She became a model and actress, and studied acting in Europe with Benno Schneider, a director in the Yiddish theater.[3] Though Abrass later took the first name Joan after the actress Joan Crawford, the origin of the name Alexander is unknown, according to her family.[1] An early, first marriage in 1944[3] to actor John Sylvester White, who became known as Principal Woodman on Welcome Back, Kotter, was also unknown to Alexander's family until two years before Alexander's death.[1]
Voice of Lois Lane
Alexander portrayed newspaper reporterLois Lane in the superhero radio program The Adventures of Superman for more than 1,600 episodes.[2] The series began in 1940, two years after Superman's debut in the modern-day DC Comics' Action Comics #1 (June 1938), with Lane first appearing in the seventh episode.[1] Though most sources indicate she was not the first actress cast,[1] Alexander was cast early in the series' run and became the radio role's signature performer.[1]
Following her divorce from White, Alexander married surgeon Robert Crowley. Author and screenwriter Jane Stanton Hitchcock (born as Jane Crowley) is their daughter.[8] After that second marriage ended in divorce, Alexander in 1954[1] or 1955[3] married Arthur Stanton, chairman of the Orangeburg, New York-based World-Wide Volkswagen, at the time the distributor of Volkswagen and Audi vehicles in New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut,[8] and which helped introduce the Volkswagen Beetle to the U.S.[3] Stanton, who died January 20, 1987,[8] adopted Alexander and Crowley's daughter, Jane when she was 9 years old. The couple's other children were sons Adam (died 1993) and Timothy. The Stantons entertained at their Manhattan apartment on the Upper East Side and their home in East Hampton, New York; their daughter told The New York Times that author George Plimpton proposed to his future wife, Freddy Espy, at one party there, that composerLeonard Bernstein sometimes performed at the piano, and that comedy playwrightNeil Simon wrote a sketch for the daughter's 21st birthday.[9]
In April 2008, Alexander filed a lawsuit against financial adviser Kenneth I. Starr, alleging the late Stanton had left Alexander a $70 million estate which, according to court paper, Starr used inappropriately and squandered.[13][14]
Death
Alexander died on May 21, 2009, at the age of 94 from an intestinal blockage. She is survived by her son Timothy Stanton, his wife Agnes Stanton and grandsons Liam and Conrad Stanton as well as her daughter, Jane Stanton Hitchcock.[1][3]
^Brooks, Tim (1999). "Name's the Same". The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows, 1946–present. Earle Marsh. Ballantine Books. p. 712. ISBN0-345-42923-0.