Joyce Randolph children-Former American actress, Joyce Randolph was born on October 21, 1924, in Detroit, Michigan in the United States of America.

Did Joyce Randolph have any children?

Joyce Randolph and her husband, Richard Lincoln Charles had a son named Randolph Richard Charles.

Who is Randolph Richard Charles?

Randolph Richard Charles is the son of Joyce Randolph and her husband, Richard Lincoln Charles. He was born in 1960, and he is currently 64 years of age. He followed his father’s footsteps to become a marketing executive as well.

Joyce Randolph career

Randolph started working in retail sales for a Saks Fifth Avenue store in Detroit after graduating from high school. She went to an audition for a Stage Door touring company, earned a part, and performed for the duration of the tour in Detroit.

In 1943, she relocated to New York City to further her acting career. She received television parts as well as Broadway ones.

Jackie Gleason asked her to participate in a sketch for Cavalcade of Stars, Gleason’s variety show on the DuMont Television Network, after she appeared in a Clorets advertisement in 1951.

She was cast as Trixie in The Honeymooners shortly after that. She was referred to as the “Garbo of Detroit” by a number of New York writers.

In skits that aired on The Jackie Gleason Show and The Honeymooners, Randolph played Trixie in the role of Thelma “Trixie” Norton, with Jackie Gleason playing Ralph Kramden, Art Carney playing Ed Norton, Audrey Meadows playing Alice Kramden, and Randolph as Randolph.

In a September 2015 interview, Randolph noted that Gleason saw her as “the quintessential Trixie” and that she did not play Trixie Norton in Honeymooners revivals for geographical and personal reasons.

It was impossible to urge Gleason to give her more lines, as Randolph insisted. Randolph remarked, “You don’t even talk to Jackie, let alone ask for anything.” “He disliked practicing a lot and didn’t talk much.”

Randolph discussed the intense pressure of filming all 39 of the show’s episodes in a single year. Despite her claim that there wasn’t much interaction amongst the group, they all turned up on Saturdays to record the show in front of a live studio audience.

On Broadway, Randolph was featured in Ladies Night in a Turkish Bath (1950). She seldom ever discovered other parts after she started to identify with the Norton character.

“No, we can’t use her,” directors would tell Randolph, “for years after that role.” Too many people know her as Trixie.”

She played in summer stock musicals, did commercials, and had a few cameo appearances on television shows, including her revival of Trixie Norton (together with Audrey Meadows returning her role as Alice Kramden) in the 1991 episode “Fur Flies” in Hi Honey, I’m Home!.

Source: www.Ghgossip.com

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