ERMA BOMBECK - TYPED LETTER SIGNED 01/25/1995 - HFSID 270146
Price: $180.00
ERMA BOMBECK
Bombeck writes to friend Phyllis Diller over her excitement of her
visiting her local Arizona: "I was ecstatic to hear you're coming to Phoenix to
bring culture to these desert people"
Typed letter signed: "Erma", 1 page, 6¼x9. No place, but
Paradise Valley, Arizona, 1995 January 25. On sheet imprinted with
her name to comedienne and actress Phyllis Diller. Begins: "Dear
Phyllis". In full: "I was ecstatic to hear you're coming to
Phoenix to bring culture to these desert people who are still raving over
the road company of Tobacco Road which played here last year. I immediately made
reservations to come and to hear you and would love a chance to come back and
say hello to you and thank you for all the caring you have bestowed upon
me during the last few years. You will recognize me by a twenty-pound
rosary around my neck that you sent me from New York. See you on February 3.
Love". Bombeck and Diller, both Ohio-born humorists and winners of the
prestigious Mark Twain Award for humor, carried on a long correspondence
and Bombeck had interviewed Diller for a segment on Good Morning America.
Bombeck and her family lived in Paradise Valley, Arizona at the time of this
letter. Dubbed "the Socrates of the Ironing Board" by "Life"
magazine, ERMA BOMBECK (1927-1996), born Erma Louise Fiste, poked fun
at everyday life in suburbia in her column, "At Wit's End", for over 30
years (beginning in 1965). Her gentle, self-deprecating humor eventually
appeared twice a week in over 600 newspapers, and Bombeck delighted readers with
several humorous books, including The Grass is Always Greener Over the
Septic Tank (1976) and If Life Is a Bowl of Cherries, What am I Doing in
the Pits? (1978). Bombeck was also a correspondent on Good Morning
America from 1975-1986 and created and produced the television
series, Maggie (1991-1992). Bombeck, who once said "I spend 90% of my
time living the scripts and 10% writing them", died in 1996 at the age of 69.
Although she survived a mastectomy in 1992, Bombeck had been diagnosed
with adult polycystic kidney disease in 1991 (she didn't go public with
her condition until 1993). After years on a transplant waiting list, she finally
received a kidney transplant in 1996, but died from complications from
the operation. The proceeds of her book, I Want to Grow Up, I Want to Grow
Hair, I Want to Go to Boise, were donated to cancer research. Bombeck had
been married to William Bombeck since 1949 and had three children. Comedienne
PHYLLIS DILLER (1917-2012), known for her
outrageous appearance, zany outfits, distinctive laugh and a stand-up act that
featured frequent references to her fictional husband, "Fang", and zingers about
her sex appeal and numerous plastic surgeries, got her big break in March
1955 (at age 37), when she debuted at San Francisco's Purple Onion club. A
subsequent appearance on The Tonight Show hosted by Jack Paar launched
her national career, which got a big boost after Bob Hope saw Diller in a
Washington, D.C. club. A favorite of the comedian, Diller would appear in
three of Hope's films and 23 of his TV specials. Diller, who recorded her
first comedy record album in 1959, took her groundbreaking "funny hausfrau" act
to nightclubs and television variety shows and specials and she also appeared on
the big screen. Her feature film credits include Splendor in the Grass
(1961), The Fat Spy (1966), Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! (1966),
The Sunshine Boys (1975) and The Silence of the Hams (1994), and
she provided the voice of the Queen in A Bug's Life (1998). By 2000, the
comedienne, who had trained as a concert pianist before her marriage (1939-1965)
to Sherwood Anderson Diller, had appeared as a piano soloist with 100
symphony orchestras across the U.S. Despite retiring from nightclub/stage
tours in May 2002 at the age of 84, Diller continued to make films
(Motorcross Kids, 2004; Forget About It, 2005) and occasionally
appear on TV programs, including two episodes of 7th Heaven (2002, 2003)
and a guest shot on The Wayne Brady Show (2004). Lightly creased with
folds, lower horizontal fold at the "E" of Erma. Fine
condition.
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