Gail Kobe

About Gail Kobe

Who is it?: Producer, Actress
Birth Day: March 19, 1932
Birth Place:  Hamtramck, Michigan, United States
Died On: August 1, 2013(2013-08-01) (aged 81)\nWoodland Hills, California, U.S.
Birth Sign: Aries
Resting place: Riverlawn Cemetery, Marysville, Michigan
Occupation: Actress, television producer
Years active: 1955–1988
Spouse(s): Richard I. Kramer (April 26, 1957–?) Edward S. Lees (1971–1972; divorced)

Gail Kobe Net Worth

Gail Kobe was born on March 19, 1932 in  Hamtramck, Michigan, United States, is Producer, Actress. During the 1950s and 1960s, she made dozens of guest appearances on such television programs as The Twilight Zone, Dr. Kildare, Felony Squad, Gunsmoke, Daniel Boone, and Mannix. She had a short role as Doris Schuster on Peyton Place. She also appeared on daytime's Bright Promise as Ann Boyd Jones (1970-1972). Kobe began to work behind the camera as supervising producer and associate producer on such daytime programs as The Edge of Night and Return to Peyton Place. In 1982 she became executive producer of Texas during its final few months. She then became executive producer of Guiding Light where she stayed from 1982 to 1987.
Gail Kobe is a member of Producer

💰Gail Kobe Net worth: $300,000

Some Gail Kobe images

Biography/Timeline

1950

During the 1950s and 1960s, Kobe made guest appearances on Richard Diamond, Private Detective, The Fugitive, Bourbon Street Beat, Maverick, M Squad (four episodes), Whirlybirds, The Californians, The Rebel, Mackenzie's Raiders, Blue Light, Felony Squad, Ironside, The Outer Limits, Hogan's Heroes, The Twilight Zone ("In His Image", "The Self-Improvement of Salvadore Ross", "A World of Difference"), Dr. Kildare, Empire, Gunsmoke, Cheyenne, Daniel Boone, Mission: Impossible, The Untouchables, Have Gun – Will Travel, The Mod Squad, Trackdown, and Mannix. In 1962, she portrayed Dr. Louise Amadon in the episode "A Woman's Place" on CBS's Rawhide, about a woman doctor's struggles against stereotype in the Old West.

1957

Kobe was cast as Penny Adams in four episodes of the 1957–1959 CBS western series, Trackdown, with Robert Culp as Texas Ranger Hoby Gilman, in whom her character had a romantic interest. She also appeared in two other Trackdown episodes as other characters. Other Trackdown regulars included Ellen Corby, Peter Leeds, Addison Richards, and James Griffith, who played Kobe's brother, Aaron Adams, the town barber. In the story line, Gilman is based in Porter, Texas, but travels across the state to capture an assortment of outlaws. on the run.

1959

On February 17, 1959, Kobe was cast in the episode "Disaster Town" of the syndicated series, Rescue 8, in the role of Ellen Mason, a mother looking for her son, Jimmy, in a western ghost town. Actor Jay North played Kobe's missing son. Rescuers Wes Cameron (Jim Davis and Skip Johnson (Lang Jeffries) are called when Ellen is trapped after she slips through the floor of an abandoned building.

1962

On the NBC western series, Laramie, Kobe played a saloon girl, Lottie Harris, in the episode "Gun Duel" (aired December 25, 1962). The story line revolves around Jess Harper, played by Robert Fuller, is the weekend deputy while Sheriff Mort Corey (Stuart Randall) is away on Business. Corey's newly married nephew, Johnny Hartley, wants to become a deputy also, but finds he is unsuited for the work after nearly getting killed by a gunshot from two bank Robbers. Lottie had hoped to marry the third bank robber, who falsely promised to take her to California. In a dramatic scene, Harper advises Lottie to stop gazing out the hotel window at the street and look in the mirror to overcome her own weaknesses.

1970

Kobe also appeared on daytime television in the NBC serial Bright Promise as Ann Boyd Jones (1970–1972).

1981

Kobe began to work behind the camera as supervising Producer and associate Producer on such daytime programs as CBS's The Edge of Night and NBC's Return to Peyton Place. From 1981–82, its final year on the air, Kobe became executive Producer of the NBC soap opera, Texas. From 1983 to 1986, she was the executive Producer of CBS's Guiding Light (for which she was nominated for a Daytime Emmy Award) and then served as a Producer on CBS's The Bold and the Beautiful from its debut in 1987 through the early 1990s.

2008

In 2008, a Golden Palm Star on the Walk of Stars was dedicated in Kobe's honor.

2013

For the last two years of her life, the twice-married Kobe resided at the Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital in Woodland Hills, where she died on August 1, 2013, aged 81, from undisclosed causes.