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1-5 of 5
- Charles Macaulay was born on 26 September 1927 in Louisville, Kentucky, USA. He was an actor, known for Splash (1983), Raise the Titanic (1980) and Star Trek (1966). He died on 13 August 1999 in Healdsburg, California, USA.
- Actor
- Writer
- Producer
In his celebrated autobiography, "We Will Always Live In Beverly Hills", Ned uniquely chronicles what it was like growing up in the glory days of Hollywood. It details, humorously and candidly, the enormous amount of celebrity contact he's had, and the sometimes sad but more often funny experiences he's had being among the elite of Hollywood. Being the son and grandson of two accomplished actors as well as the stepson of actor Van Johnson, has led him through some very interesting lessons in life including being a background actor on several "Beach Blanket Bingo" films of the sixties and a number of other films and TV shows (his performance in the remake of "Stagecoach" clearly shows why he became a screenwriter and author) and his featured role in the movie, California Dreaming (1979), which he also wrote, was further proof, according to Ned, that he should stick to writing. He is the older of two sons of Keenan Wynn and Eve Lynn Kimmel, the other son being Tracy Keenan Wynn. He has become an accomplished screenwriter and, in 1990, wrote his extraordinary autobiography which describes his jaunty, sad, hilarious and heartwarming path to his eventual career as author.- Helen Beardsley was born Helen Eileen Brandmeir, the ninth in a family of ten children in Seattle, Washington on April 5, 1930. She grew up in Seattle where Helen trained to be a nurse at Providence Hospital. At age 19 Helen married Navy man Richard (Dick) Dale North on June 30, 1949.
Helen and Dick lived at Oak Harbor, Washington where they had their first child, Colleen North, on June 1, 1950. They moved to Kodiak, Alaska where their children Janette and Nicholas were born on June 15, 1951 and July 16, 1952. Dick and Helen moved back to Oak Harbor where their son Tom was born on October 17, 1953. The Navy next took them to Okinawa, Japan, where their daughter Jean was born at Uchitomari on December 12, 1955. Their next move brought them to Great Lakes, Michigan where their son Phillip was born on February 7, 1957. Three more moves soon followed to Key West, San Diego and back again to Oak Harbor, Washington where their son Gerald was born on October 14, 1958.
At age 30 Helen became a widow when she was 6-1/2 months pregnant with her eighth child. Dick died in an aircraft accident on June 7, 1960; Helen gave birth to Teresa on August 30, 1960.
In early 1961 Helen moved to San Leandro, California where the principal of the parochial school where her children were registered, Sister Mary Eleanor, mentioned her recently-widowed brother Francis (Frank) Beardsley, a Navy Warrant Officer who had 10 children of his own. Frank and Helen began corresponding, and they had their first date on the eve of Mother's Day, May 13, 1961. The whirlwind courtship led to marriage fewer than four months later.
At age 31 Helen North married Frank Beardsley on September 9, 1961 in Carmel, California and became the mother of 18 children. She and her 8 children moved in with Frank and his 10 children. Frank's house was enlarged to 5,800 square feet in size, which included 8 bedrooms, 5 bathrooms, and 3 living rooms. The family immediately gained national press attention. The couple soon sold the movie rights to their story to Desilu Studios.
On July 14, 1962 Frank and Helen's first child together, Joseph, was born. In the spring of 1963 Helen legally adopted Frank's 10 children and Frank adopted Helen's 8 children, in the largest mass adoption in California history. The couple's 20th child, Helen, was born on April 19, 1964.
Frank and Helen appeared on the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson soon after their wedding. The family then appeared in West Coast bread commercials. Helen received the National Campfire Girls Mother of the Year award in 1963. In 1965 Helen wrote the book "Who Gets the Drumstick?" recounting her story as a Navy wife and mother. In April 1968, the movie "Yours, Mine and Ours" staring Lucille Ball and Henry Fonda which was loosely based on Frank and Helen's story, was released. Helen was also appointed by then-California Governor Ronald Reagan to the State's Advisory Commission on the Status of Women.
Helen was known as a very giving and loving person, a classy women with very traditional values; she was also a devout Catholic, described by her daughter as a peacemaker to whom family was the most important thing. She was very much loved and admired by all who knew her throughout her life, especially by her 20 children.
In 1968 Frank retired from the Navy and with Helen they opened a nut and gift shop and Ye Ol' Beardsley Donut Shoppe, which later expanded to three locations. In 1973 the couple sold the stores and Helen returned to the medical field working at Carmel Community Hospital. The family then moved to Fresno in 1977 where Helen worked at St Agnes Medical Center as a cardiovascular technician.
Frank and Helen Beardsley retired to the Santa Rosa area in the mid-1980s. Soon after obtaining her certificate in medical transcribing, Helen began a long battle with a rare form of Parkinson's disease which eventually took her life on April 26, 2000. At the time of her death, Helen was the mother of 20 children, grandmother of 44, and great-grandmother of 2. She was buried next to her first husband Dick North at Willamette National Cemetery in Portland, Oregon. - Producer
- Additional Crew
- Director
Steven Ungerleider was born on 14 June 1949 in Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA. He was a producer and director, known for Munich '72 and Beyond (2016), Positive All the Way (2020) and Waterman (2021). He died on 18 March 2023 in Healdsburg, California, USA.- Paul Erdman was born on 19 May 1932 in Stratford, Ontario, Canada. He was a writer, known for Silver Bears (1977), The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (1962) and FNN News Special: Black Monday - One Year Later (1988). He was married to Helly Elizabeth Boeglin. He died on 23 April 2007 in Healdsburg, California, USA.