QUEENSLINE 
 This Astoria native’s powerful voice was featured  
 in several Broadway musicals and hollywood fi lms 
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 TIMESLEDGER   |   QNS.COM   |   JAN. 29-FEB. 4, 2021 13  
 In  conjunction  with  the  
 Greater  Astoria  Historical  
 Society,  TimesLedger  Newspapers  
 presents  noteworthy  
 events  in  the  borough’s  
 history.  
 Born  on  Jan.  16,  1908,  as  
 Ethel  Agnes  Zimmermann,  
 Astoria  native  Ethel  Merman  
 is  perhaps  best  remembered  
 for  her  powerful  
 mezzo-soprano  voice  in  numerous  
 Broadway  musicals  
 and Hollywood films.  
 Her  much  beloved  musical  
 numbers include “Everything’s  
 Coming  up  Roses,”  
 and  “There’s  no  Business  
 like  Show  Business.”  Merman  
 was  married  four  
 times,  including  a  32-day  
 union with Ernest Borgnine  
 in 1964. 
 Ethel  Merman  was  born  
 in her maternal grandmother’s  
 house  on  26-5  4th  St.  
 in  Astoria.  She  grew  up  in  
 Dutch  Kills  near  37th  Avenue  
 and 30th Street and was  
 baptized in the local Church  
 of  the Redeemer.  The  future  
 star attended P.S. 4 and graduated  
 from  William  Cullen  
 Bryant  High  School,  where  
 the  auditorium  was  later  
 named in her honor. 
 .After  being  discovered  
 by  a  theatre  producer  during  
 one  of  her  singing  performances, 
  in 1930 the rising  
 star landed her first musical  
 role in George and Ira Gershwin’s  
 “Girl  Crazy.” Merman  
 performed  to  rave  reviews  
 at  the  Alvin  Theatre,  with  
 the  New  York  Times  noting  
 that she sang “with dash, authority, 
   good  voice  and  just  
 the right ….  style.” Perhaps  
 more  remarkable,  The  New  
 Yorker called her “imitative  
 of no one.” 
 Merman went west to Hollywood  
 in the early 1930s, but  
 really  made  a  splash  when  
 she  returned  to  Broadway  
 for  Cole  Porter’s  “Anything  
 Goes”  in  1934.  Returning  to  
 the Alvin Theatre,  her  voice  
 graced the stage in the unforgettable  
 scores “I Get a Kick  
 out  of  You”  and  “You’re  the  
 Top.”  The  accomplished  actress  
 later won a Tony Award  
 in 1950 for her role in the musical  
 “Call  Me  Madam”  and  
 garnered  a  Golden  Globe  for  
 the screen adaptation.  
 She  saved  perhaps  her  
 greatest  effort,  however,  for  
 her  portrayal  of  the  domineering  
 mother Rose Hovick  
 in  The  Broadway  Theatre  
 show  “Gypsy.”  Running  for  
 702  performances  starting  
 in  1959,  she  was  lauded  by  
 critics,  with  the  New  York  
 Post  calling  her  “a  brilliant  
 actress.”  
 In  her  later  years,  the  
 girl  from  Astoria  continued  
 to appear on stage, film and  
 television. Merman met with  
 great success in the 1963 Hollywood  
 comedy  It’s  a  Mad,  
 Mad,  Mad,  Mad  World,  and  
 later  guest  starred  on  The  
 Ed Sullivan Show,  The Lucy  
 Show, Batman and The Love  
 Boat.  In  1970, she joined  the  
 cast  of  Hello  Dolly  in  New  
 York,  her  return  to  Broadway  
 earning  her  one  standing  
 ovation after another. 
 Ethel  Merman  passed  
 away in her sleep in New York  
 on  February  15,  1984,  leaving  
 behind  a  legacy  just  as  
 rich and varied as her career  
 spanning seven decades. 
 “I  don’t  want  to  sound  
 pretentious,  but  in  a  funny  
 way  I  feel  I’m  the  last  of  a  
 kind.  Where  will  they  find  
 the  shows  like  Girl  Crazy,  
 Anything  Goes,  Annie  Get  
 Your Gun, Call Me Madam  
 and Gypsy? They  just don’t  
 produce  those  vehicles  anymore.” 
 For further info, call the  
 Greater  Astoria  Historical  
 Society  at  718- 
 278-0700  or  www. 
 astorialic.org. 
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 LAST WEEK’S TOP STORY: 
 Mega Millions  ticket worth $1 million  sold  at Astoria  
 convenience store 
 SUMMARY: The New York Lottery announced Saturday morning  
 that a second prize Mega Millions lottery ticket worth $1 million  
 was sold at an Astoria convenience store. 
 
				
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