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Erma Bombeck would have celebrated her 76th birthday on Feb. 21,
but the gift of her humor lives on because of an online museum
created by the University of Dayton with the Bombeck family. Erma
graduated from UD in 1949.
"Each year on Erma's birthday we like to add items to the
Erma Bombeck Online Museum," said Tim
Bete, humor columnist and curator of the museum. "It's our
way of honoring Erma and giving her millions of fans something to
help remember her. This year we've added seven complete episodes of
the "Maggie" sitcom Erma wrote and executive produced. The
programs can be viewed on the Web."
While Erma Bombeck is best known for her newspaper column which
celebrated the extraordinary in the ordinary and chronicled life's
absurdities, the "Maggie" sitcom showed her versatility as
a writer. Erma's syndicated column was carried by 700 newspapers
prior to her death of kidney disease in 1996.
"Maggie," was about an ordinary family from Dayton,
Ohio (where Erma grew up), and included a son who hadn't been seen
since he'd entered the bathroom when he hit puberty. The show
starred Doris Roberts, who later won an Emmy for her role in
"Everybody Loves Raymond."
"I was a housewife and mother, too, so it was easy for me to
come up with story ideas," said Karyl
Miller, Emmy award-winning writer-producer who was the executive
story consultant for the "Maggie" sitcom. "Working
with Erma was wonderful. It was like having a girlfriend at work.
Erma wasn't Hollywood, she was a housewife."
ABC ordered 13 episodes of "Maggie," which aired in
late 1981 and early 1982. The show ran for eight weeks before it was
canceled.
"Erma was as sad as I had ever seen her," said Miller.
"She said 'Maggie' was her one and only sitcom, whereas we
sitcom writers would just go on to some other show. The show's
timeslot was moved around a lot, so no viewers could find us. That's
death to a new show."
The Erma Bombeck online museum was launched in Feb. 2002 and
contains more than 100 items including audio and video clips of
Erma's family and friends, such as Phil Donahue, Bil Keane, Mike
Peters and Liz Carpenter, among others. The museum also contains
rare columns and photos and Erma's biography.
Erma Bombeck graduated from the University of Dayton in 1949 with
a degree in English and never forgot that she got her start as a
writer at UD. She credited the University of Dayton with preparing
her for life and work, for making her believe she could write. The
University of Dayton holds the Erma Bombeck Writers' Workshop (www.HumorWriters.org)
every other year to teach and encourage humor and human interest
writers. The next workshop will be spring 2004. Other notable UD
graduates in the media include Don Novello '64 (comedy writer,
author and actor best known for the role Father Guido Sarducci on
"Saturday Night Live"), Denise Palmer '77 (publisher and
CEO, Baltimore Sun), Thomas Mazza '81 (independent producer,
formerly president of Columbia Tri-Star Television and executive
vice president of Paramount Network Television), Jay Smith
(president, Cox Newspapers) and Chip Bok '74 (nationally syndicated
editorial cartoonist, The Beacon Journal).
"You don't have to check your local TV listings to see when
'Maggie' will be on," says Bete. "You can tune in and
laugh 24/7. That's a pretty good time slot for a show that was
canceled." |