- Born
- Died
- Shirley Dinsdale grew up in the San Francisco Bay area. When she was a child, she was severely burned when a kettle tipped over on her and she spent a year in a hospital recovering. During that time a puppet named "Judy Splinters" kept her company. After she returned home, her father bartered for ventriloquist lessons and by the age of 14 was appearing on San Francisco radio shows. Soon she moved to Los Angeles and became a regular on Eddie Cantor's radio program. She also appeared in a number of local benefits for the war effort where she was spotted by a KTLA-TV staffer. In the new medium of television, Shirley, by then 17, started with a five minute daily program. Her renown spread and her program appeared as a daily evening broadcast on NBC during the summer of 1949 and a regular afternoon show for the 1949-1950 season.
In 1953, Shirley retired from show business, married and had two children. At the age of 40, she entered Stony Brook University in New York and graduated to become a cardiopulmonary therapist. She died in 1999 at the age of 71.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Anonymous
- When Judy Splinters (1949) first appeared as a local television show in Los Angeles, Shirley was only 19 years old.
- Won an Emmy in 1949 as "Most Outstanding Personality". She didn't want to attend the ceremony because she had a date.
- She got her start in show business as a ventriloquist with her dummy, "Judy Splinters," an impertinent pigtailed girl.
- From 1973-1985, she was the head of the Respiratory Therapy Department of the John T. Mather Hospital in Port Jefferson, New York.
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