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Joyce Brothers 1927 - 2013

Joyce Brothers was born on October 20, 1927 in Brooklyn, Kings County, New York United States, and died at age 85 years old on May 13, 2013 in Fort Lee, Bergen County, NJ.
Joyce Brothers
Joyce Diane Brothers (Bauer)
October 20, 1927
Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, United States
May 13, 2013
Fort Lee, Bergen County, New Jersey, 07024, United States
Female
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Joyce Brothers' History: 1927 - 2013

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  • Introduction

    Joyce Brothers Joyce Brothers in 1957 Born Joyce Diane Bauer October 20, 1927 Brooklyn, New York, U.S. Died May 13, 2013 (aged 85) Fort Lee, New Jersey, U.S. Resting place Beth David Cemetery, Elmont, New York Alma mater Cornell University (BA) Columbia University (Ph.D) Occupation Psychologist Advice columnist Writer Years active 1955–2013 Spouse Milton Brothers (1949–89); his death; 1 child) Joyce Diane Brothers (née Bauer; October 20, 1927 – May 13, 2013) was an American psychologist, television personality and columnist, who wrote a daily newspaper advice column from 1960 to 2013. In 1955, she became the only woman ever to win the top prize on the American game show The $64,000 Question, answering questions on the topic of boxing, which was suggested as a stunt by the show's producers. In 1958, she presented a television show on which she dispensed psychological advice, pioneering the field. She wrote a column for Good Housekeeping for almost forty years and became, according to The Washington Post, the "face of American psychology". Brothers appeared in dozens of television roles, usually as herself, but from the 1970s onward she accepted roles portraying fictional characters, often self-parodies. Radio therapist Dr. Laura credited Brothers with making psychology "accessible". Personal life Joyce Diane Bauer was born in 1927 in Brooklyn, New York, to Morris K. Bauer and Estelle (née Rapaport), attorneys who shared a law practice. Her family was Jewish. She graduated from Far Rockaway High School in January 1944. She entered Cornell University, double-majoring in home economics and psychology and was a member of Sigma Delta Tau sorority. She earned her Ph.D degree in psychology from Columbia University. The American Association of University Women AAUW awarded Brothers the American Fellowship in 1952, which enabled her to complete the doctoral degree. She married Milton Brothers, an internist, in 1949. The couple had a daughter, Lisa. Milton Brothers died in 1989 from cancer. Brothers resided in Fort Lee, New Jersey, where she died in 2013, aged 85. Career Brothers gained fame in late 1955 by winning The $64,000 Question game show, on which she appeared as an expert in the subject area of boxing. Originally, she had not planned to have boxing as her topic, but the sponsors suggested it, and she agreed. A voracious reader, she studied every reference book about boxing that she could find; she would later tell reporters that it was thanks to her good memory that she assimilated so much material and answered even the most difficult questions. After seven weeks on the show she became the second person, and only woman, to win the $64,000 top prize. Two years later, Brothers appeared on a successor program, The $64,000 Challenge, which matched the contestant against experts in the field. Again, Brothers walked off with the maximum prize. In 1959, allegations that quiz shows were rigged, due to the Charles Van Doren controversy on the quiz show Twenty-One, began to surface and stirred controversy. Despite these claims, Brothers insisted she had not cheated, nor ever been given any answers to questions in advance. During a 1959 hearing in the quiz show scandal, a producer exonerated her of involvement. Her success on The $64,000 Question earned Brothers a chance to be the color commentator for CBS during the boxing match between Carmen Basilio and Sugar Ray Robinson. She was said to have been the first woman boxing commentator. Brothers was the convocation speaker at her Alma Mater Cornell University in May 1988. By August 1958, Brothers was given her own television show on a New York station, but her topic was not sports; she began doing an advice show about relationships, during which she answered questions from the audience. She claimed to have been the first television psychologist, explaining to The Washington Post: "I invented media psychology. I was the first. The founding mother." Sponsors were nervous about whether a television psychologist could succeed, she recalled, but viewers expressed their gratitude for her show, telling her she was giving them information they could not get elsewhere. Brothers presented syndicated advice shows on both television and radio, during a broadcasting career that lasted more than four decades. Her shows changed names numerous times, from The Dr. Joyce Brothers Show to Consult Dr. Brothers to Tell Me, Dr. Brothers to Ask Dr. Brothers to Living Easy with Dr. Joyce Brothers.[18] In 1964, she interviewed and posed for publicity photographs with the Beatles on their first visit to the United States. Brothers also had a monthly column in Good Housekeeping magazine for almost four decades, and a syndicated newspaper column that she began writing in the 1970s and which at its height was printed in more than 300 newspapers. She also published several books including the 1981 book, What Every Woman Should Know About Men, and the 1991 book, Widowed, inspired by the loss of her husband. Her advice was also used as a source for some questions on the 1998–2004 incarnation of Hollywood Squares. As a psychologist, Brothers had been licensed in New York since 1958. Brothers died, aged 85, at her home in Fort Lee on May 13, 2013, due to respiratory failure. The Washington Times called her "the mother of television psychology". She is credited with inspiring "Dr. Laura" Schlessinger and "Dr. Phil" McGraw who called himself "a very big fan of hers" after her death.
  • 10/20
    1927

    Birthday

    October 20, 1927
    Birthdate
    Brooklyn, Kings County, New York United States
    Birthplace
  • Professional Career

    Movie Appearances Selected filmography Stand Up and Be Counted (1972) - Herself The War Between Men and Women (1972) - Herself Embryo (1976) - Herself More Wild Wild West (1980) - Casio Guest Hero at Large (1980) - Herself Oh, God! Book II (1980) - Herself on NBC The King of Comedy (1982) - Herself The Lonely Guy (1984) - Herself Mama's Family (1986) - Herself Love at Stake (1987) - Herself The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad! (1988) - The Baseball Announcer #7 Troop Beverly Hills (1989) - Herself Animal Behavior (1989) - Visiting Psychologist Age Isn't Everything (1991) - Herself Married With Children (1992) - Judge Loaded Weapon 1 (1993) - Coroner Exit to Eden (1994) - Herself Lover's Knot (1995) - Herself The Misery Brothers (1995) - Herself Spy Hard (1996) - Steele's Tag Team Member Dear God (1996) - Herself The Nanny (1996-1997) - Herself Elvis Is Alive! I Swear I Saw Him Eating Ding Dongs Outside the Piggly Wiggly's (1998) Diagnosis: Murder (1998) - Herself Van Wilder (2002) - Herself Analyze That (2002) - Herself
  • 05/13
    2013

    Death

    May 13, 2013
    Death date
    Unknown
    Cause of death
    Fort Lee, Bergen County, New Jersey 07024, United States
    Death location
  • Obituary

    Dr. Joyce Brothers, On-Air Psychologist Who Made TV House Calls, Dies at 85 By Margalit Fox May 13, 2013 Joyce Brothers, a former academic psychologist who, long before Drs. Ruth, Phil and Laura, was counseling millions over the airwaves, died on Monday at her home in Fort Lee, N.J. She was 85. Her daughter, Lisa Brothers Arbisser, confirmed the death. Dr. Joyce Brothers, as she was always known professionally — a full-name hallmark of the more formal times in which she began her career — was widely described as the mother of mass-media psychology because of the firm, pragmatic and homiletic guidance she administered for decades via radio and television. Historically, she was a bridge between advice columnists like Dear Abby and Ann Landers, who got their start in the mid-1950s, and the self-help advocates of the 1970s and afterward. Throughout the 1960s, and long beyond, one could scarcely turn on the television or open a newspaper without encountering her. She was the host of her own nationally syndicated TV shows, starting in the late 1950s with “The Dr. Joyce Brothers Show” and over the years including “Ask Dr. Brothers,” “Consult Dr. Brothers” and “Living Easy With Dr. Joyce Brothers.” She was also a ubiquitous guest on talk shows like “The Tonight Show” and on variety shows like “The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour.” She was a panelist on many game shows, including “What’s My Line?” and “The Hollywood Squares.” These appearances had a fitting symmetry: It was as a game-show contestant that Dr. Brothers had received her first television exposure. Playing herself, or a character very much like herself, she had guest roles on a blizzard of TV series, from “The Jack Benny Program” to “Happy Days,” “Taxi,” “Baywatch,” “Entourage” and “The Simpsons.” She also lectured widely; had a call-in radio show, a syndicated newspaper column and a regular column in Good Housekeeping magazine; and wrote books. Dr. Brothers arrived in the American consciousness (or, more precisely, the American unconscious) at a serendipitous time: the exact historical moment when cold war anxiety, a greater acceptance of talk therapy and the widespread ownership of television sets converged. Looking crisply capable yet eminently approachable in her pastel suits and pale blond pageboy, she offered gentle, nonthreatening advice on sex, relationships, family and all manner of decent behavior. ‘I Really Just Wanted the Comfort of My Husband’s Being There’ It is noteworthy, then, that her public life began with fisticuffs. The demure-looking, scholarly Dr. Brothers had first come to wide attention as a contestant on “The $64,000 Question,” where she triumphed as an improbable authority on boxing. Joyce Diane Bauer was born in Brooklyn on Oct. 20, 1927, and reared in Queens and Manhattan. She earned a bachelor’s degree from Cornell, with a double major in home economics and psychology, followed by a Ph.D. in psychology from Columbia. In the late 1940s and early ’50s, Dr. Brothers taught psychology at Hunter College. By the mid-’50s, while her husband, Milton J. Brothers, was pursuing a medical residency, she had left the academy to stay home with their baby daughter. Dr. Joyce Brothers engulfed by mail from radio listeners after she kept a suicidal caller on the phone until help could arrive. Milton Brothers’s residency paid $50 a month. Joyce Brothers, who had a steel-trap memory, decided to supplement their income by appearing on a quiz show. She settled on “The $64,000 Question,” produced in New York and broadcast on CBS. On the show, contestants answered a string of increasingly difficult questions in fields of their choosing. Dr. Brothers quickly saw that the show prized incongruous matches of contestant and subject: the straight-backed Marine officer who was an expert on gastronomy; the cobbler who knew all about opera. What she decided, would be more improbable than a petite psychologist who was a pundit of pugilism? She embarked on weeks of intensive study, a process little different, she later said, from preparing to write a doctoral dissertation. She made her first appearance on the show in late 1955, returning week after week until she had won the top prize, $64,000 — only the second person, and the first woman, to do so. She later won the same amount, also for boxing knowledge, on a spinoff show, “The $64,000 Challenge.” In the late 1950s, amid the quiz-show scandals (which included revelations that contestants on some shows, “The $64,000 Question” among them, had been fed correct answers), Dr. Brothers was called before a grand jury. In an exercise that was curiously reminiscent of her appearances on the shows, she was peppered with arcane boxing questions to test her authentic knowledge of the subject. She passed handily, and no taint of the scandal attached to her. In 1956, as a result of her performance on “The $64,000 Question,” Dr. Brothers was invited to be a commentator on “Sports Showcase,” a television show on Channel 13 in New York, which had not yet become a noncommercial station. One show led to another, and before the decade was out she was a television star. If, in later, years, Dr. Brothers’s public image had acquired the faint aura of camp, it was leavened by her obvious awareness of that fact — and her corresponding ability to laugh at herself in public. (Who without such self-knowledge would have agreed, as she did, to appear on both “The David Frost Show” and “The $1.98 Beauty Show,” a late-’70s Chuck Barris game show-cum-parody?) But for the most part, Dr. Brothers displayed a far more serious side: More than once, she dissuaded suicidal callers to her radio show from ending their lives, keeping them on the line with encouraging talk until their phone numbers could be traced and help dispatched. In her book “Widowed” (1990), she wrote candidly of her own suicidal despair after her husband’s death from cancer, and her eventual resolve to go on with her life.
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19 Memories, Stories & Photos about Joyce

Joyce Brothers and Lisa Brothers Arbisser
Joyce Brothers and Lisa Brothers Arbisser
A photo of Joyce Brothers with Lisa Brothers Arbisser
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Lisa (Brothers) Arbisser
Lisa (Brothers) Arbisser
A photo of Lisa (Brothers) Arbisser
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Lisa (Brothers) Arbisser
Lisa (Brothers) Arbisser
A photo of Lisa (Brothers) Arbisser
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Lisa (Brothers) Arbisser
Lisa (Brothers) Arbisser
A photo of Lisa (Brothers) Arbisser
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Milton J Brothers
Milton J Brothers
A photo of Milton J Brothers
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Milton J Brothers
Milton J Brothers
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Joyce Brothers' Family Tree & Friends

Joyce Brothers' Family Tree

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Joyce's Friends

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