Sara Berner entered the world in Albany, New York, in 1912 as Lillian Ann Herdan—a name too plain for the life she was going to live. She built her stage name the way she’d build her career: piece by piece, instinctively, and with a touch of theatricality. “Sara” from her mother. “Berner” from the maiden name that shaped her bloodline. She was the oldest of four, which means she learned early how to be responsible, how to perform, how to slip between roles depending on what the day demanded.
Her family moved to Tulsa when she was a teenager, and the shift rattled something loose in her. She used to sneak into theaters to watch silent films and vaudeville acts, then imitate the scenes in front of the women’s restroom attendant—her first accidental audience. That bathroom-floor rehearsal style suited her. She wasn’t built for elegance; she was built for mimicry, speed, and instinct.
After graduating she performed in Abie’s Irish Rose and then studied drama for two years at the University of Tulsa. But life didn’t become glamorous just because she’d chosen show business. Her family moved again, this time to Philadelphia, where she worked at Wanamaker’s department store. And she would’ve stayed there longer if she hadn’t done what came naturally—imitating a customer. They fired her for it. Good for them. Better for her.
She found a radio station that let her host a fifteen-minute show written by Arthur Q. Bryan. It wasn’t big, but it was hers. Then she hit New York like a storm—worked in a millinery, studied dialects by watching customers, and snuck out during shifts to audition for Major Bowes. When Bowes hired her, everything changed.
From 1937 on she roamed the country with his “all-girl unit,” a sixteen-member vaudeville troupe. She invented a character—a fired saleslady who imitated famous actresses—and the audiences roared. When you’re good at voices, you become a shapeshifter. When you’re great, you become something else—something slippery, something magical, something dangerous to yourself. Sara Berner was all three.
Hollywood radio pulled her in next.
She had recurring roles on Fibber McGee & Molly and The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show. But The Jack Benny Program was the gold vein. She started with small roles, but it didn’t take long for her to become Gladys Zybisco and Mabel Flapsaddle—the telephone operator who gossiped with Gertrude Gearshift while Jack Benny waited on the other end of the line. Mabel wasn’t just a character. She became a cultural presence. In 1944 Erskine Johnson called Berner “the most famous voice in Hollywood,” and he wasn’t exaggerating.
She and Bea Benaderet even took over the NBC switchboards for publicity photos—two actresses pretending to be operators while the real operators probably glared from the back room. Berner had that kind of humor, that kind of nerve.
And then came her own show—Sara’s Private Caper—a comedic detective satire. It lasted only eleven episodes. The show changed titles too many times, and no one seemed to know whether it was supposed to be funny or dramatic. That sort of confusion kills good things before they grow teeth.
Animation was a natural fit. She could imitate Katharine Hepburn, Bette Davis, Joan Crawford, Mae West, Martha Raye. Studios drooled over that kind of versatility.
She became the first voice of Andy Panda for Walter Lantz. She voiced Mama Buzzard, A. Flea, and half a dozen background weirdos for Warner Bros. Cartoons, stepping into the booth and turning into whatever shape the animators needed. She was in Mother Goose Goes Hollywood, Hollywood Bowl, Hollywood Steps Out. She voiced a camel in Road to Morocco and Jerry Mouse in Anchors Aweigh during that famous dance with Gene Kelly—a performance nobody forgets, even though most never knew her name.
But Hollywood wasn’t kind to her forever. In the 1950s she slowed down. An undisclosed dispute with Jack Benny benched her from the show for eighteen months. Television variety programs replaced radio dramas. The new era favored faces over voices, and her career dimmed accordingly.
She made an appearance on This Is Your Life in 1952. She performed comic relief at the 1961 Grammys with Mort Sahl. She guested on Gypsy Rose Lee’s talk show in 1966. But by then, the world had changed faster than she had.

