- First person to win an Emmy Award for Best Supporting Actress. (1954)
- In the 1970s, she discovered commercials were a lucrative way to capitalize on fame, with a three-year $250,000 contract. She became known as Maxine, in the Maxwell House Commercials.
- Vance and co-star William Frawley were offered an Ethel and Fred spin-off of I Love Lucy (1951). Despite their intense disliking of each other, Frawley was quite game, but Vivian wasted no time in declining. Producer Jess Oppenheimer was quoted as saying that the infamous feud between Vance and William Frawley was exaggerated. While television's favorite neighbors may not have been "chummy" in real life, they were professionals who for the most part treated each other with respect during rehearsals and filming.
- Miss Vance was honored by the State of Connecticut Department of Mental Health for her contributions on behalf of the mentally ill.
- She returned to Broadway in the late 1960s, early 1970s, and usually commanded a $2,500/week salary. When she would return to her hometown of Albequerque, New Mexico, she would only accept a maximum of $250/week for little theater performances.
- Legend has it that a clause in her television contract required her to stay 10 pounds heavier than co-star/producer Lucille Ball. Actually, this contract never existed, at least not in legal, binding form. It was a mock contract given to Vance by Ball as a gag gift sparking the legend it was a real contract.
- She left The Lucy Show (1962) as a regular in 1965, because the weekly commutes between Connecticut and Los Angeles put a strain on her marriage to publishing executive John Dodds. She asked the show for a $500,000 advance, more creative and directorial control, and a raise in weekly pay. These demands were in part to convince Lucille Ball not to try and talk her out of retirement. She would go on to guest star with Lucy in future projects.
- Appears on a 44¢ USA commemorative postage stamp in the Early Television Memories issue with Lucille Ball, as Lucy Ricardo and Ethel Mertz in a scene from Job Switching (1952). The stamp was issued 11 August 2009.
- Vance's I Love Lucy (1951) co-star, William Frawley, reportedly received a unique deal for early television. His contract called for residuals from I Love Lucy (1951) for years after the series ended production in 1957. Unfortunately, Vance did not have a similar clause in her contract.
- Divorced Philip Ober in 1959 under allegations of spousal abuse. Because the majority of the wealth was earned during the success of I Love Lucy (1951), she was forced to hand over half of her $160,000 in community property, which included, among other things, her ranch in Cubero, New Mexico and home in California.
- Vance began acting when she moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico, where she took the last name "Vance" from a dramatics teacher who had been supportive of her acting career.
- After marrying publisher John Dodds in 1961, she left Los Angeles for good. The couple spent the next several years living in various locations. In 1961, they purchased an old white farmhouse in Stamford, Connecticut. They also purchased a 200 year old schoolhouse in Westchester County, New York to be used as a retreat for the two of them after her years on The Lucy Show (1962). As John's career took off, they lived in a penthouse at Beekman Place in Manhattan. Tiring of the big city life, in the late 1960s, they moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico owning and operating a Travel Agency. In 1974, after her first bout with cancer, they decided to sell the business along with property she owned in Solvang, California to finance a publishing business for John in San Francisco. She would live the rest of her life in Belvedere, California, near to her sister, in a shingle style house by the beach.
- Made her film debut in a silent film The Patent Leather Pug (1925), which is apparently now lost.
- Wrote her autobiography with plans to publish it before her death but never did. It was discovered the decade after her death by her widow.
- A founding member of the Albuquerque Little Theater, where she played a vamp in "This Thing Called Love" and a nun in "The Cradle Song", the local theater community helped pay her way to New York. The theater in later years was eventually nicknamed The Vivian Vance Playhouse.
- Producer Vinton Freedley was preparing his next musical and offered Vivian a musical role in which she would have to do a playful striptease. Known for her vulgar, tauntingly glamorous roles already, she turned him down lest she be typecast. The show was "Leave It to Me", the song was "My Heart Belongs to Daddy", and Mary Martin became a huge musical star as a result of it.
- Donated her Emmy Awards to the Little Theatre in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
- Made her talkie debut in Take a Chance (1933) as a singer in the "Eadie Was a Lady" number.
- She was posthumously awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 7030 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California on February 14, 1991.
- One of her closest friends in childhood was the silent film star Louise Brooks, who was her neighbor in Cherryvale, Kansas.
- Godmother to John Sebastian. She was best friend's with his mother, Jane Sebastian, and mentioned her name in many episodes of I Love Lucy (1951).
- Appeared in nine Broadway shows, including playing Babe in the original production of "Anything Goes", before she was tapped to play Ethel Mertz on television.
- Attended and graduated from Independence High School in Independence, Kansas.
- Vivian's second husband, George Nathan Koch, was a musician.
- Like Peggy Wood she helped promote the launch of Playhouse-on-the-Mall in Paramus, NJ, years before its founder and producer Robert Ludlam gained fame as a novelist. (1960)
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