy looking tonight
Very easy to binge watch this show.
Sadly, James McArthur , Helen’s son died of cancer at Mayo Clinic in Jax when I worked there.
Helen Hayes was wonderful! !
RIP Helen Hayes (10 Oct 1900- 17 Mar 1993) (aged 92), Mary MacArthur (16 Feb 1930-22 Sep 1949) (aged 19), James MacArthur (8 Dec 1937- 28 Oct 2010) (aged 72), and Charles Gordon MacArthur Jr. (5 Nov 1895- 21 Apr 1956) (aged 60) you will truly all be missed and my prayers go out to them all.
Always love what's my line
(born , February 20, 1890 – September 1, 1971), known as , was a Hollywood restaurateur, con man and actor born in Lithuania. He is perhaps best remembered as the owner of the now-defunct Romanoff's, a Beverly Hills restaurant popular with Hollywood stars in the 1940s and 1950s. He claimed to be a member of Russia's royal House of Romanov (sometimes spelled "Romanoff" in English). This was widely known to be untrue throughout his career, but press reports tended to treat the deception as a humorous matter.