![]() ![]() ![]() Her work is often hard to describe, but as NBC producer Herb Dudnick, a former boss at Overnight, said, “You know it when you see it. ![]() The cracked television survived the cracked marriage did not.Įllerbee, a zaftig brunette in a business of skinny blondes, is the kind of woman who, when asked by a newspaper columnist whether she could leave her house without making the bed, replied, “I have no problem with leaving an unmade bed very often I’ve been accused of looking like one.”Įllerbee, a casually coiffed, Levis-and-work-shirt type in a business of blow-dried tresses and bowed blouses, is the kind of woman who, when queried about her wardrobe, replied, “My employer and I agree there are times when it is appropriate to dress up we just disagree when those times are.”Įllerbee, a lover of words in a business of pictures, is the kind of woman who, in recalling James Cagney for the evening news, offered only 50 words of her own in a 3 1/2-minute piece, prompting a former boss to say, “She used 50 words because she probably couldn’t get away with 45 she writes great silence.” Linda Ellerbee, a free spirit in a business of decidedly unfree spirits, is the kind of woman who once heaved a television set out the window because her husband was watching Sonny & Cher instead of listening to her. ![]()
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