Kathi Norris

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Norris in 1960

Kathleen Norris Stark Caruso, professionally known as Kathi Norris (June 1, 1919 – June 15, 2005) was an American writer and television presenter.

Career

Norris's father was a woodworker and cabinetmaker, and also a musician, playing the

Newark Symphony Orchestra. She had an older sister, Helen, who became a schoolteacher, and three older brothers, Carl, Donald, and Lowell Norris. The family were Presbyterians.[1]

Kathi Norris became an advertising executive at W. R. Grace in Chicago and a radio writer,[2] marrying Wilbur Stark in 1945.[3] She hosted the first daytime talk show on WABD, the DuMont Television Network flagship TV station in New York City. The show was known by the alternate titles Kathi Norris' Television Shopper,[4][5] TV Shopper , and Your Television Shopper, which ran on DuMont from November 1, 1948 to December 1, 1950, and as The Kathi Norris Show which ran from 1950 to 1955 on DuMont, and on ABC from 1955 to 1957.

When her father died in 1957, she was living in Bronxville, New York.[6]

Norris also was host of the DuMont

The Today Show with Dave Garroway. Model and film actress Koo Stark is her daughter with Stark. Norris was married to 1950s TV host Carl Caruso from 1979 until her death. She and Caruso had co-hosted Spin the Picture. Her husband died in 2001.[7]

Norris died in London in June 2005, aged 86, survived by her children Pamela Stark-Guyer, Kathleen (Koo) Stark, and Wilbur B. Stark, three stepchildren, five grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ Andrew Devore Boyd, Joseph Boyd, Sr. (died 1799) of Prince George's County, Maryland, and his family through six generations' (2010), p. 34: '221. Lena A. Loyd'
  2. ^ a b 'KATHLEEN NORRIS S. CARUSO Obituary' in Herald Tribune dated Aug. 3, 2005
  3. ^ Radio Daily, Volume 31 (1945), p. 55: "Wilbur Stark, WMCA time salesman, getting hitched this morning to Kathleen I. Norris — the radio writer, not the author, natch."
  4. ^ McKenney, William (1949-03-29). "McKenney on Bridge". Warren Times Mirror. p. 10. Retrieved 2020-11-01.
  5. ^ Barron, Mark (1949-07-14). "Broadway". Opelika Daily News. p. 2. Retrieved 2020-11-01.
  6. ^ 'Edwin Earl Norris, 80, widely known cabinetmaker and musician', obituary in Newark Advocate dated February 27, 1957
  7. ^ Carmen A. Caruso at legacy.com/obituaries, accessed November 17, 2017

Bibliography

External links