Jan Miner was an American actress best known for her role as the character "Madge", the manicurist in Palmolive dish-washing detergent television commercials beginning in the 1960s.
Biography
Early life and career
Jan Miner, the daughter of a dentist and a painter, whose siblings included three brothers, Sheldon, Donald and Lyndsey, studied at the Vesper George School of Art in her native Boston, Massachusetts. She went on to study acting with Lee Strasberg and others before making her stage debut in 1945 in a Boston production of Elmer Rice's Street Scene. Miner then became a well-established actress on radio, and through the 1950s was one of many busy performers working in multiple series simultaneously. Among other roles, she was one of three sequential actresses who voiced secretary Della Street on Perry Mason, one of five to play girlfriend Ann Williams on Casey, Crime Photographer, and Mary Wesley on Boston Blackie. Miner played featured roles in the 1948-1950 dramatic anthology series Radio City Playhouse. It was, though, her appearance in the premiere broadcast of the series that "created a minor sensation in the play Long Distance"; the episode proved so popular that she repeated her performance later in the season. From circa 1948 through sometime before the series ended in 1957, Miner, eventually succeeded by Grace Matthews, starred as Julie Erickson, head of the titular orphanage in the revival of the 1937–1941 soap operaHilltop House. The series was sponsored by the Colgate-Palmolive Company, for which she would later appear in a famous, long-running series of television commercials.
As radio drama faded with the popularity of television, Miner made her New York City theater debut in the 1958 melodrama Obbligato at Theatre Marquee, adapted by Jane Hinton Gates from the novel Une Ombre by :fr:Paul Vialar|Paul Vialar; Miner starred as a spinster in romantic competition with her younger sister, played by Carol Vandermeir. Her Broadway debut came two years later, in the very short-lived advertising-world comedyViva Madison Avenue!, by George Panetta, at the Longacre Theatre.
Television icon
Miner appeared on television in, among other shows, Boston Blackie and Casey, Crime Photographer, in roles she originated on radio. But she became an icon to TV viewers as Madge, the wisecracking manicurist in commercials for Palmolive dish-washing detergent. In an advertising campaign created by the agency Ted Bates Advertising, Miner played Madge, who worked at the Salon East Beauty Parlor and soaked her customers’ fingernails in Palmolive. The campaign ran from 1966 to 1992. Miner's Palmolive commercials would appear in France, Germany, Switzerland, and Austria, Finland, Denmark, and Italy. In Australia and New Zealand, the Madge character was played by Robina Beard. Madge's trademark line became one of the more famous and parodied television commercial quotes: Miner was a regular on the 1974 CBS situation comedyPaul Sand in Friends and Lovers in which she played the mother of the character portrayed by Paul Sand.