Edie Adams
- Original name:
- Elizabeth Edith Enke
- Born:
- April 16, 1927, Kingston, Pennsylvania, U.S.
- Died:
- October 15, 2008, Los Angeles, California, U.S. (aged 81)
- Awards And Honors:
- Tony Awards (1957)
Edie Adams (born April 16, 1927, Kingston, Pennsylvania, U.S.—died October 15, 2008, Los Angeles, California, U.S.) was an American actor and singer who served as the comic foil for her husband, Ernie Kovacs, in his TV comedy-show sketches; she also spent more than two decades appearing as a sultry blonde beauty in Muriel cigar advertisements, in which she sang and breathily invited, “Why don’t you pick one up and smoke it sometime?”
Adams, a graduate of the Juilliard School of Music, New York City, initially pursued a career in opera, but she attracted the attention of Kovacs’s director, who was impressed with her performance in 1950 on the Arthur Godfrey’s Talent Scouts TV show and offered her an audition. Though her repertoire of popular songs was slim, she was selected to join Kovacs’s show. In recalling her acceptance, she said, “Here was this guy with the big mustache, the big cigar, and the silly hat....I thought, ‘I don’t know what this is, but it’s for me.’” In 1954 she and Kovacs eloped to Mexico.
Adams also found success on Broadway in Wonderful Town (1953) and then earned (1957) a Tony Award for her featured (supporting) role as Daisy Mae in Li’l Abner. That same year Adams and Kovacs were nominated for Emmy Awards for best performance in a comedy series. In the late 1950s the couple moved to Hollywood, and Adams began appearing in films. Some of her credits include The Apartment (1960), It’s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World, Love with the Proper Stranger, and Under the Yum Yum Tree (all in 1963).
After Kovacs’s death (1962) in an automobile crash, Adams worked to pay her husband’s massive back-tax bill and won a highly publicized custody battle for his children from a previous marriage. She briefly (1963–64) hosted her own TV musical comedy show, Here’s Edie, and later made cameo appearances and played bit parts in a number of prime-time TV shows.