March 4, 1995(1995-03-04) (aged 71) Los Angeles, California
Occupation(s)
Singer, voice actress
Years active
1941–1995
Musical artist
Gloria Wood (September 8, 1923 – March 4, 1995) was an American singer and voice actress. Her rare voice was in the four-octave range. She was able to imitate other voices.
Background and career
Born in Medford, Massachusetts in 1923, her father was Robert E. Wood, a Boston radio singer in the 1920s, who with wife Gertrude Anderson-Wood, was the influence which had encouraged both Gloria and her older sister Donna to cultivate their vocal skills. Shortly after leaving high school in 1941, Gloria joined Donna in The Horace Heidt Band. In 1947, Kay Kyser offered Gloria the emotional problem of replacing Donna in his Campus Kids vocal group when she died on April 8, 1947, at the age of 29. Wood also became the lead singer for Kyser on occasion and enjoyed several hits. She became a member of The Rhythmaires vocal group which worked with Bing Crosby for nearly ten years. Crosby would occasionally showcase her apart from the group, such as on the Philco shows of March 17 and 31, 1948 when, in their duet, she reprised her Kyser success, "Saturday Date." They sang another of her Kyser hits, "On a Slow Boat to China" on Philco June 1, 1949. She can also be heard on Crosby's 1950 recording and subsequent air checks of "Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer," where she supplies the voice of Rudolph.[1] Her recording of "The Woody Woodpecker Song" with Kyser's orchestra sold more than 4 million copies.[2]
Wood recorded more than 2,500 singing commercials both on radio and television.[4] One of the best known of these was for Rice-A-Roni (...the San Francisco treat); but she may be best remembered as the voice of the orbiting Tinker Bell in the Peter Pan peanut butter ads. Wood was used on numerous cartoons, beginning in Walter Lantz's Wet Blanket Policy (1948), where she was heard singing the Woody Woodpecker Song. On television, Wood supplied voices for The Bugs and Daffy Show and That's Warner Bros.!; as well as that of Minnie Mouse and other characters on several Walt Disney programs.[1] Wood married in 1955, and it was around this time that she joined The Johnny Mann Singers.[1]
Wood died on March 4, 1995, from complications of diabetes. At that time, she was known as Gloria Wood-McGeorge, and was buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Glendale).[5]
1995: Voices various cartoon characters in That's Warner Bros.! TV series; reconfigured as The Bugs n' Daffy Show (TV cartoon series) the following year (archive footage).
References
^ abcdMcQuade, Martin (Winter 2007). "Zing a Little Zong". BING Magazine: 36–42.