Peggy Webber’s personal life
Peggy Webber was born on 15 September 1925 in Texas, United States. She is an American actress and writer who has worked in film, stage, television, and radio. She is the daughter of Webber. Her father was a Wildcat Oil Driller. She completed her graduation from Tucson High School in 1942. We do not have any information about her early life and education. She has shared no information on the Internet.
Peggy Webber’s successful career
Webber’s screen debut came in the 1946 film Her Adventurous Night. In 1948, she played Lady Macduff in Orson Welles’ adaptation of Macbeth. Her other notable roles include Mrs. Alice Rice in the 1952 film Submarine Command and Miss Dennerly in The Wrong Man, directed by Alfred Hitchcock.
Webber debuted on radio at age 12 on WOAI (AM) in San Antonio, Texas. Time magazine highlighted her vocal talents for radio in its August 5, 1946 issue. The Radio: Vocal Varieties article noted, “In three years, her latex voice has supplied radio with 150 different characters on some 2,500 broadcasts. Programs on which she was heard included The Dreft Star Playhouse, Dragnet, The Woman in My House, 358 Pete Kelly’s Blues, and The Man Called X. In 1979, she played many characters on Sears Radio Theater.
She is the founder of California Artists Radio Theatre. The September 8, 2019, episode of The Big Broadcast highlighted her career and included a recent interview in which she mentioned her current projects. She also played abused sister Flora Stencil in the 1957 episode of Gunsmoke in the episode Cheap Labor. Webber wrote and directed “some 250 stage plays, radio and television programs.
She was a writer and producer for Treasures of Literature, an early television program. In her later years, she was responsible for writing, directing, and producing hundreds of new audio programs. Webber received the 2014 Norman Corwin Award for Excellence in Audio Theatre, celebrating a lifetime of achievement in this sonic art. She was the first woman so honored. Her program Treasure of Literature was named “Most Popular Television Program–1949 by the Television Academy.
Peggy Webber’s husband, Dr, Robert Marshall
Dr Robert Marshall is an accomplished consultant rheumatologist based in Bristol.
He has extensive experience in diagnosing and managing a wide range of conditions. He is an expert on several types of arthritis, including rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, inflammatory arthritis, and osteoarthritis. He worked with Arthritis Research UK for seven years as part of their USER committee and chaired it from 2011 to 2015.
He helped them target about £12 million in annual funding towards the research areas with the highest chance of benefitting people with arthritis. He is also extensively skilled in the management of gout, lupus, and ankylosing spondylitis. Since the beginning of his consultant career in 2006 at the Bristol Royal Infirmary, he has made every effort to improve the quality of care in the rheumatology department. He helped to create a care pathway for patients with newly diagnosed rheumatoid arthritis.