Career
Arthur appeared in numerous movies and television programs from the late 1950s through the early 1990s as well as on Broadway. Her catch phrase, "Oklahoma Charlie." In 1969, she co-starred with Don Knotts in the screwball comedy and with Bob Hope, Jackie Gleason and Jane Wyman in the romantic comedy How to Commit Marriage. In the mid-1960s she recorded a popular tune on the Carlton record label titled "Don"t Make The Angels Cry" and "What Does He Do With Her".
A second single, "Don"t Leave Maine," was unreleased, though an acetate recording exists.
In New York, she studied singing and studying drama with Wynn Handman of the Neighborhood Playhouse. She made frequent appearances on The Steve Allen Show and on The Editor Sullivan Show before moving on to play the Rivera Hotel in Las Vegas with the Latin Quarter Review.
She traveled on to Los Angeles to start in her motion pictures, beginning with Hot Rod Gang, Thunder Alley and Killers Three. In New York for rehearsals, she toured the country for two years and was in the Broadway production for one year before returning to Los Angeles for another audition, this time for the movie.
After several more movies, she headed back again to Broadway for Something Different, a play written and directed by Carl Reiner, and starring Bob Dishy and Linda Lavin.
When that play closed, she returned to Los Angeles to marry producer/creator Aaron Ruben. Her performance as Mission Adelaide in the Los Angeles Civic Light Opera revival of Guys and Dolls brought her a Drama Critics" Best Performance Award. Her longtime association with Variety earned her the title of "First Lady of Variety Clubs Telethons" and went on to earning the prestigious official title of International Ambassador.
She was a longtime president of Variety, the Children"s Charity of Southern California, Tent 25.