She was also a role model for how to grow old joyously.
She was voted Entertainer of the Year by The Associated Press. At age 88 she became the oldest guest host of "Saturday Night Live" following a social media campaign targeting the show's producers and she was invited onto the pilot of the sitcom "Hot in Cleveland" – and ended up staying through 124 episodes.
She wrote, produced and hosted a syndicated TV show, "The Pet Set."īut by 2010, when she appeared in a Snickers candy bar commercial, White became America's senior citizen sweetheart – a sweet old lady with a hip, naughty side, and a penchant for bawdy humor.
She followed that series with "The Golden Girls," playing the sweet, naïve Rose Nylund, and winning a third Emmy.Ī self-proclaimed workaholic, White continued making numerous guest appearances on shows, in addition to authoring more than a half-dozen books, and raising money for animal causes. "And they'd ask my husband, Allen Ludden, they'd ask, 'How close to Betty is Sue Ann?' He said, 'Well, they're the same, except Betty can't cook, of course.'" "She was the neighborhood nymphomaniac," White told "Sunday Morning" in 2011. White played the part hilariously, and became a fixture of the series, winning two of her five Emmy Awards for the role. She was a welcome presence throughout the '60s on such game shows as "To Tell the Truth," "What's My Line?," "Liar's Club," "It Takes Two," and "Password," where she met her husband, host Allen Ludden.ĭuring the fourth season of "The Mary Tyler Moore Show," one script described a character, Sue Ann Nivens, as "a sickeningly sweet Betty White type." Sweet – as well as scheming, conniving, and laughably lustful. In the '50s she starred in the sitcom "Life With Elizabeth," and her own talk program, "The Betty White Show." After the war, when she served as a member of the American Women's Voluntary Services, she began hosting a live variety show, "Hollywood on Television," in 1949. The Associated Press contributed to this gallery.įor generations, the actress, comedian and television presenter Betty White (January 17, 1922-December 31, 2021) was one of TV's most familiar and beloved faces, often hilariously playing against the sweet image of her smiling eyes and dimpled cheeks on the series "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" and "The Golden Girls."īorn in Oak Park, Illinois, and raised in California during the Great Depression, White performed on radio and for an experimental TV station in Los Angeles in the 1930s.
Let me know how I can help out.Betty White, of "The Mary Tyler Moore Show." | CBS Photo Archive Getty ImagesĪ look back at the esteemed personalities who left us this year, who'd touched us with their innovation, creativity and humanity.īy senior producer David Morgan. If a new one is inserted at the incorrect angle, it still will not run.įeel free to send me a private message if you have any other questions. When that pops, the motor will no longer run from an external gas tank. Even their carburetors were strange with a little balloon for a fuel pump. The one thing I recall is that the little motors ran well when they ran, but when they stopped, it was easier to take them to the scrap yard than it was to repair them. I had the opportunity to work on a number of these motors in the late 1990’s when I was laid off and needed some income to stay afloat (pun not intended). I actually am guilty of having an "ESKA Toss" many years ago at a Lake Catherine wet meet because it was the only motor that would not anger one of our members when we threw one into the lake (not to worry, we had a rope on each motor and did not leave them in the lake). This forum is probably not the best source for information on the ESKA outboard because nobody that I know collects the Tecumseh powered air-cooled motors from ESKA.
The last company that I dealt with that had manuals and parts for the ESKA outboard was Certified Parts Corporation in Janesville, Wisconsin. Rated at 5hp, it is an air-cooled motor however, if it is similar to some I have worked on in the past, there is still a water pump impeller in the lower end that pushes water to the bottom of the powerhead to condense gases and to keep heat from building up under the top cowlings. I am not an expert on your outboard, but I am fairly certain that it is an ESKA outboard manufactured in 1974 for Sears in Canada.