We all have banker problems. We all have issues.

Every time a bell rings, an angel gets his wings.

Everybody has some sorrow, worry, and everybody asks God for help.

My Aunt Marsha ruled the family with a rod of iron. She was one wicked, mean woman.

I never saw movies I was in because my mom told me that would be prideful, being stuck on yourself.

It's all in how you look at your life, because no one has a wonderful life. But you can make it what you want it to be.

With a lot of help from my high school teachers, I went to college and became a medical tech at a clinic outside Kansas City.

I put the movie days totally behind me... It was a part of my past that I really kind of put in a little drawer and shut the door.

Life continues to be difficult. It always will be because that's just life. But I am so glad I have put some happiness into the world.

My mother died when I was 12, and right after, my dad died in a car crash. I was 15 and had no family. The court sent me to live with my uncle and aunt in Missouri.

Meeting the people. I love it. Just talking with people and sharing part of their lives for just a few moments ... I get love and appreciation and I hope I give them the same.

I was raising seven kids. I lived in the bedrooms, in the laundry room, in the kitchen, in the car - car pooling all over. I just didn't have time to sit down and watch a lot of TV. So I really didn't.

I never wanted to return to Hollywood because Hollywood people and the fakeness - very artificial and not dear to my heart. After I lived in the Midwest, and I learned what sincere, real people were all about, I never wanted to go back.

In all, I was in 16 movies, including 'The Bishop's Wife' with Cary Grant, Loretta Young and David Niven; I was in 'Rio Grande' with John Wayne, 'Albuquerque' with Randall Scott, 'Blue Skies' with Bing Crosby and 'Hans Christian Anderson' with Danny Kaye.

I grew up in Hollywood during WWII, and my mother was afraid that my father was going to be drafted because she didn't think we were going to be able to live on army pay. She didn't want to have to get a job, so she decided to put me to work, and that's how I got started in the movies.

I started with the Target Company in 1993 when their Christmas theme that year was 'It's A Wonderful Life,' and they reunited the actors who played the Bailey kids. So we went all over and really had a blast getting the love from all of the fans and thought, 'Whoopty-doo, there's something going on here.'

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