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arion
Shockley
(10
Oct
1911
–
14
Dec
1981)

Name: some sources
naming Marion Marian...
Birth: some sources 10 Oct 1908 or 10 Oct 1910
Height:
5'
1"
(1.55
m)
Husband:
Bud Collyer (June
18. 1908 - September
8. 1969)
Children: two girls and a boy (the youngest)
Even on radio
Marion
Shockley
(1911-1981)
was the first actress to portray Nikki Porter
, Ellery's secretary and
low-key love interest. In the "Gum-Chewing Millionaire" she's a blonde
professional typist who gets asked to work on Ellery's manuscripts. She then
applies for the job of personal secretary.

As a graduate of the University of Missouri (majoring in
history) and
proud possesor of a Kappa Alpha Theta pin, she especially took to theatre
and was one of the chief attractions
of the International Players at the Vancouver theatre. She
co-starred as Tim McCoy's leading lady in the serial "Heroes
of the Flames" and Bob Steele's in
"Near the Trail's End"
(1931), directed by Wallace Fox.
This was
the last of eight Westerns Steele did for low-budget company Tiffany
and the only feature film to co-star Marion Shockley. She
is more known for her work in comedy shorts and radio.
Offered an acting job with a stock company, she performed in
plays as "Believe me, Mr.Xantippe" (March 1934) and "Three
Cornered Moon" (1934) in which she played the role Claudette Colbert
played in the movie.

Shockley was the Wampas baby star in 1932 .
The WAMPAS Baby Stars was a promotional campaign sponsored by the Western
Association of Motion Picture Advertisers in the United States , which
honored thirteen young women each year who they believed to be on the
threshold of movie stardom. They were selected from 1922 to 1934 and honored
at a party called the WAMPAS Frolic . Those selected were given extensive
media coverage. The awards were not given in 1931 and 1933 and ended after
1934 due to objections from the movie studio s because of its independence.
She
debuted in Broadway in
George M. Cohan's
"Dear Old Darling" (1936).
The story suggested melodrama. Wealthty, retired Calvin Miller had been
hounded by a sweet girl (Marion Shockley) in her twenties, whom he met on
shipboard and who has sent a photograph inscribed "To my dear old darling,
with all the love of my heart and soul." Her mother (Theresa Maxwell
Conover) appears soon enough, and the two gals prove to be blackmailers.
This presents numerous problems for Miller, not the least that he has been
courting the Widow Collins (Ruth Shepley). Matters are put in order only
just before eleven o'clock. But the play was no melodrama. Indeed, it was
billed as "A Comic Experience" but had to settle for a fortnight's stay.
(American Theatre: A Chronicle of Comedy and Drama, 1930-1969 Gerald
Bordman)
  
On radio she was already heard on "Abie Irish Rose",
"Road of Life" and "My True Story" when in 1939, at CBS,
producer Zachary was gathering his team
for the radio version of "The Adventures of Ellery Queen". In
order to attract a more female audience, Dannay, Lee and Zachary added a new
character to the stories: Ellery's secretary Nikki Porter.
She and George Zachary, the radioseries' producer, were married in October
1939, and Zachary made sure that Nikki was written out of the scripts during
the weeks the newlyweds were off on their honeymoon.
She played Nikki both opposite Hugh Marlowe and Carleton Young.
Their marriage ended
soon after the war and
in 1956 she was remarried to Clayton 'Bud' Collyer
the
radiostar who starred in
"Superman".
In 1949 she also had a role in "Stage
Door Canteen" (1943) Together they appeared in
"Road of Life" and
"The Guiding Light"
(longest running soap!)
and in the 50s made the
transition to TV.
Collyer as announcer both appearing on radio and tv. His task reading out advertising
lines. After her husband died she took up various humanitarian
causes. |