Gilbert Thompson, television actor and teacher, dies at 91
The Philadelphia
Inquirer
By Joe Juliano
May 21, 2020
Between earning his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from
Temple University, Gilbert Thompson went into acting as a cast member of Action
in the Afternoon, which was shot on the back lot of the WCAU-TV studio on
City Avenue and promoted as television’s only live daily network Western in
1953.
It wasn’t an easy gig, according to Mr. Thompson’s daughter,
Lori Maxfield.
“Inside the building, they would have the bar scene, and
they would ride their horses on the lot,” she said of the actors. “It would
seem like they were just strolling into the bar. But actually they had to run
all the way around the parking lot to get to where those swinging doors would
be. He said that was just so hard.
“Then they would be riding their horses, and there would be
cars driving by on the street. So you had city noise on what was supposed to be
a setting that was out in the country.”
Mr. Thompson, 91, who worked in the broadcasting industry
before going into teaching, a career that included 15 years on the faculty at Pennsylvania State
University, died Thursday, April 30,
of obstructive lung disease at Valley View Haven Retirement Home in Belleville, Pa.
After Action in the Afternoon ended in January 1954,
Mr. Thompson continued working at WCAU and WFIL (now WPVI) on live children’s
shows, including Pixanne and Chief Halftown.
His daughter said she “felt like I hit the jackpot” getting
to know actress Jane Norman, who played Pixanne.
“My parents were friends with her and her husband, and we
always had these huge Fourth of July parties when we lived in Philadelphia,” she said. “One year, [Norman] came, and my
cousin to this day still talks about it. As a kid, you wouldn’t believe these
people would come to a party and you’d really see that person.”
Ms. Maxfield said her father was a happy and personable man
who always was interested in people. He began teaching at Penn State
in 1987 and took a keen interest in his students, giving them tips if they had
an upcoming interview.
He also liked to be theatrical around family and friends and
make them laugh, she said.
“Everything was always kind of like he was acting,” she
said. “On his birthday, it would take so long for him to open the presents and
read the cards, because he would read every line with this big voice.”
Mr. Thompson joined the Navy after graduating from Northeast High School
in 1946 and later attended Temple.
He met Emalee Ann Earon while performing at the Lambertville (N.J.) Music
Circus and married her in 1952, and the couple later sang together on cruise
ships.
A member of the Broadcast Pioneers of Philadelphia, Mr.
Thompson was a broadcasting account executive with CBS and its subsidiary
Columbia Records. He also worked as an ABC regional manager. He later taught at
Suffolk County (N.Y.) Community College before moving to State College, Pa.,
in 1985.
At Penn
State, he taught a
variety of subjects, including marketing, oral communications, and sales
management, his daughter said. During his tenure, he received a 1996 faculty
award after one of his sales management students with the highest honors over
four years at the School
of Business Management
recognized Mr. Thompson as the teacher who had the biggest influence on him.
After retirement, Mr. Thompson and his wife attended many
athletic events on campus and were active in the community, particularly with
Special Olympics.
In addition to his daughter, Mr. Thompson is survived by
four grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by
his wife and daughter Lee Ann.
Funeral services are to be held at a later date.
THOMPSON, Gilbert
Born: 8/20/1928, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
U.S.A.
Died: 4/30/2020, Belleville, Pennsylvania,
U.S.A.
Gilbert Thompson’s
westerns – actor:
Action in the Afternoon – 1953-1954
Chief Halftown – 1950’s
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