Elly May Offers up Some Vittles
TINSELTOWN TALKS
By Nick Thomas
If ever an actor was recognized by one career role, it was Donna Douglas with her portrayal
of ‘Elly May’ in the highly popular CBS 60s comedy, The Beverly Hillbillies. In the four
decades since the series ended its nine season run in 1971, the drop-dead gorgeous blonde native
of Pride, La, is still strongly identified with the show wherever she goes.
Rather than distancing herself from the connection to the Jed, Granny, Jethro and the Clampett
clam, Donna has embraced her sitcom heritage and stills makes public appearances as a real-life
Southern belle.
“Elly was a slice out of my life,” says Donna, whose new web site
(donnadouglasofficialwebsite.com) was launched in September. “I was raised a Tom boy, with
one older brother and all male cousins. So I grew up swinging from vines and playing softball.
I was getting ready for Jethro long before we ever met! I still adore Elly and we have a lot in
common, with the same interests and values.”
After the Hillbillies ended, Donna was offered many roles, but accepted just a handful which she
felt wouldn’t comprise her standards. “I’ve got no regrets about anything I turned down. I sold
real estate for a while, made a couple of record albums, and speak at churches, ladies groups, and
schools around the country. My days are full and I’m very happy!”
This year, she also published a nostalgic cookbook, “Southern Favorites with a Taste of
Hollywood,” a collection of recipes gathered over the years, many from friends including Debbie
Reynolds, Buddy Ebsen, Phyllis Diller, and Valerie Harper.
“The cookbook came about as a way to share my favorite recipes,” said Donna, who recalls
home cooked meals prepared in the rich, Southern tradition that many will also remember from
their childhood.
“Homemade dishes are almost unheard of today,” she lamented. “They’re all premade in a box
or from a drive-thru. That’s today’s way. But there was something about the way your mom made
dishes with a special touch – with a bit of this and a pinch of that.”
Although her own mother never used Granny’s “possum fat,” her childhood meals weren’t
exactly lean. “Lard and bacon grease, especially in the South, were cooking essentials!”
Interspersed between the book’s recipes, are delightful personal anecdotes from her Hollywood
days. “I thought fans would enjoy a few remembrances from my life, along with some photos
from my scrapbook.”
In an effort to remind readers of the long lost art of good manners, there’s also a quaint section
called Hollywood Social Graces. Advice includes never using your fork as a toothpick, chewing
gum in someone else’s home, or answering a cell phone while a dinner guest. “Etiquette was
taught in the South, but I’m afraid it’s a thing of the past now. Social graces are lacking all
around us, people are rushing all the time, and no one sits and visits any longer.”
Not a big fan of today’s television programming, Donna says she likes to watch the classics in
reruns, such as “Touched by an Angel” as well as the occasional Hillbillies episode which brings
back memories. “Elly May not have kissed many fellows during the show’s run, but she sure
did kiss a heap of animals. Somewhere around 500 were used during the series, provided by
Hollywood animal trainer Frank Inn.”
Today, she shows little sign of slowing down. “I seldom really rest,” admits Donna, who turned
80 in September. “I travel all over the US and Canada and have a very busy schedule. But I have
to turn down a lot of requests. I also garden, spend time with family and friends, and still get
quite a bit of fan mail. My days are full and then some, so I’m always playing catch-up. Life has
been very good to me, and full of blessings for a little backwoods girl from Louisiana who never
had any thoughts of a career in showbiz.”
Thomas’ features and columns have appeared in more than 320 magazines and newspapers. He
can be reached at his blog: http://getnickt.blogspot.com



