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Jane Withers

Hollywood Stars : Jane Withers

  • Born Name: Jane Withers
  • Birthday: 1926-04-12 (Year-Month-Day)
  • Website:
  • Spouse(s): William P. Moss Jr. (1947–1954) (divorced) 3 children Kenneth Errair (1955–1968) (his death) 2 children
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Jane Withers, Jane Withers (born April 12, 1926) is an American actress best known for being one of the most popular child film stars of the 1930s and early 1940s, as well as for her portrayal of Josephine the Plumber in a series of TV commercials for Comet cleanser in the 1960s and early 1970s.Withers began her career as a child actress, first on local radio broadcasts in Atlanta, Georgia as Dixies Dainty Dewdrop. By the age of three, she was singing and imitating adult celebrities. In the early 1930s Withers and her family moved to Hollywood; she worked as an extra and a bit part player in several films in 1932 and 1933.Witherss big break came when she landed a supporting role in the 1934 Shirley Temple film Bright Eyes. Her character Joy Smythe was spoiled and obnoxious, a perfect foil to Temples sweet personality. In a 2006 interview on TCMs Private Screenings with Robert Osborne, Withers recalled that she was hesitant to take this role because she had to be so mean to Shirley Temple and she thought the public would hate her for it (video clip). In the movie, she tells Temple: There aint any Santa Claus, because my psychoanalyst told me! Withers received positive notices for her work, and was awarded a long-term contract with Fox.Through the remainder of the 1930s she starred in several movies every year, including Ginger (1935), The Farmer Takes a Wife (1935) and Little Miss Nobody (1936), usually cast as a wholesome, meddlesome young girl in films less sugary than Temples vehicles. Moviegoers flocked to see her films, and Withers became one of the top 10 box-office stars in 1937 and 1938. Her popularity was such that Fox gave her name co-stars: the Ritz Brothers (in Pack Up Your Troubles) and Gene Autry (in Shooting High). Withers also took a flyer in screenwriting: she wrote the original story filmed as Small Town Deb, under the pseudonym Jerrie Walters.Withers was the heroine of two novels, Jane Withers and the Hidden Room (1942, by Eleanor Packer) and Jane Withers and the Phantom Violin, (1943, by Roy J. Snell), published by Whitman Publishing Company, where the heroine has the same name and appearance as the famous actress but has no connection ... it is as though the famous actress has stepped into an alternate reality in which she is an ordinary person. However, in 1944s Jane Withers and the Swamp Wizard (1944, by Kathryn Heisenfelt), the heroine is identified as a famous actress. The stories were probably written for a young teenage audience and are reminiscent of the adventures of Nancy Drew. They are part of a series known as Whitman Authorized Editions, 16 books published between 1941-1947 that featured a film actress as heroine.Withers kept working in the 1940s; she made 16 films for Fox, Columbia, and Republic Pictures. Her sweet sixteen birthday party was filmed by Paramount for the Hedda Hoppers Hollywood series. Withers received excellent notices for her dramatic performance in Lewis Milestones The North Star.In 1947, in her early twenties, Withers retired for several years from acting, after marrying wealthy Texas oil man, William P. Moss Jr., and had three children by him—William, Wendy, and Randy. The marriage was not a happy one and lasted only six years. Though she suffered from rheumatoid arthritis, it never stopped Janes spirit.In 1955, she remarried, this time to Kenneth Errair, one-quarter of the harmonizing group The Four Freshmen. They had two children, Ken and Kendall Jane. The same year, she earned a supporting role in the film classic, Giant.In 1955, while filming the movie Giant Jane developed a friendship with James Dean. In the DVD special features she tells the story that Dean had a favorite pink cowboy shirt he wore all the time. He never let it go the laundry for fear it would be lost like the other shirts he had. Withers convinced him to let her wash it for him. She did this often and when he left to go to the race he gave her his shirt to wash and have ready for him when he came back. James Dean died that day in the fateful fatal car wreck in California. Withers still keeps his shirt and the fond memories of him.By the mid-1960s, Withers gained fame again as Josephine the Plumber, a character in a long-running and popular series of television commercials for Comet cleanser, and the veteran TV-ad pitchwomans beloved character lasted into the 1970s, and even further in the 80s when her niece, JoAnn or Jo, would show her customers a picture of her Aunt Josephine. Withers continued to do voice-over work and occasionally guest stars on television shows.Tragically in June 1968, her husband of 14 years, Errair was killed in a plane crash in California. And sadly, Withers lost adult son Walter Randall “Randy” Moss (from her first marriage) in Jan. 15, 1986, just two days after his 34th birthday. Miss Withers often claimed, a strong spiritual faith got her through many personal challenges.A December 15, 2008 Advertising Age article about Flo, the Progressive Insurance TV commercial character played by Stephanie Courtney, said that Flo, ... is a weirdly sincere, post-modern Josephine the Plumber who just really wants to help. She has: The brand is flourishing.


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