Peg Lynch(1916-2015)
- Actress
- Writer
Writer-actress Peggy (aka Peg) Lynch, who was born in Lincoln,
Nebraska, began her broadcasting career in 1938 as a jack-of-all-trades
at a small radio station in Minnesota. Her realistic husband-and-wife
sketches caught the attention of network officials at NBC in Chicago,
and soon her popular and extremely funny radio show (which had become
known as "Ethel And Albert," the names of her husband-and-wife
characters) was being heard on a regular basis on that network. When
the ABC network was formed in the mid 1940s, "Ethel And Albert" became
one of that network's earliest successful attractions. Lynch was the
show's only writer as well as its leading female actress for the entire
run of the series. In the early 1950s, "Ethel And Albert" was seen
regularly as a featured skit on The Kate Smith television program and
subsequently became a popular weekly situation comedy series.
In the mid 1950s, Lynch wrote and starred in a new radio series called "The Couple Next Door" for the CBS radio network. The show basically followed the same format as the old "Ethel And Albert" show, and the program co-starred Lynch's longtime "Ethel And Albert" leading man, Alan Bunce. In the 1970s, Lynch's husband-and-wife sketches turned up once again as one of the 15-minutes-five-days-a-week programs on the syndicated Radio Playhouse radio series. Lynch's husband on these shows was Robert Dryden. Lynch and her wonderful "slices of life" radio plays can still be seen and heard regularly at various Old Time Radio show conventions and at various radio retrospective presentations.
In the mid 1950s, Lynch wrote and starred in a new radio series called "The Couple Next Door" for the CBS radio network. The show basically followed the same format as the old "Ethel And Albert" show, and the program co-starred Lynch's longtime "Ethel And Albert" leading man, Alan Bunce. In the 1970s, Lynch's husband-and-wife sketches turned up once again as one of the 15-minutes-five-days-a-week programs on the syndicated Radio Playhouse radio series. Lynch's husband on these shows was Robert Dryden. Lynch and her wonderful "slices of life" radio plays can still be seen and heard regularly at various Old Time Radio show conventions and at various radio retrospective presentations.