JEANE DIXON - TYPED LETTER SIGNED 09/27/1993 - HFSID 270181
Price: $220.00
JEANE DIXON
Jeane Dixon sends a typed letter to Phyllis Diller for Diller's appearance on
her TV show.
Typed Letter Signed: "Jeane", 1 page, 8½x11. Washington, D.C., 1993
September 27. On letterhead of Children to Children, Inc. to comedienne
and actress Phyllis Diller. Facsimile signature at upper left.
Handwritten salutation: "Dearest Phyllis". In full: "And
you are one of the women in the world I respect and love most, and are most
grateful and truly appreciative to you for your splendiferous appearance on my
TV show. And thank you at least jillians (sic) for those quite undeserved
Godivas! Always, and may all good things keep coming to you. Love". Typed
postscript: "And the Pony Express is rushing more cherry juice
overland!" Astrologer JEANE DIXON (1918-1997) became a celebrity
after predicting the election and assassination of John F. Kennedy. Her
annual predictions were widely publicized, and Dixon wrote seven books as well
as a daily horoscope column published in a number of newspapers. Her celebrity
clients included Ronald and Nancy Reagan. Dixon was also an influential
Washington socialite. 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, not at signature. Fine
condition.
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