Born Elizabeth Edith Enke in 1925 (some sources give 1927) in Kingston, Philadelphia, she initially hoped for a career in opera, and she trained as a classical singer at the Juillard School of Music before graduating from Columbia School of Drama. In 1950 she won a talent competition as Miss US Television, which led to an appearance (billed as Edith Adams) with Milton Berle on his television show.
The following year she was invited to audition as resident
vocalist on a Philadelphia television series, Ernie in Kovacsland. Adams proved
an admirable foil for Kovacs' innovative humour and eccentric
characterisations, and she stayed with him when, re-titled The Ernie Kovacs
Show, the series moved to CBS in 1952.
In 1953 she made her Broadway début as Rosalind Russell's
sister in the Leonard Bernstein-Betty Comden-Adolph Green musical hit Wonderful
Town, based on the play My Sister Eileen. Adams' fresh blonde beauty was ideal
for the role of baby-faced Eileen, who brings out the protective impulse in
men, unlike her assured sister Ruth, played by Russell, and she had an
appealing solo ballad, "A Little Bit in Love" as well as partnering
Russell in the show-stopping "Ohio", in which the
sisters express doubts about having left their small-town home for the excitement of New York.
sisters express doubts about having left their small-town home for the excitement of New York.
In 1954 Adams and Kovacs eloped to Mexico City, and she
returned to Broadway in 1956 to play the winsome Daisy Mae in the musical Li'l
Abner, based on Al Capp's satirical comic strip about the citizens of Dogpatch.
Adams shared with Peter Palmer (as Abner) the show's major ballad, "Namely
You", and won a supporting actress Tony Award for her appealing
performance.
In 1957, a year in which both she and Kovacs were nominated
for Emmy awards for best performances in a comedy series, Adams
played fairy godmother to Julie Andrews in Rodgers and Hammerstein's television musical Cinderella, which was reputedly watched by 107 million people.
played fairy godmother to Julie Andrews in Rodgers and Hammerstein's television musical Cinderella, which was reputedly watched by 107 million people.
Adams has described herself in fits of self-deprecation as a
"singer who never had a record on the charts." While that may be, the
evidence of her recordings show that Miss Adams had a most ingratiating way with a
melody and had a keen ear for selecting out-of-the-way choices for great songs
to interpret.
Adams had her first major film role when cast in Billy
Wilder's The Apartment (1960) as the spurned mistress of philandering boss Fred
MacMurray. She then had a prime role in arguably the funniest of the comedies
co-starring Doris Day and Rock Hudson, Lover Come Back (1961), as the chorus
girl Rebel Davis, who stars in a series of commercials for Hudson's advertising
executive.
In 1962, after Adams and Kovacs attended a party at Milton
Berle's home, Kovacs left to drive home (Adams was to follow in their second
car), but had a fatal crash when his vehicle skidded on the wet street – Adams
suggested he was probably lighting one of his constant cigars when he lost
control. (Their daughter Mia also died in a car crash, in 1982.) It transpired
that Kovacs owed half a million dollars in back taxes, which Adams eventually
settled by taking whatever work would pay most, refusing to file for bankruptcy
and declining the offer of a benefit concert suggested by friends including
Berle, Frank Sinatra, Jack Lemmon and Dean Martin.
She played the wife of Sid Caesar in the film It's A Mad,
Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), and made a strong impact as Steve McQueen's
stripper girlfriend who refuses to lend him money so that his lover can have an
abortion, in Love with the Proper Stranger (1963), and as the wife of an
unscrupulous Presidential candidate (Cliff Robertson) in The Best Man (1964).
She also appeared in Las Vegas, where Groucho Marx introduced her with the comment,
"There are lots of things that Edie Adams won't do, but there's nothing
she can't do".
She eventually won a lengthy and bitter battle for the
custody of Kovacs' two daughters from his first marriage, and when her debts
were paid she began acquiring the rights to Kovacs' television shows to keep
his talent alive – many of them had already been destroyed. She married twice
more, briefly to the photographer Marty Mills, with whom she had a son, then to
the trumpeter Pete Candoli. She continued to make occasional nightclub
appearances, and took guest roles in such television series as Fantasy Island
and Murder, She Wrote.
Adams died in Los Angeles, California on October 15, 2008, at age 81, from cancer and pneumonia. She was interred in Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Hollywood Hills alongside her first husband Ernie, between her daughter, Mia, and her stepdaughter, Kippie.
(Edited from Wikipedia but mainly from Independent article
by Tom Vallance)
For “The Charming Miss Edie Adams” & Edie Adams Sings, "Music To Listen To Records By"
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“The Charming Miss Edie Adams” (1951-1959)
1. There May Be a Love 02:44
2. He Don't Wanna Be Kissed (Lo Mammeta E Tu) 01:57
3. Why Can't I? 03:14
4. Swiss Holiday 02:13
5. He Was Too Good to Me 02:33
6. If You Don't Love Me 02:28
7. Sailor Man 02:06
8. I Must Love You 02:28
9. The Theme from Studio X 03:10
10. There's So Much More 02:04
Edie Adams Sings, “Music To Listen To records By” (1959)
11. Whiffenpoof Song
12. (All Of A Sudden) My Heart Sings
13. School Days
14. Indian Love Call
15. Blue Tail Fly
16. Serenade
17. Stouthearted Men
18. Singin' In The Rain
19. Paradise
20. Autumn Leaves
21. Tip Toe Through The Tulips
22. Lo, Hear The Gentle Lark
AllMusic Review by Cub Koda
Singer/actress/comedienne Edie Adams has described herself in fits of self-deprecation as a "singer who never had a record on the charts." While that may be, the evidence on this album shows that Miss Adams had a most ingratiating way with a melody and had a keen ear for selecting out-of-the-way choices for great songs to interpret. The Charming Miss Edie Adams was originally issued on RKO Records in 1959, and the majority of its track line-up was recorded the previous year. Two of the album's tracks ("Sailor Man" and "There May Be a Love") had been recorded in 1951 and released on Top Tunes Records, a small independent based in Ocean City, New Jersey. For the RKO release, she recorded another ballad, "If You Don't Love Me" and another novelty, "He Don't Wanna Be Kissed," co-written by her husband, comedian Ernie Kovacs, Domenico Modugno (writer and singer of "Volare") and Jack Segal, the lyricist responsible for "When Sunny Gets Blue" and "Scarlet Ribbons." Four seldom-heard selections from the Rodgers and Hart songbook ("Why Can't I?," "There's So Much More," "I Must Love You" and "He Was Good to Me"), along with two instrumentals from bandleader Joe Leahy ("The Theme From Studio X" and "Swiss Holiday") complete this ten-song package.
Funny you should mention. I just finished watching "Here's Edie." Thanks for the supplementary material!
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