Archive | October, 2010

Tippy Stringer on WTOP-TV before her WRC gig

26 Oct

This was unearthed by Bob Bell:

Tippy Stringer Dies

24 Oct

Tippy Stringer Huntley Conrad, charming D.C. weather beauty, dies at 80

By Emma Brown
Washington Post Staff Writer

Saturday, October 23, 2010; 9:46 PM

Tippy Stringer Huntley Conrad, who became a Washington personality during the 1950s as a comely weather girl issuing forecasts on the local NBC affiliate, and who left the city for New York when she married television newsman Chet Huntley, died Oct. 1 at her home in Los Angeles. She was 80 and had a brain tumor.

Miss Tippy Stringer, as she was known when she took to the airwaves, hosted cooking and homemaking shows on WRC-TV and radio before she landed a permanent role as the station’s weather girl in 1953. She was often joined on-air by a cartoon character she created named Senator Fairweather, whose doe-eyed likeness was photographed with Tippy for Life magazine in 1955.

Mrs. Conrad appeared as a weather girl twice each evening, at 6:45 and 11:10, wearing pearls and a perfect coiffure. In between, she raced to the Shoreham Hotel’s swanky Blue Room nightclub, where she changed costumes to sing in two nightly floor shows.

Five-foot-five, blond and slender, she was popular among television viewers and critics alike.
She “pitches her patter at women, but Miss Stringer herself is well-worth any male’s attention,” wrote Washington Post TV reviewer Lawrence Laurent in 1953. “Her long suit is fashion, beauty and the undeniable fact that she’s about the cutest thing seen on TV in these parts.”

Washington newsman David Brinkley, whom Miss Stringer knew through her television work, introduced her to Chet Huntley, who was known nationally for broadcasting the news with Brinkley on NBC’s “The Huntley-Brinkley Report.”

“She sat in my lap or something corny like that,” Brinkley said in a 1961 interview, “and I told her who Chet was while he looked on [in] the monitor. The next thing I knew he was taking her out.”
The couple married in 1959. They lived in New York until retiring in 1970 to Huntley’s home state, Montana, where they founded the Big Sky Resort on the Gallatin River outside Bozeman. Chet Huntley died just three days before the 1974 dedication ceremony for the $25 million recreational complex

The resort, which includes a golf course and a tangle of ski runs including one called “Tippy’s Tumble,” was sold to a Michigan company in 1976. Mrs. Conrad – then Mrs. Huntley – ran unsuccessfully for Congress in 1978 as a Republican candidate from Montana.
In 1980, she met and married another nationally known figure: William Conrad, an actor who first rose to prominence as the voice of Marshal Matt Dillon on the radio program “Gunsmoke.” He had been widowed in 1977, and he met Tippy during a visit to the Big Sky Resort.
Mrs. Conrad moved to Los Angeles and helped manage Conrad’s later career, which included a starring role in the CBS legal drama “Jake and the Fatman.” William Conrad died in 1994 after 14 years of marriage.

In 1995, Mrs. Conrad founded the Stringer Foundation to support causes including public broadcasting and reproductive education.

Lewis Tipton Stringer was born July 15, 1930, in Evanston, Ill. Her family moved to the Washington area later that decade, and she graduated from Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School.
She was admitted to the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg only to discover that the school had assumed, given her name, that she was a young man. With space in women’s dorms already allotted to other students, she chose instead to attend the University of Maryland – and she began calling herself Tippy.

Mrs. Conrad was noticed for her looks and magnetism while performing onstage in student plays. She was crowned homecoming queen in 1951, the same year she appeared in a Washington Post article featuring local women and their fashion philosophies.
“I’m very fond of crinolines because they make your waist look so small,” she said.
During the height of her local fame, Mrs. Conrad often appeared off-screen at local fairs and holiday celebrations. In the mid-1950s, she cut the ribbon at opening ceremonies for the Seven Corners Shopping Center and the bridge that carries East Capitol Street across the Anacostia River.
An honorary member of the city’s royalty, she was crowned Miss Get Out the Vote in 1956, posing at the District Building in a sash, gown and white gloves as part of a campaign to nudge reluctant voters to the polls.

She also was the Washington Convention and Visitors Association’s Miss Summer Jubilee; Queen of the Seabees, the Navy’s civil engineering corps; and Princess of the Winchester, Va., Apple Blossom Festival.

Survivors include a brother.

THE WTOP-TV CONNECTION

(Our thanks to our friend the amazing Bob Bell for alerting us….and for his impressive research!  -Lee)

Terrific!

15 Oct

Thurmont 2010 was a great success!

Our “gluemaster” (the person who pastes all the little details together) Doris Fausey, would have been carried off on our group’s shoulders if this had been a football game.

It wasn’t, but the word “touchdown” comes to mind when describing this week’s luncheon.

Doris booked the COZY INN last summer and guessed that about 40 people would attend. The final figure was 39!

COZY REUNION- OCTOBER 12, 2010 39 Attendees

Albert Bargamian
Mr. and Mrs.Gene Beall
Buddy and Florence Belote
Ray Bloom
Tom Buckley
Paul Byers
Bill Calder
George Catron
Earl and Donna Dunmeyer
Doris and Bob Fausey
Emil&Hazel&Mike Franks
Dave & Eloise French
Stanley Guttenberg
Mr.and Mrs.Norm Hannen
Jim and Margaret Hargreaves
Mike Henry
Harold Hoiland
Philomena Jurey
Chuck Langdon
Bob Oberlander
James O’Neal
Theda Parrish
Don Richards
Ratso Silman
James Snyder
Ernest Tobin
Carol Woodard
David Zarin and Son
Tony&Betty Zukas

Afterwards, Doris wrote a  note to the Cozy Manager thanking Suzy, the reservation planner, and our waitress, Diane, who was the best we have had!

Sometimes everything just goes right. This was one of those times!

Here are some great snapshots of the event compliments of Tom Buckley.

Buddy Belote and Philomena Jurey
Don Richards and Doris Fausey
Chuck Langdon  James O’Neal  Michael Henry
David French
Dave Zarin
Don Richards
Doris Fausey and “Ratso” Silman
Earl Dunmyer  Gene Beall  Ray Bloom
Tony Zukas

Gene Beall and Bill Calder

Hal Hoiland and Theda Parrish

James Snyder

Jim Hargraves and Norm Hannen

Michael Henry and James O’Neal

Norm Hannen  Ray Bloom  Al Bargamian  Jim Hargreaves

“Ratso” Silman and Don Richards

Ray Bloom and Al Bargamian

Stan Gutenberg and Buddy Belote

Stan Gutenberg and Emil Franks

Bob Oberlander and Don Richards

Enjoy!  -Lee