The Secrets Of Our Five Prominent Detroiters Tell How They Made It To The Top. WENDY ROLLIN Special to The Jewish News Shirley Eder TY 9 rom the star-spangled boulevards of Hollywood to the sidewalks of New York, Shirley Eder's got show biz covered. "If there's something happening, I'm there:' Eder says, recalling assignments, adventures and enough famous folk to fill several autograph books. There was the time Eder went with Ginger Rogers to meet President Harry Truman. Or her journey to war-torn Viet Nam with Bob Hope. And — live from the lion's den — a radio interview with animal trainer Clyde Beatty. As she tells these and myriad other stories, it would be hard to miss the ge- nuine enthusiasm in Eder's voice. One of the components of success, she says, is "to enjoy every moment of what you're doing." Clearly, she does — and always did. Eder first fell in love with the world of glamour and greasepaint as a child in New York, taken by her mother to see matinees. When she graduated high school, she told her father, "I don't want to go to college because I'm going to be a big star!' Eder's father, a New York Supreme Court judge, responded, "fine"—on the con- dition she could find a job in theater before school started in the fall. He couldn't im- agine that his inexperienced, 17-year-old daughter would succeed. "I just knew I had to do it," Eder says. "I knocked on every door!" And, lo and behold, a door finally opened. Eder landed a small role in the last week of the last road company of The Women playing in Newark, N.J. F 26 FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1990 D Eder describes the night her parents came to see the show: "My father said to my mother, 'When does Shirley go on?' And my mother said, 'She's been on: " Eder had three lines — reduced from 10, seven of which went to the director's girlfriend. It cost her $40 to join Equity and she was paid $25 for her role. Her father said, "That's it. You're going to college." Attending New York University, Eder arranged her hours so she could look for an entertainment-related job in the afternoon. Once again, determination opened a door. At 18, Eder became the host of a "woman's show," reading recipes on radio station WINS. "I liked show people better," she says. "I liked stars. I decided to go get stars to help me read the recipes — Ann Francis, Gregory Peck, Katharine Cornell. Very soon it became an interview show. That was really the beginning." Ever since the beginning, Eder's been resourceful, as well as persistent. Before Edward R. Murrow did "Person To Person;' Shirley Eder and her inquiring mike went right into people's homes . . . into Gloria Swanson's closet . . . into Fredrick March's kitchen. Based in Detroit since 1958, Eder says she "travels constantly to get what I want!' And, as any Eder-reader can testify, even with her geographical disadvantage, Eder manages to come up with more scoops than Baskin-Robbins. Eder's New York-to-Detroit transition highlights another of her ingredients for success: solid priorities. Her husband, Ed- ward Slotkin, whose family business is Hygrade Food Products, made the move for business reasons. Despite her attachment to New York, Eder went with him. "You've got to know what comes first. Family. I know what's important." She says she's benefited both from the good values instilled by her parents and the support of a husband "who never minded my doing what I was doing. He encouraged me all along!' Eder acknowledges that she's heard a few discouraging words from people who've asked, "How can you like everybody?" She says she aims "to be honest and honorable. To tell the truth, but not to put it in such a way that it hurts the person you're talk- ing about!' It's a success formula that's worked. Disarmed and charmed, the stars come out — and Eder makes them shine. ❑