Alice Reinheart

An article in the September 1940 issue of Radio and Television Mirror magazine described her as "pert, vivacious, beautiful and talented in writing and music as well as acting.

[8] Reinheart's other work on radio included roles in One Man's Family,[8] The Woman in My House,[9] Nona from Nowhere,[10] Wendy Warren and the News,[11] Young Doctor Malone,[12] Treasury Agent,[13] Front Page Farrell,[14] Romance, Inc.,[15] Call the Police,[16] Casey, Press Photographer,[17] Her Honor, Nancy James,[18] John's Other Wife,[19] Gang Busters, Molle Mystery Theater (05/17/1946 episode "Killer Come Back to Me"), On Broadway,[20] and The Court of Human Relations.

"[23] A newspaper article reported, "Alice Reinheart has [a] vocal range of three and one-half octaves [and] can scream ten full notes above high C" and that she "can drive the studio control needle up to 60 decibels, which is tops for the measuring instrument.

[25] Her Broadway credits include Papavert (1931-1932), Foolscap (1933), The Mask and the Face (1933), The Drums Begin (1933), The Wooden Slipper (1934), Journey to Jerusalem (1940), and Leaf and Bough (1949).

"[1] A brief item in a 1932 issue of the trade publication Film Daily reported that she "appeared in several shorts and feature productions for Ufa while in Berlin.

She was in the cast of Journey to Jerusalem, which was filmed and made available "throughout the land" for exhibition by "more than 25,000 owners and renters of 16 millimeter sound-equipped projectors" as part of a project called Theater-on-Film Inc.[29] Reinheart appeared in a number of television programs, including Dragnet, The Donna Reed Show, The Danny Thomas Show, Get Smart, I Dream of Jeannie, and Mission Impossible.

She has a large collection of fine editions, and a four-volume scrapbook which she began in 1928, into which she copies in her own handwriting excerpts from the world's greatest literature.