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American actress (1905–1990) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Portland Hoffa (January 25, 1905 – December 26, 1990) was an American comedian, radio host, actress, and dancer. The daughter of an itinerant optometrist, she was named after Portland, Oregon, the city in which she was born. She began her career performing as a dancer in numerous Broadway productions in the 1920s, before meeting her first husband, comedian Fred Allen. They were married in 1927, and Hoffa began performing characters with Allen in comic radio programs, often portraying a dimwitted female counterpart in fast-paced, witty skits.[1][2] She gained particular notice from audiences for her distinctive, high-pitched voice.[3]
Portland Hoffa | |
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Born | Portland, Oregon, U.S. | January 25, 1905
Died | December 26, 1990 85) Los Angeles, California, U.S. | (aged
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Allen hosted several highly successful network radio shows in the 1930s and 1940s, in which Hoffa was a frequent participant. She remained married to him until his death in 1956, after which she married bandleader Joe Rines. Rines later worked as an advertising executive. Hoffa helped compile her first husband's correspondence, which was published as Fred Allen's Letters in 1965. She died in 1990 in Los Angeles of natural causes, aged 85.
Hoffa was born January 25, 1905, in Portland, Oregon[4][5][a] to Frederick Hoffa and Mary Hoffa (née Keesey).[5][7] As with most of her other siblings, including sister Lebanon and brother Harlem, she was named after the city in which she was born.[6] Additionally, she had two younger sisters, Lastone and Doctor Fredericka known as Fredericka.[7] Her father, an itinerant optometrist, was a native of Washington state of German descent,[7] while her mother was from Pennsylvania.[7] Her father was Jewish, while her mother was a Presbyterian.[8] By the time Hoffa was 15 years old, she and her family had relocated to New York City and were residing in Manhattan.[7][9]
In New York, Hoffa performed as a dancer in vaudeville and Broadway stage productions, and met Fred Allen while performing in The Passing Show in 1922 and joined him in his vaudeville routines (centered on his clever jokes spun off his weakness as a juggler). The couple married in 1927 at St. Malachy's Church in Manhattan[10] before Allen began his long-running radio work in 1932. Because Allen was a devout Roman Catholic, Hoffa converted to Catholicism before the two married.[8]
A frequent performer opposite Allen, Hoffa became familiar for her distinctive high-pitched voice,[11] her brief routines involving jokes bounced off or from her mother, and, later, strolling Allen's Alley with her husband, after asking him what his question of the week for the Alley denizens would be. Allen himself likened Hoffa's voice to "two slate pencils mating or a clarinet reed calling for help."[12]
Although Hoffa performed under her real name on her husband's show, the character she portrayed as "Portland Hoffa" in the radio broadcasts was not Allen's wife; instead, she depicted an enthusiastic girl of indeterminate age, around thirteen years old. One of Allen's sponsors loathed the character played by Hoffa, and kept urging Allen to drop her from the show. Allen ignored these requests for as long as he could, then finally—in an angry outburst at a sales meeting—told the executive that the broadcasts were bearable only due to Hoffa's presence, and that if she were removed from the program then Allen would quit.[citation needed]
Allen's declining health was the main reason he ceased hosting his own show after 1949, but Hoffa often joined him as a semi-regular on Tallulah Bankhead's radio variety show, The Big Show (1950–52). She also appeared as the "mystery guest" on one episode of television's What's My Line, on which Allen had become a panelist from 1954 until his death in early 1956. Hoffa and Allen had also appeared in such films as Is Everybody Listening? (1947) and the Jack Benny vehicle Buck Benny Rides Again (1940).[citation needed]
Allen died in 1956. In 1959, Hoffa married bandleader Joe Rines, who later worked as an advertising executive. Hoffa and Rines lived long enough to celebrate a silver wedding anniversary, allowing Hoffa an unusual second such anniversary in one lifetime.[citation needed] In 1965, she compiled a large volume of her first husband's correspondence, which was edited into and published as Fred Allen's Letters. Rines died in 1986.
Twice widowed and childless, Hoffa died of natural causes in Los Angeles on December 26, 1990,[13] aged 85.[3] She was survived by her two younger sisters, Lastone Hershkowitz of New York and Los Angeles, and Frederika Bond of Bellingham, Washington.[3] She is interred with her first husband Fred Allen at the Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Hawthorne, New York. Hoffa has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1640 Vine Street.[13]
Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
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1940 | Buck Benny Rides Again | Herself (voice) | [14] | |
1947 | Is Everybody Listening? | Herself | Documentary film | [15] |
1954 | Take Your Choice | Herself | Unaired gameshow pilot | [16] |
1954 | Omnibus | Herself | Episode: "Treadmill to Oblivion" | [17] |
1955 | What's My Line? | Herself | Season 6, episode 25 | |
1965 | A 1960s Radio Broadcast Addition: Chase and Sandborn 101st Anniversary | Herself | Television film | |
Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
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1932–1949 | The Fred Allen Show | Series regular | ||
Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
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1921 | The Mimic World | Performer | Century Promenade Theatre | [18] [19] |
1922 | Make It Snappy | Performer | Winter Garden Theatre | |
1922 | The Passing Show of 1922 | Performer | Winter Garden Theatre | |
1924 | Marjorie | Performer | Shubert Theatre; 44th Street Theatre | |
1925 | Tell Me More | Performer | Gaiety Theatre | |
1926–1927 | George White's Scandals | Performer | Apollo Theatre | |
1929–1930 | The Little Show | Performer | Apollo Theatre | |
1930–1931 | Three's a Crowd | Performer | Selwyn Theatre | |
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