- Born
- Died
- Birth nameAnn Bradford Davis
- Height5′ 4″ (1.63 m)
- Ann B. Davis made her debut in show business at age 6 earning $2.00 in a puppet show. At the University of Michigan, Ann planned to study medicine but got the acting bug from her brother who was the lead dancer in the national company of "Oklahoma" for over a year. Ann then spent six years in little theaters, stock companies, touring musicals, and such until she got her break as "Schultzie", the secretary on "The Bob Cummings Show." Before Hollywood, Ann spent a summer at the Cain Park Theater and, during a year at the Erie Playhouse in Erie, Pennsylvania, she studied everything about show production and played dozens of roles ranging from teenagers to characters over 60. In 1949, she arrived at Porterville, California and spent three years at the Barn theater.
She then moved down the coast to Monterey, where she appeared at the Wharf theater. From there she decided to try Hollywood. Anne has also played many parts on stage including "The Women", "Twelfth Night", "Dark Of The Moon", and others. Her mother, Marguerite Scott Davis, appeared with professional stock companies for over thirty years.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Bill Hafker thehuntzie@yahoo.com
- Parents
- RelativesHarriet Davis(Sibling)Evans Davis(Sibling)
- Blue maid's uniform and white apron
- Was one of the three actors to appear in every episode of The Brady Bunch (1969).
- Originally wanted to be a doctor and studied pre-med at the University of Michigan.
- Has a twin sister named Harriet and an older brother named Evans.
- She was awarded a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 7048 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California on February 8, 1960.
- Davis fell in her bathroom early one morning hitting her head and never regained consciousness. She was in excellent health for an 88-year-old woman and her death was a complete shock.
- [on never having married] By the time I started to get interested, all the good ones were taken.
- [on being content with her very ordinary appearance] I know at least a couple hundred glamor gals who are starving in this town. I'd rather be myself and eating.
- [on her character Alice Nelson on The Brady Bunch (1969)] All of us wish we had an Alice. I wish I had an Alice.
- On leaving show business in 1976 for a year to join Bishop Frey's Episcopalian commune: I never heard a voice from the clouds saying get out of show business. - Interview with R. Todd Nash the Tartan in 1987
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