Diminutive, blond character comedienne whose strident voice and nervy
manner made her the perfect foil to
Lucille Ball's madcap antics on TV, at
first, occasionally, on
I Love Lucy (1951) (as "Betty
Ramsay" and "Evelyn Bigsby"), then on a regular basis on
The Lucy Show (1962) and
Here's Lucy (1968) (as "Mary Jane
Lewis"). Mary Jane started her show business career on the stage with
the civic theatre in her hometown, Muncie, Indiana. After briefly
acting with the Guild Theatre in Cincinnati, Ohio, she joined the local
radio station WLW and embarked on a lengthy career as a radio actress.
Her marriage to fellow actor Jack Zoller was followed by a move to Los
Angeles in 1939.
During the
1940's and 1950's, Mary Jane became one of a company of much
in-demand voice actresses (along with performers
Lurene Tuttle,
Howard Duff and
Bea Benaderet, whom she befriended),
comedy inevitably being her forte. She acted on "The Mel Blanc Show"
(1946), as the love interest "Leila Ransom" on "The Great Gildersleeve"
(1950), "Blondie" (1950), "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes" (1950),
the family friend on
The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet (1952),
and the voice of basset hound "Cleo", owned by
Jackie Cooper, on
The People's Choice (1955)
(1955-56). Her best-known pre-Lucille role was as "Daisy Enright", the
nemesis of "Our Miss Brooks", which starred
Eve Arden and
Gale Gordon (both on radio and,
subsequently, on TV). Mary Jane re-enacted the part for three seasons
in the television series, produced by Desilu.
In 1960, Mary Jane got married for the second time, using her newly
married name for her character on
The Lucy Show (1962), produced
by new hubby
Elliott Lewis. By 1965, Mary
Jane had replaced
Vivian Vance, who retired
from the show, as Lucy's neighbor. For most TV audiences, Mary Jane
will be fondly remembered as Lucy's cheerful ally and confidante in
their various joint endeavors at setting up pompous banker Mr. Mooney
(
Gale Gordon). Despite other changes in the
cast, Mary Jane's role carried over into the next incarnation of the
Desilu franchise,
Here's Lucy (1968).
After her death in August 1999,
Lucie Arnaz
eulogized her mother's friend Mary Jane, as being the antithesis of the
dizzy blonde she portrayed on screen and as a fun-loving and joyous
spirit.