- Mother of Pamela Britton (Mrs. Brown of My Favorite Martian (1963)). She lived to be 103.
- Most comments focused on the comic timing she displayed in the show's Honeymooners sketches as Alice Kramden's insult-dispensing mother who specialized in acid-tinged putdowns of her son-in-law Ralph, especially when referring to his weight and low-paying job.
- Owen was a regular on the popular 1930s radio series "Gangbusters" that featured weekly episodes based actual crime incidents. Each program ended with various descriptions of wanted criminals, many of whom were later arrested due to avid listener participation.
- In her early sixties, during the mid-1950s, she had a memorable recurring TV role on The Honeymooners, playing Mrs. Gibson, Ralph Kramden's sharp-tongued, interfering mother-in-law.
- She started performing around 1907, at age 14.
- Ethel Owen was an American actress with a lengthy career on stage as well as radio and television.
- Starting in 1947-48, at the dawn of a period referenced as the Golden Age of Television, Edith Owen began appearing in the numerous live drama series emanating from New York.
- The frequent appearances she made between 1952 and 1957 on various incarnations of CBS's very popular Jackie Gleason Show, provided more recognition than any other assignment in the course of her 60-year acting career.
- Much and, eventually, most of her work came from radio, the prime home entertainment medium of the 1930s and 40s. The tens of thousands of broadcast hours, especially those featuring dramatic presentations, required a constant supply of voice professionals who were called upon to perform in multiple shows within the course of a single day, thus making the list of credits for a hard working performer such as Ethel Owen run into the thousands.
- At the start of the Depression 1930s, the Owens family left Milwaukee to settle in New York City, where Ethel Owen, now in her late thirties and early forties, found steady work in regional theatre, radio plays and even the black operetta, Africana, with a mixed cast, which had its November 26, 1934 opening night at Broadway's newly renamed Venice Theatre disrupted by a man claiming to be the story's uncredited co-author. Saddled with negative reviews (The New York Times called it "Whimper of the Jungle"), the show closed on the 28th.
- One of her earliest performances was in the title role of "Old Lady Robbins", the November 3, 1948 episode of NBC's hour-long series Kraft Television Theatre. Also in the presentation, in her first screen appearance, was eighteen-year-old Grace Kelly.
- In her mid-fifties, Owen married insurance executive John Hale Almy (1886-1967) on April 2, 1949. They lived in New York City's affluent suburb of Bronxville.
- Following Dr. Raymond Owens' death in 1926, the now-widowed actress continued her non-stop working schedule during the World War II years, while still looking after her grown daughters. In 1943-44 and in 1946, she was in two Broadway shows, the Phoebe and Henry Ephron comedy Three's a Family and the revival of Show Boat. The three-act Family, which Henry Ephron also directed, opened at the Longacre Theatre on May 5, 1943 and ran for 497 performances, transferring to the Belasco Theatre on May 28, 1944 and closing there on July 8. Show Boat, with music by Jerome Kern and lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II, opened at the Ziegfeld Theatre on January 5, 1946, eight weeks after Kern's death on November 11, 1945. The production, with 115 cast members, including Ethel Owen in the non-singing role of Parthy Hawks, the mother of Magnolia, played by Jan Clayton, counted 418 performances, closing on January 4, 1947 - the longest-running revival of a stage musical at that point in Broadway history.
- Ethel Owen gradually retired from acting in the mid-1960s, upon reaching her early seventies.
- Owen's other dramatic roles included roles in shows such as Inner Sanctum, Armstrong Circle Theatre and the two-part December 20-27, 1954 Robert Montgomery Presents Christmastime production of David Copperfield, in which she portrayed Aunt Betsey.
- Four days before Owen's death, a story in a local publication reported on a production of Brigadoon at the Contra Costa Musical Theatre, Owen's granddaughter (by Pamela), chorus member Kathy Ferber, is described as taking center stage at the final bows as a tribute to her mother who had lived in the area for over twenty years and had played Meg Brockie in Brigadoon (the original 1947-48 Broadway production). Ferber also referenced her 103-year-old grandmother.
- Although she is credited with appearances on a number of vaudeville circuits, her primary venue was the legitimate stage, mostly as a member of regional touring theatre groups.
- Daughter Armilda Jane, born in Milwaukee in 1923, even began her own career as a child actress in her mother's plays. Well known in summer stock by her tenth birthday, she was offered a film contract at a time when the popularity and rising success of Shirley Temple on screen prompted various studios to conduct searches for other young talented performers, but her mother decided against the move to motion pictures. In succeeding years, Armilda Jane became a teenage performer in musical comedy and, changing her stage name to Pamela Britton, had co-starring roles on Broadway and in a few films, including two classics, the 1945 musical Anchors Aweigh, playing Frank Sinatra's Brooklyn-accented girlfriend, and the 1950 noir, D.O.A..
- She had three daughters. Her eldest child, Mary, would later move to Texas, where in Fort Worth she worked professionally as a social worker; however, Ethel's younger girls, Virginia and Armilda Jane, followed their mother into show business as actresses.
- While raising a family, Ethel Waite continued to act but under the new stage name "Ethel Owen", although she opted to drop the "s" in her married surname.
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