Eleanor Geisman net worth is $10 Million. Also know about Eleanor Geisman bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship and more …
Eleanor Geisman Wiki Biography
June Allyson (October 7, 1917 – July 8, 2006) was an American stage, film, and television actress, dancer and singer.Allyson began her career as a dancer on Broadway in 1938. She signed with MGM in 1943, and rose to fame the following year in Two Girls and a Sailor. Allyson’s “girl next door” image was solidified during the mid-1940s when she was paired with actor Van Johnson in five films. In 1951, she won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress for her performance in Too Young to Kiss. From 1959 to 1961, she hosted and occasionally starred in her own anthology series, The DuPont Show with June Allyson, which aired on CBS.In the 1970s, she returned to the stage starring in Forty Carats and No, No, Nanette. In 1982, Allyson released her autobiography June Allyson by June Allyson, and continued her career with guest starring roles on television and occasional film appearances. She later established the June Allyson Foundation for Public Awareness and Medical Research and worked to raise money for research for urological and gynecological diseases affecting senior citizens. During the 1980s, Allyson also became a spokesperson for Depend undergarments. She made her final onscreen appearance in 2001.Allyson was married four times (to three husbands) and had two children with her first husband, Dick Powell. She died of respiratory failure and bronchitis in July 2006 at the age of 88. IMDB Wikipedia $10 million 1917 1917-10-7 2006-07-08 5′ (1.52 m) Actress Alfred Glenn Maxwell Eleanor Geisman June Allyson Net Worth Libra Little Women (1949) New York October 7 Pamela Richard Powell Jr. Soundtrack That’s Entertainment! III (1994) The Bronx The DuPont Show with June Allyson (1959) Till the Clouds Roll By (1946) USA
Eleanor Geisman Quick Info
Full Name | June Allyson |
Net Worth | $10 Million |
Date Of Birth | October 7, 1917 |
Died | 2006-07-08 |
Place Of Birth | The Bronx, New York, USA |
Height | 5′ (1.52 m) |
Weight | 99 lbs. |
Profession | Actress, Soundtrack |
Nationality | American |
Spouse | Alfred Glenn Maxwell (divorced) |
Children | Pamela, Richard Powell Jr. |
Parents | Robert Geisman, Clara Josephine Provost |
Siblings | Henry Geisman, Arthur Peters |
IMDB | http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000742 |
Awards | Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, Grand Jury Prize |
Nominations | Golden Globe Henrietta Award for World Film Favorites |
Movies | Little Women, The Glenn Miller Story, Two Girls and a Sailor, Strategic Air Command, The Stratton Story, Too Young to Kiss, Till the Clouds Roll By, Best Foot Forward, The Opposite Sex, The McConnell Story, The Bride Goes Wild, High Barbaree, Executive Suite, Two Sisters from Boston, Music for Milli… |
TV Shows | The DuPont Show with June Allyson |
Eleanor Geisman Trademarks
- Her husky speaking and singing voice
Eleanor Geisman Quotes
- The only parental authority I had was the studio. When I was a star, there was always somebody with me, to guard me. I was not allowed to be photographed with a cigarette, a drink, a cup of coffee or even a glass of water because someone might think it was liquor. When I left the studio I was already married and had two children, but I felt as sad as a child leaving home for the first time.
- If you see someone without a smile, give him yours.
- I couldn’t dance, and, Lord knows, I couldn’t sing, but I got by somehow. Richard Rodgers was always keeping them from firing me.
- [assessing her appeal as a performer] I have big teeth. I lisp. My eyes disappear when I smile. My voice is funny. I don’t sing like Judy Garland. I don’t dance like Cyd Charisse. But women identify with me. And while men desire Cyd Charisse, they’d take me home to meet Mom.
- [on Joan Crawford] I tried to be a good listener. I decided that was what she wanted all along – not so much a friend as an audience.
- MGM was my mother and father, mentor and guide, my all-powerful and benevolent crutch. When I left them, it was like walking into space.
- In real life I’m a poor dressmaker and a terrible cook – anything in fact but the perfect wife.
Eleanor Geisman Important Facts
- She was a heavy smoker until the 1970s.
- June Allyson confessed, in her autobiography, that she had a short-term relationship with a young John F. Kennedy.
- Is one of 20 actresses who did not receive an Oscar nomination for their Best Actress in a Comedy/Musical Golden Globe-winning performance; hers being for Too Young to Kiss (1951). The others, in chronological order, are: Ethel Merman for Call Me Madam (1953), Jean Simmons for Guys and Dolls (1955), Taina Elg and Kay Kendall for Les Girls (1957), Marilyn Monroe for Some Like It Hot (1959), Rosalind Russell for A Majority of One (1961) and Gypsy (1962), Patty Duke for Me, Natalie (1969), Twiggy for The Boy Friend (1971), Raquel Welch for The Three Musketeers (1973), Barbra Streisand for A Star Is Born (1976), Bernadette Peters for Pennies from Heaven (1981), Kathleen Turner for Romancing the Stone (1984) and Prizzi’s Honor (1985), Miranda Richardson for Enchanted April (1991), Jamie Lee Curtis for True Lies (1994), Nicole Kidman for To Die For (1995), Madonna for Evita (1996), Renée Zellweger for Nurse Betty (2000), Sally Hawkins for Happy-Go-Lucky (2008), and Amy Adams for Big Eyes (2014).
- Allyson claims, in her autobiography, that in the roman a clef “Center Door Fancy”, written by husband Dick Powell’s first wife Joan Blondell, the character of “Amy” is a thinly-disguised version of her. It has been theorized by film historian Michael Buckley that “Amy” is an anagram for May, the month just before June.
- In May 2014, she was honored as Turner Classic Movie’s Star of the Month.
- Initially wanted to be a doctor, and got into acting merely as a way to make money to pay for medical school. She ended up sticking with it, and instead paid for her brother to become a doctor. She took a lifelong interest in health and medical research.
- Her father was of German descent. Her mother had Dutch and Channel Islands (Guernsey) ancestry.
- Was a fan of the mystery writer Agatha Christie, so much in fact that her personal library consisted of every novel that Christie ever wrote. She also cited the Christie character Jane Marple to be her favorite female detective.
- She was fan of the TV shows Touched by an Angel (1994), Mad About You (1992), and Law & Order (1990).
- Her favorite actors were Tom Hanks, Harrison Ford, and Meg Ryan.
- Was close friends with: Esther Williams, Van Johnson, Claudette Colbert, Kathryn Grayson, Judy Garland, Jane Wyman, Gloria DeHaven, Ann Rutherford, James Stewart, and Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Reagan.
- In the 1980s, 1990’s, and early 2000’s, she was the spokeswomen for Depend undergarments.
- After filming The Secret Heart (1946) together, June and her co-star, Claudette Colbert, became great friends. Claudette became godmother to June’s daughter, Pamela Powell.
- Stepmother of Norman S. Powell and Ellen Powell.
- She had one sibling, a brother named Henry Allyson Geisman, who was born November 22, 1915 in New York, NY and died Jan 6, 1995 in Riverside, CA.
- Her father, Robert Geisman, was born in Roanoke, VA on September 29, 1892 and died in Ventura County, California on April 19, 1983 at the age of 90. Her mother, Clara Josephine Provost, was born in New York, NY on October 21, 1897 and died on April 23, 1994 in Ventura County, California at the age of 97.
- In December 1993, June Allyson dedicated the Holland-America Line cruise ship the MS Maasdam.
- Has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1537 Vine Street.
- She initially turned down the opportunity to be a celebrity spokesperson for Depends undergarments because “it was not a very pleasant subject”. Reportedly, her mother changed her mind because she convinced Allyson that she could actually help people with a very real and widespread problem that they were too embarrassed to talk about with friends or family.
- When she married Alfred Glenn Maxwell, her family allowance from the estate of Dick Powell was reduced from $5,000 per month to $2,500 per month.
- She was a staunch supporter of the Republican Party.
- June married Dr. David Ashrow, a retired dentist-turned actor in October of 1976. June and David toured the country together in the late seventies/early eighties in the stage play “My Daughter, Your Son” to fine reviews. A few years earlier, June starred in the same show with her son Dick Powell Jr..
- Could cry on cue, a talent she shared with Margaret O’Brien. Allyson’s method for triggering tears was to “try very, very hard not to cry . . . So the more I thought about not crying the more I cried.” According to Allyson, during O’Brien’s death scene in Little Women (1949), they “could not stop” crying.
- Daughter Pamela Powell born June 18, 1948. She was adopted in August 1948.
- Son Dick Powell Jr. born December 24, 1950.
- Received a special tribute as part of the Annual Memorial tribute at The 79th Annual Academy Awards (2007). The film footage showed Miss Allyson on stage at the Academy Awards smiling and laughing.
- Good friend of James Stewart and played his wife in three different films.
- In Italy, her films were dubbed mainly by Miranda Bonansea. As she matured, she was dubbed by Rosetta Calavetta and Rina Morelli. She was once dubbed by Andreina Pagnani in Two Girls and a Sailor (1944), released in Italy after the war.
- Married to husband David Ashrow at the Ingleside Inn in Palm Springs, California, in October 1976. There is a photograph of the wedding party hanging at the historic hotel garden to this day.
- Along with her husband Dick Powell, she persuaded future President of the United States Ronald Reagan to switch from the Democratic Party to the Republican Party in 1962.
- Longtime friend of Esther Williams.
- In 1945, Harvard Lampoon voted her worst actress of the year. That year’s worst actor was regular co-star Van Johnson.
- When she was eight years old, she was crushed by a falling tree limb while riding a bicycle. She wore a back brace for four years and taught herself to dance by watching Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers movies. She was told that the accident would prevent her from having children. Her first child, Pamela Powell, was adopted in 1948. In 1950, however, she gave normal birth to her son, Dick Powell Jr..
- Her father, an alcoholic, abandoned the family when she was six months old.
- Her second husband, Glenn Maxwell, was Dick Powell’s former barber. Her last husband, David Ashrow, who survived her, was a retired dentist turned actor.
- Filed for divorce once during her marriage to Dick Powell, but the turbulent marriage lasted until his death from cancer in 1963. She struggled with alcoholism following his death which may have triggered a custody battle against her mother.
- Very seldom was able to break out of her spry “goody two shoes” types. The couple of times she did, however, were extreme. She played a harsh, cold-hearted wife to José Ferrer in The Shrike (1955) who nags him to the point of a nervous breakdown. Audiences would not accept her in the role and the movie failed at the box office. Another time she played a lesbian murderess in They Only Kill Their Masters (1972), one of her final films.
- Separated from Powell once when she fell in love with actor Alan Ladd during filming of The McConnell Story (1955). Ladd was also married at the time.
- Mother of Dick Powell Jr., and Pamela Powell from her marriage to Dick Powell.
- She was a valued resource in preserving information about Metro Goldwyn Mayer (MGM) and Hollywood’s golden years. She was a spokesperson on the issue of incontinence, and was instrumental in establishing the June Allyson Foundation for Public Awareness and Medical Research. She and her husband, Dr. David Ashrow, actively supported fund-raising efforts for both the James Stewart and Judy Garland museums. Stewart and Garland were both close friends.
- After her film career was over, she continued to do occasional Broadway & off-Broadway plays, television appearances and commercials, including her famous Depends commercials, from the 1960s through the 1990s.
- Witnessed Joan Crawford’s cruel treatment of her daughter Christina Crawford and claims the book and film adaptation Mommie Dearest (1981) are honest accounts of how Joan treated her children.
- After the death of first husband Dick Powell, she went through a bitter court battle with her mother over custody of her son Dick Powell Jr., and adopted daughter Pamela Powell. Reports at the time revealed that Dirk Wayne Summers was named legal guardian for Dick and Pamela, as a result of a court petition.
- From 1963 to 1975, she had a long term, ill-fated romance with writer/director Dirk Wayne Summers, often announcing to the press that the couple would be married soon. She and Summers were the lead item in Walter Winchell’s then influential column more than a few times. They often traveled together through Europe. Although Summers apparently loved her and their life together, he refused her many proposals of marriage, much to her chagrin. Members of the nascent jet-set, they were frequently seen in Cap d’Antibes, Madrid, Rome and London, where they called Hugh M. Hefner’s borrowed Mayfair penthouse home.
- She was just 5′ 1″ and weighed 99 lbs. in 1945.
- Was a good friend of Judy Garland. They were both under contract at MGM in the 1940s, and Judy used to give June rides in Judy’s car to the studio whenever possible. In interviews after Garland’s passing, Allyson said that she could hardly talk about Garland without getting tears in her eyes because she was such a special lady who didn’t have appropriate help available to her in her lifetime.
- On contract to MGM for 12 years.
Eleanor Geisman Filmography
Title | Year | Status | Character | Role |
---|---|---|---|---|
The DuPont Show with June Allyson | 1959-1960 | TV Series | Sister Mary Ann / Nancy Evans / Vivian Wadron / … | Actress |
A Stranger in My Arms | 1959 | Christina Beasley | Actress | |
My Man Godfrey | 1957 | Irene Bullock | Actress | |
Interlude | 1957 | Helen Banning | Actress | |
You Can’t Run Away from It | 1956 | Ellen ‘Ellie’ Andrews | Actress | |
The Opposite Sex | 1956 | Kay Ashley Hilliard | Actress | |
The McConnell Story | 1955 | Pearl ‘Butch’ Brown | Actress | |
The Shrike | 1955 | Ann Downs | Actress | |
Strategic Air Command | 1955 | Sally Holland | Actress | |
Woman’s World | 1954 | Katie Baxter | Actress | |
Executive Suite | 1954 | Mary Blemond Walling | Actress | |
The Glenn Miller Story | 1954 | Helen Burger | Actress | |
Remains to Be Seen | 1953 | Jody Revere | Actress | |
Battle Circus | 1953 | Lt. Ruth McGara | Actress | |
The Girl in White | 1952 | Dr. Emily Dunning | Actress | |
Too Young to Kiss | 1951 | Cynthia Potter | Actress | |
Right Cross | 1950 | Pat O’Malley | Actress | |
The Reformer and the Redhead | 1950 | Kathleen Maguire | Actress | |
The Stratton Story | 1949 | Ethel | Actress | |
Little Women | 1949 | Jo | Actress | |
Words and Music | 1948 | June Allyson | Actress | |
The Three Musketeers | 1948 | Constance | Actress | |
The Bride Goes Wild | 1948 | Martha Terryton | Actress | |
Good News | 1947 | Connie Lane | Actress | |
High Barbaree | 1947 | Nancy Frazer | Actress | |
The Secret Heart | 1946 | Penny Addams | Actress | |
Till the Clouds Roll By | 1946 | Jane (segment: “Leave It to Jane”) | Actress | |
Two Sisters from Boston | 1946 | Martha Canford Chandler | Actress | |
The Sailor Takes a Wife | 1945 | Mary Hill | Actress | |
Her Highness and the Bellboy | 1945 | Leslie Odell | Actress | |
Music for Millions | 1944 | Barbara Ainsworth | Actress | |
Meet the People | 1944 | Annie | Actress | |
Two Girls and a Sailor | 1944 | Patsy Deyo | Actress | |
Girl Crazy | 1943 | Specialty Singer | Actress | |
Thousands Cheer | 1943 | June Allyson | Actress | |
Best Foot Forward | 1943 | Ethel | Actress | |
All Girl Revue | 1940 | Short | Mayor | Actress |
Rollin’ in Rhythm | 1939 | Short | Band Vocalist | Actress |
The Knight Is Young | 1938 | Short | June | Actress |
The Prisoner of Swing | 1938 | Short | Princess | Actress |
Sing for Sweetie | 1938 | Short | Sally Newton | Actress |
Dates and Nuts | 1937 | Short | Wilma Brown – Herman’s Girl | Actress |
Dime a Dance | 1937 | Short | Harriet | Actress |
Ups and Downs | 1937 | Short | June Daily | Actress |
Pixilated | 1937 | Short | Actress | |
Swing for Sale | 1937 | Short | Actress | |
A Girl, Three Guys, and a Gun | 2001 | Joey’s Grandma | Actress | |
These Old Broads | 2001 | TV Movie | Lady in Hotel (uncredited) | Actress |
Burke’s Law | 1995 | TV Series | Shelly Knox | Actress |
Pros and Cons | 1991 | TV Series | Actress | |
Wilfrid’s Special Christmas | 1989 | TV Movie | Miss Nancy | Actress |
Airwolf | 1986 | TV Series | Martha Stewart | Actress |
Crazy Like a Fox | 1986 | TV Series | Neva | Actress |
Misfits of Science | 1985 | TV Series | Bessie | Actress |
Murder, She Wrote | 1984 | TV Series | Katie Simmons | Actress |
Hart to Hart | 1984 | TV Series | Elizabeth Tisdale | Actress |
The Love Boat | 1978-1983 | TV Series | Shirley Walsh / Audrey Wilder | Actress |
Simon & Simon | 1982 | TV Series | Margaret Wells | Actress |
The Kid with the Broken Halo | 1982 | TV Movie | Dorothea Powell | Actress |
House Calls | 1980 | TV Series | Florence Alexander | Actress |
The Incredible Hulk | 1979 | TV Series | Dr. Kate Lowell | Actress |
Blackout | 1978 | Mrs. Grant | Actress | |
Vega$ | 1978 | TV Series | Loretta Ochs | Actress |
Three on a Date | 1978 | TV Movie | Marge Emery | Actress |
Curse of the Black Widow | 1977 | TV Movie | Olga | Actress |
Switch | 1977 | TV Series | Dr. Trampler | Actress |
Letters from Three Lovers | 1973 | TV Movie | Monica | Actress |
They Only Kill Their Masters | 1972 | Mrs. Watkins | Actress | |
The Sixth Sense | 1972 | TV Series | Mrs. Ruth Desmond | Actress |
The ABC Comedy Hour | 1972 | TV Series | Actress | |
See the Man Run | 1971 | TV Movie | Helene Spencer | Actress |
The Name of the Game | 1968 | TV Series | Joanne Robins | Actress |
Burke’s Law | 1963 | TV Series | Jean Samson | Actress |
The Dick Powell Theatre | 1962-1963 | TV Series | Rosalind Cramer / Jeri Brenr / Julie Stevens | Actress |
Zane Grey Theater | 1960 | TV Series | Stella | Actress |
That’s Entertainment! III | 1994 | Documentary performer: “Cleopatterer” 1917, “The Three B’s” 1941 – uncredited | Soundtrack | |
MGM: When the Lion Roars | 1992 | TV Mini-Series documentary performer – 1 episode | Soundtrack | |
That’s Entertainment! | 1974 | Documentary performer: “Thou Swell” 1927, “The Varsity Drag” 1927, “The French Lesson” 1947 – uncredited | Soundtrack | |
You Can’t Run Away from It | 1956 | performer: “Howdy Friends and Neighbors”, “Thumbin’ A Ride”, “Temporarily” | Soundtrack | |
The Opposite Sex | 1956 | performer: “Young Man With a Horn”, “A Perfect Love”, “Now Baby Now” – uncredited | Soundtrack | |
Remains to Be Seen | 1953 | performer: “Too Marvelous for Words”, “Toot, Toot, Tootsie Goo’ Bye!” – uncredited | Soundtrack | |
Little Women | 1949 | performer: “Merry Christmastime Is Here”, “It Came Upon a Midnight Clear” 1850 – uncredited | Soundtrack | |
Words and Music | 1948 | performer: “Thou Swell” | Soundtrack | |
Good News | 1947 | performer: “Lucky in Love”, “The French Lesson”, “The Best Things in Life Are Free”, “Just Imagine”, “Varsity Drag” – uncredited | Soundtrack | |
Till the Clouds Roll By | 1946 | performer: “Till The Clouds Roll By”, “Cleopatterer”, “Leave It to Jane” – uncredited | Soundtrack | |
Two Sisters from Boston | 1946 | performer: “After the Show” 1946 – uncredited | Soundtrack | |
Meet the People | 1944 | performer: “I Like to Recognize the Tune” 1939 | Soundtrack | |
Two Girls and a Sailor | 1944 | performer: “Sweet and Lovely” 1931, “A Tisket, a Tasket” 1938, “A Love Like Ours” 1943, “The Young Man with a Horn” 1944 – uncredited | Soundtrack | |
Girl Crazy | 1943 | performer: “Treat Me Rough” 1930 – uncredited | Soundtrack | |
Thousands Cheer | 1943 | performer: “In a Little Spanish Town” – uncredited | Soundtrack | |
Best Foot Forward | 1943 | performer: “Wish I May” 1941, “The Three B’s” 1941 | Soundtrack | |
All Girl Revue | 1940 | Short performer: “We’ve Got to Make the City Pretty” | Soundtrack | |
The Knight Is Young | 1938 | Short performer: “What Do You Hear from the Mob in Scotland?”, “Bob White Whatcha Gonna Swing Tonight?” – uncredited | Soundtrack | |
The Prisoner of Swing | 1938 | Short performer: “Pardon Me If I Say It with My Feet” – uncredited | Soundtrack | |
Ups and Downs | 1937 | Short performer: “Rhythm Personality”, “The Dancing Financier” – uncredited | Soundtrack | |
That’s Entertainment!: The Masters Behind the Musicals | 2004 | Video documentary short | Herself | Self |
American Masters | 2004 | TV Series documentary | Herself – Actor | Self |
Ronald Reagan: The Hollywood Years, the Presidential Years | 2001 | Video documentary | Herself | Self |
Larry King Live | 2001 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
Biography | 1997-2000 | TV Series documentary | Herself | Self |
Private Screenings | 1998 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
Inside the Dream Factory | 1995 | TV Movie documentary | Herself | Self |
That’s Entertainment III: Behind the Screen | 1994 | Video documentary | Herself | Self |
Reflections on the Silver Screen | 1994 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
That’s Entertainment! III | 1994 | Documentary | Herself – Co-Host / Narrator | Self |
Vicki! | 1992 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
MGM: When the Lion Roars | 1992 | TV Mini-Series documentary | Herself | Self |
Burt Reynolds’ Conversation With | 1991 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
The 8th Annual American Cinema Awards | 1991 | TV Special | Herself | Self |
The 35th Annual Thalians Gala | 1990 | TV Movie | Herself | Self |
America’s All-Star Tribute to Elizabeth Taylor | 1989 | TV Special documentary | Herself | Self |
Happy 100th Birthday, Hollywood | 1987 | TV Special documentary | Herself | Self |
The 58th Annual Academy Awards | 1986 | TV Special | Herself – Performer: Separate Lives | Self |
The 43rd Annual Golden Globe Awards | 1986 | TV Special | Herself – Presenter: Best Actor in a Motion Picture Drama | Self |
All-Star Party for ‘Dutch’ Reagan | 1985 | TV Special | Herself | Self |
The Annual Friars Club Tribute Presents a Salute to Gene Kelly | 1985 | TV Movie | Herself | Self |
Hour Magazine | 1982 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
Night of 100 Stars | 1982 | TV Special | Herself | Self |
The Irv Kupcinet Show | 1982 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
Good Morning America | 1980 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
Dean Martin Celebrity Roast: Jimmy Stewart | 1978 | TV Special | Herself | Self |
The Hollywood Squares | 1972-1978 | TV Series | Herself – Panelist | Self |
An All-Star Tribute to Elizabeth Taylor | 1977 | TV Movie documentary | Herself | Self |
The Bob Braun Show | 1974 | TV Series | Herself – Actress | Self |
ABC Late Night | 1974 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
The Dean Martin Show | 1973 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson | 1965-1972 | TV Series | Herself / Herself – Guest | Self |
The Merv Griffin Show | 1971 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
This Is Your Life | 1971 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
The Mike Douglas Show | 1964-1971 | TV Series | Herself – Actress / Herself | Self |
The Movie Game | 1970 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
The David Frost Show | 1970 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
The Ed Sullivan Show | 1953-1970 | TV Series | Herself / Herself – Singer | Self |
Personality | 1968 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
The Joey Bishop Show | 1967 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
I’ll Bet | 1965 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
You Don’t Say | 1965 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
The Celebrity Game | 1965 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
The Match Game | 1964 | TV Series | Herself – Team Captain | Self |
The Judy Garland Show | 1963 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
Perry Como’s Kraft Music Hall | 1963 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
The Dick Powell Theatre | 1962-1963 | TV Series | Herself – Host | Self |
The 20th Annual Golden Globes Awards | 1963 | TV Special | Herself – Accepting Award for Best TV Program | Self |
What’s My Line? | 1954-1961 | TV Series | Herself – Mystery Guest / Herself – Cameo Appearance | Self |
I’ve Got a Secret | 1961 | TV Series | Herself – Guest | Self |
The DuPont Show with June Allyson | 1959-1961 | TV Series | Herself – Hostess / Ann Lawson / Stephanie Cate / … | Self |
The 31st Annual Academy Awards | 1959 | TV Special | Herself – Co-Presenter: Best Scoring of a Musical Picture | Self |
The All-Star Christmas Show | 1958 | TV Movie | Herself | Self |
The 30th Annual Academy Awards | 1958 | TV Special | Herself – Presenter: Best Special Effects | Self |
General Motors 50th Anniversary Show | 1957 | TV Movie | Herself | Self |
Person to Person | 1955 | TV Series documentary | Herself | Self |
The 27th Annual Academy Awards | 1955 | TV Special | Herself – Audience Member | Self |
Sheilah Graham in Hollywood | 1955 | TV Series | Herself | Self |
Olympic Fund Telethon | 1952 | TV Special | Herself | Self |
The Arthur Murray Party | 1951 | TV Series | Herself – Actress | Self |
Hollywood Singing and Dancing: A Musical History – The 1940s: Stars, Stripes and Singing | 2009 | Video documentary | Herself | Archive Footage |
A Life in Words and Music | 2007 | Video short | Herself | Archive Footage |
Royal Wedding: June, Judy and Jane | 2007 | Video documentary short | Herself | Archive Footage |
The 79th Annual Academy Awards | 2007 | TV Special | Herself – Memorial Tribute | Archive Footage |
13th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards | 2007 | TV Special | Herself – In Memoriam | Archive Footage |
Private Screenings | 2006 | TV Series | Barbara Ainsworth – ‘Music For Millions’ | Archive Footage |
Corazón de… | 2006 | TV Series | Herself | Archive Footage |
Great Performances | 2003 | TV Series | Herself | Archive Footage |
Biography | 1998 | TV Series documentary | Herself | Archive Footage |
That’s Entertainment! | 1974 | Documentary | Clip from ‘Words and Music’ | Archive Footage |
The Dick Cavett Show | 1971 | TV Series | Herself | Archive Footage |
The Judy Garland Show | 1964 | TV Series | Herself | Archive Footage |
Hollywood: The Great Stars | 1963 | TV Movie documentary | Herself (uncredited) | Archive Footage |
Hollywood Without Make-Up | 1963 | Documentary | Herself | Archive Footage |
Screen Snapshots: Hollywood, City of Stars | 1956 | Documentary short | Herself (uncredited) | Archive Footage |
MGM Parade | 1955 | TV Series | Connie Lane | Archive Footage |
Twenty Years After | 1944 | Short | Archive Footage | |
The Birth of a Star | 1944 | Short | Dancer, clip from ‘Dime a Dance’ (as June Allison) | Archive Footage |
Eleanor Geisman Awards
Year | Award | Ceremony | Nomination | Movie | Category |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1960 | Star on the Walk of Fame | Walk of Fame | Motion Picture | On 8 February 1960. At 1537 Vine Street. | Won |
1955 | Most Popular Female Star | Photoplay Awards | Won | ||
1954 | Special Jury Prize | Venice Film Festival | Executive Suite (1954) | Won | |
1952 | Golden Globe | Golden Globes, USA | Best Actress – Comedy or Musical | Too Young to Kiss (1951) | Won |
1960 | Star on the Walk of Fame | Walk of Fame | Motion Picture | On 8 February 1960. At 1537 Vine Street. | Nominated |
1955 | Most Popular Female Star | Photoplay Awards | Nominated | ||
1954 | Special Jury Prize | Venice Film Festival | Executive Suite (1954) | Nominated | |
1952 | Golden Globe | Golden Globes, USA | Best Actress – Comedy or Musical | Too Young to Kiss (1951) | Nominated |