Eve Whittle

Evelyn "Eve" Whittle (born August 5, 1967) is an American actress and child psychologist best known for her TV role of the earnest and enthusiastic airport supervisor/technician Brenda Blue on the PBS Kids CGI animated cartoon series Jay Jay the Jet Plane. Brenda is noted for her formulaic enunciation of words.

Eve Whittle
Born
Evelyn Whittle

(1967-08-05) August 5, 1967
OccupationActress, child psychologist
Years active1998–present

Biography

Whittle is a program director for Kids on Stage, a Los Angeles-based theatrical program for children it is her blue jumpsuit-clad character on Jay Jay that has made her a household name with pre-schoolers (and their parents). She is known for her crisp manner of speaking to the talking airplanes, and this makes Whittlewho uses her married name, Evelyn Whittle Keller, when not actingan intriguing counterpoint to the childlike talking planes.

Eve is known for her ability to whistle in strange and haunting ways. In the Jay Jay mysteries, Eve uses her own whistling as a special effect.

Eve Whittle is a graduate of Roanoke College (BA) and Antioch University (MA). She lives in Culver City, California.

gollark: Ideally we'd be able to partition Earth into... lots of... different areas, set up different governments in each with people who like each one in them, magically fix externalities between them and stop them going to war or something, somehow deal with the issue of ensuring children in each society have a reasonable choice of where to go, and allowing people to be exiled to some other society in lieu of punishment there - assuming other ones will take them, obviously. But that is impractical.
gollark: The reason I support *some* land-value-taxish thing is that nobody creates land, so reward from it should probably go to everyone.
gollark: The only big problem I can see with that is that you can't really have the property/developed stuff on that land separate from the land itself, at least with current technology and use of nonmovable stuff.
gollark: You wouldn't just say "each m² of land costs $0.0001/year in taxes", I think one interesting idea there is to have people *set* a value, have a % of that be taxed, but also force it to be sold at that price if someone wants it.
gollark: * lots of

See also

References

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