Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Burns & Wilcox is an independent insurance wholesale broker and managing underwriter founded in 1969 by Herbert W. Kaufman. [1] Its corporate headquarters is located in Farmington Hills, Michigan . Burns & Wilcox, previously a public company, [ 2 ] is family run with Kaufman's son Alan Jay Kaufman serving as chairman, president, and CEO.
Wilcox appeared in 1957 as Joe Spaulding in "Lucy Wants to Move to the Country," one of the later episodes of the CBS sitcom I Love Lucy. He also appeared on the sitcom Private Secretary. From 1953 to 1956, Wilcox made 16 appearances in different roles on The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show.
24 episodes (1956–58) as Bonnie Sue McAfee, Ronnie Burns' aspiring actress girlfriend from Texas. 12 episodes (1958–59) of The George Burns Show, also as Bonnie Sue McAfee. In real life, she was born in Portland, Oregon, and joined the Ice Follies as a teenager, but was sidelined following an unrelated skiing accident.
Babcock & Wilcox Enterprises, Inc. is an American energy technology and service provider that is active and has operations in many international markets with its headquarters in Akron, Ohio. Historically, the company is best known for their steam boilers .
Beatrice Benaderet was born on April 4, 1906, [1] [2] [3] [note 1] in New York City. [4] [6] [7] Her mother, Margaret (née O'Keefe), was Irish American, [8] [9] and her father, Samuel David Benaderet, [10] a Sephardic Jewish emigrant from what is now Turkey, [11] was a tobacconist who relocated the family from New York City to San Francisco in 1915 after his participation in the Panama ...
George explains to the audience that the club used to meet in the Burns house for five years. Gracie visits bank president Chester Vanderlip (Lou Merrill) who denies her request for a loan. Harry Morton refers to the club as "the Beverly Hills shoplifters". The club meets once again in the Burns home, to discuss fund raising ideas.
Herbert Wilcox was the producer and apparently he fell between two stools—that of finding a singer who could do justice to Bobbie Burns's "Comin' Through the Rye" and other equally famous ballads, and an actor who could present an adequate picture of Robbie the man"; [5] and more recently, TV Guide called it a "poorly produced life of the ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate