
Roberta Shore
Acting • Born 1943-04-07
Biography
Born on April 7, 1943, in Monterey Park, California, Roberta Jymme Schourup quickly gave way to the name Roberta Shore, at a young age, as an actress and singer on film and TV. Raised in San Gabriel, California, Roberta began her career at age ten, singing country western songs at supermarket openings with Tex Williams, who invited her to join his weekly TV show from Knotts Berry Farm. This is when she changed her stage name to "Jymme Shore". She subsequently joined The Pinky Lee Show (1950), NBC's number one rated children's daily television program at the time. The well-dressed, confident-looking teen actress with the pretty brunette bangs gained her best notice, however, when Disney Studios hired her as a snooty dating nemesis for Annette Funicello in a couple of the star's showcases. Because the name Jymme was often confused as a male, Walt Disney himself suggested she use her name Roberta. Prominently feature in Annette (1958), which was an episodic series culled from "The Mickey Mouse Club" files, and the highly popular feature film The Shaggy Dog (1959), both of which had Roberta fighting Annette over the affections of Tim Considine. Roberta also performed the theme song for that movie. She appeared many times on episodes of The Mouseketeers, although she herself was not a Mouseketeer as she was deemed too tall. She provided voices for some of their animated projects and, as a singer, was featured on the Disney label, including songs that recreated her distinctive squeaky vocal effect. As she blossomed, she played a school friend for Elinor Donahue, during one season of Father Knows Best (1954); scored some points playing Henrietta, better known as "Hank", a tomboyish teen on The Bob Cummings Show (1961), a short-lived 1961 TV series starring Robert Cummings; and was one of a plethora of girlfriends for Ricky Nelson's on his family's show, The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet (1952). But the most notable role for Roberta on a TV series was as "Betsy Garth" on The Virginian (1962) for its first three seasons. A support player in other "young love" films, such as A Summer Place (1959), Blue Denim (1959) and Because They're Young (1960), nothing much clicked for Roberta, however, to push her into the front ranks. Raised a Mormon, she eventually left the limelight altogether in 1965 and focused entirely on raising her family. She and her actor husband, Ron Frederickson, moved to Salt Lake City and little was heard from her again. A disc jockey on a Utah radio station at one time in the 1980s, decades later she was cast as Ishmael's wife, a major supporting role in Gary Rogers' The Book of Mormon Movie, Volume 1: The Journey (2003) movie in 2003. Her husband played Ishmael. More recently, she has been a manufacturer's rep for a furniture business.
Filmography
29 credits
Bachelor in Paradise
Movie • 1961
Ginnie Caccardi (uncredited)

The Shaggy Dog Kids
Movie • 2006
Self

The Young Savages
Movie • 1961
Jenny Bell

Because They're Young
Movie • 1960
Richelle 'Ricky' Summers

Strangers When We Meet
Movie • 1960
Lindy, the Babysitter

The Shaggy Dog
Movie • 1959
Franceska Andrassy

A Summer Place
Movie • 1959
Anne Talbert (uncredited)

Blue Denim
Movie • 1959
Cherie

Cipher in the Snow
Movie • 1974
Peggy, school secretary

Gala Day at Disneyland
Movie • 1960
Self

Sizeman and Son
Movie • 1956
Jennie

Lolita
Movie • 1962
Lorna (uncredited)

The Mickey Mouse Club
TV • 1955
Self

Annette
TV • 1957
Laura Rogan

General Electric Theater
TV • 1953
Ellie Beckett

The Tall Man
TV • 1960

The New Bob Cummings Show
TV • 1961

The Donna Reed Show
TV • 1958

Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre
TV • 1956
Laurie Lawson

The Dick Clark Show
TV • 1958
Self

The Bob Hope Show
TV • 1950
Self

The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis
TV • 1959
Clothilde Ellingboe

Lawman
TV • 1958
Millie Johnson

The Donna Reed Show
TV • 1958
Carol

The Virginian
TV • 1962
Betsy Garth

The Wonderful World of Disney
TV • 1954
Self

Maverick
TV • 1957
Judy Mason

Wagon Train
TV • 1957
Millie Allen

The Wonderful World of Disney
TV • 1954
Franceska Andrassy