Verna Felton, much to my surprise, was from Canada, had lived here in Vancouver (not far from Mary Livingstone's house, actually) and had a home in the Victoria area at the time of her death (I'll have to find her obit again in the Vancouver papers, where they quote her about living in B.C.). I've spotted her in some newspaper ads from 1910-12 appearing in plays at a theatre in Lethbridge, Alberta. So she had a long career before radio.
Here's a short newspaper piece on her in television, dated Oct. 29, 1956:
Not all TV actors rely on the teleprompter. Some like Verna Felton, have their own special devices for jogging the old memory.
Miss Felton pastes, write s or pins "cue words" inn odd spots around the "December Bride" set. She can then take a peek at them while carrying on with her normal acting duties for the cameras.
A note stuck in the pages of a magazine on the coffee table in the living room might say simply, "Well, kids ..." Those two words will cue a long speech that Miss Felton was having trouble with during rehearsals.
Verna has stuck cues in so many strange places that the studio property department never knows what to expect. Cues have turned up written in ink across the breast of a dressed chicken in a market scene, scrawled in chalk on a watermelon, pasted inside a humidor or sometimes under the cradle of a phone.
Now the prop men even cooperate with Miss Felton in her scheme. They might write the cue words into the frosting of a cake insert them with vegetable dye into sandwiches or even scribble them on banana peels and apple skins.
The food items work out nicely, Miss Felton explained. Her role in the show calls for her nearly always to be eating or getting ready to eat.
"But I nearly came a cropper once," Verna recalled, "when I put the cue on the bottom of a cup and then someone poured in two much coffee.
"I have planned so I would take one sip and then be able to see the bottom of the empty cup and the cue word. Instead, the cup was darn near full—I had to gulp like crazy to get to the bottom in time."
Yhtapmys