The Hollywood Squares (1966)

NBC (ended 1982)

Cast & Crew

EDIT
  • Morey Amsterdam

    Himself (1967-1969)

    9.1
    Morey Amsterdam began his career in vaudeville in 1922 as the straight man for his brother's jokes. He was an accomplished cello player and used it in his comedy routines. He performed his comedy routine on radio on The Al Pearce Show and nightclubs. Morey had his own self-titled show on radio and television on CBS which ran from 1948-1949. He appeared in several films and other television shows, but he is perhaps best known to audiences as Buddy Sorrell of the 1961-1966 series The Dick Van Dyke Show. Over the years he appeared on many game shows, variety shows and talk shows, always with a joke and a wonderful story. His final appearance was on the television comedy Caroline in the City in 1996.moreless
  • Cliff Arquette

    Charley Weaver (1966-1974)

    10

    Comedian, actor, pianist, composer and songwriter. He was a night club pianist, later joining the Henry Halstead orchestra in 1923. He created the character of "Charlie Weaver" for The Jack Paar Show, and portrayed "Mrs. Butterworth" in television commercials. He joined ASCAP in 1959, and his chief musical collaborator was Charles "Bud" Dant. His popular-song compositions include: "It's Xmas in Mount Idy" "Just Got a Letter from Mama"; "On the Boardwalk at Snider's Swamp"; "Fight for Sub-Normal U"; "Who'll Sign the Pardon for Wallace Swine?"; and "Don't Give the Chair to Buster".

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  • Kaye Ballard

    Herself (1968)

    9.3
  • Charo

    Herself (1975)

    4.7
    When Charo was quite young, she was discovered by famous musician Xavier Cugat, whom she later married on August 7, 1966, at the reported age of 15; Cugat was 66. The couple were the first to have their nuptials in Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas. In 1977, she became a naturalized citizen of the United States. On August 11, 1978 she re-married, this time to her manager Kjell Rasten, in Lake Tahoe. In 1982 she bore her only child, a son, Shel Rasten (who is a drummer with the metal band Treazen) and decided to move to Hawaii, where she regularly performed at the Outrigger Hotel and waited on customers at her restaurant on the island of Kauai. Charo waited for her son to grow up before returning to Los Angeles to get back into show business full time. Charo studied classical and flamenco guitar while residing in Murcia. As a result of her training and skill she has been named "Best Flamenco Guitarist" in Guitar Player Magazine's readers' poll. She now has a regular touring show in addition to appearances in Las Vegas shows regularly. One of Charo's regrets is that, because of her flamboyant stage presence, she has been overlooked as a guitar player. She also donates her talents to Jerry Lewis' annual MDA telethon.moreless
  • Wally Cox

    Himself (1967-1973)

    8.4
    Cox was often cast as a milquetoast type of character.
  • John Davidson

    Himself (1974)

    8.5
    Entertainer John Davidson has made a career doing what he loves. He has appeared as an actor and singer on Broadway and in regional theater, and has recorded 13 albums. He has many television appearances to his credit, including starring in and hosting his own programs. John's talent and likable personality made him a fixture on variety and talk shows in the 1960s and 1970s.moreless
  • Sandy Duncan

    Herself (1975)

    8.8
    Sandy Duncan was born not in Tyler, Texas as she always says, but in Henderson. Her father, M.R.Duncan, and her mother, Syliva Love Duncan, lived in Overton, Texas when Sandy was born on Wednesday, Febuary 20,1946 at 8:42pm. Sandy and her family moved when she was either six or nine months old, family stories differ. They moved to Killgore where Sandy's sister, Robin, was born in 1951. In 1954 the family moved to Tyler when Sandy's father opened a gas station. It was in 1959 that the acting bug hit her and in 1962 she made her debut at the Dallas summer theatre. In school she was looked on as, in her words, "strange little person. I didn't have a lot of friends." After high school at Robert E. Lee High, Class of 1965, Sandy tried to go to junior college but the pull of New York was too strong and, at age 19, she left Texas. Less that 3 months later, Sandy did her first TV commercial and she had found a new life - TV. In 1968, she met and married 22 year old actor Bruce Scott, but she admits now it was a big mistake. In 1969 came the Canterbury Tales and her first Tony award nomination, but at the end of that year, Sandy did a series of 3 commercials for the UCB bank in California. She became an overnite star in that state. In 1970, she did the play "The Boy Friend" and her star went even higher. The rest of the story of Sandy Duncan is well known.moreless
  • Nanette Fabray

    Herself (1969-1971)

    8.5
  • George Gobel

    Himself (1974-1982)

    9.3
    George Gobel, with his brand of folksy humor, gained fame in the 1950s with his own television show. He became a favorite guest on talk shows and game shows, becoming a regular on Hollywood Squares. Gobel died at age 71, leaving his wife, "Spooky Ol' Alice," three children, and three grandchildren.moreless
  • Paul Lynde

    Himself (The Center Square: 1968-1981)

    9.2
    Paul had three brothers (Richard, Corydon, Johnny) and two sisters (Helen, Grace). Parents: Hoy & Silvia. Paul's father was a sheriff & a butcher. Paul's nickname as a child was "chicken plucker" because his father was the local butcher. (Lynde attempted to glorify his father's occupation by referring to him as a "cattle surgeon".) From the time he was a small child, he was obsessed with being rich and famous. Graduated (barely) from Northwestern University, where he befriended Cloris Leachman & Charlotte Rae. On the day of commencement, he was not scheduled to graduate. It was only by appealing to the student senate (which held a special session while the orchestra was rehearsing the processional), that Paul was able to graduate. Starred in the 1960 Broadway production of "Bye, Bye Birdie" which featured his hit song, "Kids". Paul & Dick Van Dyke were the only two people in the Broadway production to have been featured in the movie version. Lynde's most public relationship was with his dog, Harry MacAfee, a Dandie Dinmont named after the character he played in "Bye Bye Birdie". Harry (the dog) earned his championship in the canine world and had a string of trophies to match his master's citations.moreless
  • Rose Marie

    Herself (1966-1982)

    7.0
    Okay, so she had a little help-talented writers, directors, and costars. But basically that classic, independent, funny, vulnerable character, Sally Rogers of The Dick Van Dyke Show, was the creation of Rose Marie, the actress who gave Sally life and turned millions of viewers into her personal cheering section.
    Her work on that series earned her three Emmy nominations, which she attributed to her experience of having been a performer since the age of 3. As "Baby Rose Marie," at the age of five she was signed by NBC to star in her own coast-to-coast radio show. At the age of seven she was sent on the road by NBC just to prove that her deep adultlike voice did indeed belong to a child. In 1933 she appeared in her first film, International House with W.C. Fields.

    At age 11 she dropped the "Baby" and continued her career as Rose Marie. As a teenager, the husky-throated young lady became a headliner at leading nightclubs across the country, from New York's famed Copacabana and Latin Quarter to the Las Vegas Strip where, with Jimmy Durante and Xavier Cugat, she opened the first luxury casino-club, The Flamingo. The years that followed found Rose Marie a regular headliner in Vegas, where she played the Riviera Hotel, Sahara, Thunderbird and Harrah's in Reno and Tahoe.

    Gathering a wealth of show-biz knowledge from working with the greats of comedy and song, Rose Marie became expert in comedic delivery herself. She interrupted her singing career long enough to gain great critical acclaim on Broadway as costar with Milton Berle in Spring in Brazil, Zero Mostel in Lunatics and Lovers, and Phil Silvers in Top Banana. She followed this up by touring with the national touring companies of Call Me Madam and Bye Bye Birdie.

    The film version of Top Banana brought Rose Marie back to motion pictures. (As a child star she made numerous musical shorts and comedy films.) She appeared in Memories of Us, Dead Heat on a Merry-Go-Round, The Man from Clover Grove, Lunch Wagon, Cheaper to Keep Her, and Dick and Jane.

    When situation comedy began to emerge on television, Rose Marie was there. She created running roles on The Bob Cummings Show, My Sister Eileen, The Doris Day Show and S.W.A.T., not to mention her own series in Honeymoon Suite. But it is for her costarring role in the c comedy The Dick Van Dyke Show that Rose Marie is most remembered. Here, she portrayed the first "woman in a man's world"-the independent, Sally Rogers. She received three Emmy nominations for this role.

    Later, variety television shows became a natural for the comedienne-vocalist. Rose Marie made numerous appearances with Jackie Gleason, Jimmy Durante, Milton Berle, Red Skelton, Garry Moore, Tennessee Ernie Ford, Dinah Shore, George Gobel, Dean Martin, Merv Griffin, Mike Douglas, and Johnny Carson. Her game-show appearances read like a history of the genre from Password and I've Got a Secret to a 14-year stint as a regular on Hollywood Squares.

    Most recently Rose Marie has returned to the night club-concert hall circuit across the country, appearing in the highly successful revue 4 Girls 4 along with Rosemary Clooney, Helen O'Connell, Margaret Whiting and later, Kay Starr.

    Rose Marie's roles usually portray her as a husband-hunter, but she was very much married for twenty years to the late Bobby Guy, first trumpeter for the NBC Orchestra. She still lives in the same home she and Bobby moved into over 30 years ago in the San Fernando Valley, California. She is a celebrated Italian cook, a collector of plates, and a tireless defender of numerous humanitarian causes, notably animal welfare.

    (taken from TVLand.com)moreless
  • Peter Marshall

    Host/The Master (1966-1982)

    8.4
    Born Pierre LaCock (or la Cocque) in 1927 in Huntington, WV, he was the son of a pharmacist and the younger brother of Joanne la Cocque, who moved from being a successful model to a movie star in the 1940s and 1950s under the name Joanne Dru. He began singing in big bands as a teenager during the 1940s, then took a job as a page at NBC, and moved through different varieties of employment before finding himself broke and in Los Angeles in 1949. He hooked up with a slightly older contemporary, Tommy Noonan, in a comedy duo called Noonan & Marshall; the duo made several appearances on the Ed Sullivan Show and got cast in a handful of films at the outset of the 1950s. Marshall's obvious talent for comedy was augmented by his good looks and he had a sporadically successful, busy career over the next 15 years as an actor, working in a variety of stage and film vehicles, among them a London production of Bye Bye Birdie and the abortive Warner Bros. sequel to Mister Roberts, Ensign Pulver. Perhaps his best performance was as the young officer trapped underground with a group of allied and enemy troops in Edgar G. Ulmer's World War II drama The Cavern. That film, made in 1965, was the last screen performance that Marshall was able to give as an anonymous working actor. In 1966, NBC and the sponsors were looking for a host for a new program called The Hollywood Squares, in which well-known actors and comedians were invited to give comical (and often comically wrong answers) to leading, sometimes double-entendre questions. Somebody at the network noticed Marshall's photograph on top of a pile of publicity materials, liked what they saw and the fact that he'd acted and had also done comedy, and called him in. Starting in October 1966, and lasting until 1981, he was the host of the extraordinarily popular program, which became a kind of pop culture fixture for decades. He ceased his career as a working actor, although he did co-write the screenplay for (and appear in) Maury Dexter's notorious 1968 anti-marijuana drama Maryjane, starring an overage Fabian. He also hosted a syndicated variety show during the 1970s and was a frequent guest as a host, singer, or dancer, on programs like The People's Choice Awards. Since The Hollywood Squares, he has appeared onscreen (usually as a game show host) and done comedy in films such as Annie, and poked fun at his own image on the Fox network comedy series In Living Color. He also has a recording career, and starred in HMS Pinafore with the London Symphony Orchestra. Marshall remains busy in his seventies and his son, Pete LaCock, is a well-known major league baseball player. Bruce Edermoreless
  • Roddy McDowall

    Himself (1975)

    8.9
    Actor, photographer. Born Roderick McDowall, on September 17, 1928, in London, England. He was the only son of Thomas McDowall, a merchant seaman, and his wife, Winifred. As a child, Roddy appeared in a slew of British films, including Yellow Sands (1938) and Just William (1939). In 1940, Roddy moved to America, with his mother and sister, to escape the World War II bombing of London. Thomas McDowall joined his family shortly thereafter. They settled in Hollywood, where Roddy was immediately contracted by 20th Century-Fox. In 1941, he gave a remarkable performance as the juvenile lead in John Ford's Oscar-winning drama How Green Was My Valley. Roddy followed the film's success with equally impressive roles in the children's classics My Friend Flicka and Lassie Come Home (both 1943). Like many child stars, McDowall found it hard to transition into adult film roles. Frustrated with dwindling opportunities in Hollywood, he turned to stage acting. He toured in vaudeville and in summer stock before moving to New York in 1954. He was featured in a succession of memorable Broadway productions, including Compulsion (1957) and The Fighting Cock (1959). For the latter, McDowall earned a Supporting Actor Tony Award. In 1963, McDowall returned to film acting in the more mature role of Octavian in the extravagant feature Cleopatra, costarring with Richard Burton and longtime friend Elizabeth Taylor. Shortly after, he made his mark in television with a recurring roleas the miscreant Bookwormon the 1966 Batman series, opposite Adam West.His role as one of Batman's nemeses (others included Julie Newmar's Catwoman, Cesar Romero's Joker, and Vincent Price's Egghead) made McDowall a household name with younger viewers. In 1968, McDowall starred as the sympathetic scientist Cornelius in the seminal science fiction film Planet of the Apes. With undeniable camp appeal, the film spawned a number of sequels and earned McDowall a cult following. He reprised his role as Cornelius in the third installment, Escape from the Planet of the Apes (1971). In the two subsequent releases, Conquest of the Planet of the Apes (1972) and Battle for the Planet of the Apes (1973), McDowall assumed the role of Cornelius' son Caesar. McDowall made a transition to the small screen with the Planet of the Apes TV series, appearing in a number of episodes in 1974. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, he continued to direct his efforts toward television work. He acted in the TV movies The Rhineman Exchange (1977), The Martian Chronicles (1980), and Hollywood Wives (1985). During this period, McDowall's most notable film credit was as a washed-up movie star in the acclaimed horror film Fright Night (1985). Toward the end of his prolific career, McDowall lent his voice to a number of animated series, including the Darkwing Duck (1992) and The Adventures of Batman and Robin (1994). In 1998, he provided the voice of Mr. Soil in the Disney/Pixar animated feature A Bug's Life, which marked his final film role. McDowall was also an accomplished portrait photographer whose pictures of Katharine Hepburn, Spencer Tracy, and Mia Farrow appeared in Look and Life magazines.He published a series of books: Double Exposure (1966), Double Exposure, Take Two (1989), Double Exposure, Take Three (1992), and Double Exposure, Take Four (1993). An active and respected member of the Hollywood community, McDowall served on the executive boards of the Screen Actors Guild and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. McDowall died on October 3, 1998 after a long battle with cancer. He was 70 years old.moreless
  • Jan Murray

    Himself (1968-1973)

    9.5
    Comedian Jan Murray began his stand-up routine on the vaudeville stage at age 18. During World War II he entertained the troops at the USO. After the War ended he performed monologues at nighspots eventually landing a TV job as a game show host on Songs For Sale. Continuing on television he hosted his own show Jan Murray Time and The Jan Murray Show. His most successful role was in the 1960's game show Treasure Hunt which was briefly revived in 1973. A regular on the variety, talk show programs, Jan Murray also had some success in sitcoms and the films.moreless
  • Vincent Price

    Himself (1970-1976)

    9.7

    Vincent Price is one of the most widely known actors of the 20th century, with his work spanning seven decades. He was born on May 27th, 1911 in St. Louis Missouri, to Vincent Leonard Price, Sr. and Marguerite Cobb Willcox, as the youngest of four children. He grew up in a wealthy environment and was fascinated with art as a child. Following in the footsteps of his father and brother, he went off to study art at Yale and graduated in 1933. The next year he decided to go back to school, and enrolled at the Courtauld Institute in London. While at the Courtland Institute, he decided to act upon his interest in theatre which had been growing over the last few years.

    Price decided to try out for some plays, and had a part in a number of plays starting in 1935. The success of one particular play, "Victoria Regina," brought the play to the United States, and Vincent Price came along with it. The success of the play also resulted in an offer for a Hollywood contract. Price decided to wait a few years before trying his luck on the big screen, and took roles in several more plays. When Price felt he was ready for the big screen, he went back to Hollywood. Signing a contract with Universal, he made his film debut with "Service de Luxe" in 1938. Also in 1938, on April 23rd, Price married his first wife, the actress Edith Barrett. On August 30th, 1940, Price had his first child, Vincent Barrett Price. In 1944, Price and his wife separated. They got back together in 1946, but then divorced in 1948.

    In 1949 Price once again married, this time to the costume designer Mary Grant. In 1953, Price made the film "House of Wax," one of his most famous films and one that changed the course of his career significantly. After making "House of Wax," Price went on to make many more horror movies such as "The Fly" and "House on Haunted Hill," and Edgar Allen Poe adaptations such as "The Masque of the Red Death," "The Pit and the Pendulum," and "The Fall of the House of Usher." Price became known as a horror star, although he had many roles in other film genres.

    Price wrote the autobiography "I Like What I Know" in 1959, and had his second child, Mary Victoria Price, on April 27th, 1962. Price continued acting throughout the 1960's, starting a partnership with Sears department stores along the way. Tens of thousands of pieces of artwork that Price had collected throughout the years were sold through Sears. In 1967, Price began a recurring role as Egghead in the television series "Batman," one of his most well-known television roles. His second wife, Mary Grant, filed for divorce in 1973, but Price quickly re-married once again, this time to Coral Browne, on October 24th, 1974.

    As Price became older he continued acting, branching out along the way to take part in other projects. He published several books, some of which were cookbooks, and took part in the making of Michael Jackson's world-famous "Thriller." Price continued his work throughout the 1980's, with his last major film role being the inventor in "Edward Scissorhands" in 1990. Price's last wife Coral died on May 29th, 1991, which was a great blow for the aging Price. On October 25th, 1993, the great Vincent Price died from a combination of Parkinson's disease and lung cancer, after a memorable life-long career filled with great accomplishments that reflect his undying love for theatre and the arts.

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  • Joan Rivers

    Herself (1976)

    7.0
    Joan is the younger of two daughters of Russian immigrants Beatrice and Meyer Molinsky. Joan got into acting from an early age and continued throughout college; appearing in almost every college production. After graduating and at a loss for what to do Joan took a job as a buyer for a department store. Whilst there she married the Boss's son a marriage which only lasted 6 months. After this and determined to fulfill her dream Joan started making the rounds in New York going through the normal motions of sleazy agents, dirty clubs and hostile audiences. It wasn't until 1965 when her dreams came true with a booking on the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. After this Joan met and married her second husband and had a daughter, Melissa. For Joan 1968 through 1972 was when she started making it with appearances on both television and the big screen. In 1983 Joan thought she was at the top of the world, she had book deals, permanent guest star positions on television, sold out concerts and comedy albums. After hitting rock bottom in her personal life Joan picked herself back up and in 1989 she was back on the screens and the stage.moreless
  • Karen Valentine

    Herself (1971-1977)

    9.4
    Karen Valentine started out as a contestant on the Miss Teenage America Pageant. Ed Sullivan saw her comical song-and-dance lip-synching to an Eydie Gorme song and said that he wanted that girl on his show. Her quirky personality landed her the role on the 1969 TV series Room 222 and in 1970 she won an EMMY for supporting actress in the role of Alice Johnson. Karen appeared on several television shows during the 1970's even starring in her own series Karen in 1975 for one season.moreless
  • Abby Dalton

    Herself (1967-1970)

    8.5
    Abby is best known for her role as Julia Cumson on Falcon Crest, her on screen son Lorenzo Lamas (Lance) was actually her son-in-law at one time, he was married to her daughter Kathleen. Abby has two other children with her husband of 43 years. Falcon Crest was in the top 10 when Abby got to really stretch her talent by playing her nice character everyone liked into a psycho. She has done a lot of other tv shows in the 50's and 60's. She most recenly starred on the long running soap opera The Young and the Restless. Abby hasn't done much work since 1995, but she is involved in some volunteer work. Abby still keeps in touch with her Falcon Crest castmates.moreless
  • Kenny Williams (II)

    Announcer (1966-1982)

    10
    Not to be confused with the assistant director, this Kenny Williams is best known for his announcing work on Merrill Heatter / Bob Quigley produced game shows including Hollywood Squares and Video Village.
  • Jonathan Winters

    Himself & Temp. Replaced (1975-1982)

    9.5
    The son and grandson of midwestern bankers, Jonathan Winters spent most of his childhood with his divorced mother, a Springfield, Ohio radio personality. At an early age, he developed a facility for imitating movie sound effects, which matured into a talent for mimicry and improvisation. After serving with the Marines during World War II, Winters attended the Dayton Art Institute for two years. Although he hoped to pursue a career as a cartoonist, Jonathan held down a variety of unusual jobs (including a stint in an incubator factory) before trying his luck in show business. After winning a talent contest, he landed a disc jockey position at Dayton radio station WING, and from 1950 to 1953 Winters hosted several local programs for Columbus' WBNS-TV. Refused a salary increase, he moved from Ohio to New York City with slightly less than $57 in his pocket. Jonathan's appearance on Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts led to a number of guest-star assignments on network television and a featured spot in the 1954 Broadway revue Almanac. In 1955, he became the first comedian to appear on the prestigious CBS cultural series Omnibus, and the following year he starred in his own weekly TV variety show. Winters also pursued a successful nightclub career, and recorded several Grammy Award-nominated comedy albums-- winning a 1995 Grammy for his album Crank Calls. Jonathan's psychological problems and his growing dependency on alcohol resulted in a well-publicized stay at a sanatorium in the early 1960s; he emerged clean and sober and continued to build a successful film, television, and nightclub career throughout the decade. Blessed with what actor Rod Steiger characterized as "one of the most gifted improvisatory minds in existence," Winters' form of comedy does not rely upon conventional jokes, but instead comments on the foibles of everyday life in a skewed, exaggerated manner. He is perhaps most famous for his gallery of richly comic characters, including feisty old lady Maudie Frickert, childlike Chester Honeyhugger, and bucolic Elwood P. Suggins. At his best when improvising, Jonathan was one of the few entertainers to star in a totally adlibbed weekly television series, The Wacky World of Jonathan Winters (1972). In addition to his own television programs and specials, Winters played dramatic roles in such anthology series as The Shirley Temple Storybook Theater and The Twilight Zone. In 1981 he costarred with Robin Williams (a lifelong fan) in the TV situation comedy Mork and Mindy; ten years later, he won an Emmy Award for his supporting role in another sitcom, Davis Rules. Jonathan's motion picture credits include It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), The Loved One (1965), Viva Max! (1969), and The Flintstones (1994). A collection of his short stories, Winters' Tales, made the best-seller lists in 1987; the following year he published a book of his paintings, Hang-Ups. For many years, Jonathan served as honorary chairman of the National Congress of American Indians, and in 1999 he was presented with the Kennedy Center's Mark Twain Prize for his contributions to American humour.moreless
  • George Gobel

    Himself

    9.3
    George Gobel, with his brand of folksy humor, gained fame in the 1950s with his own television show. He became a favorite guest on talk shows and game shows, becoming a regular on Hollywood Squares. Gobel died at age 71, leaving his wife, "Spooky Ol' Alice," three children, and three grandchildren.moreless
  • Milton Berle

    Himself

    8.7
    In a career that has spanned eight decades, and included everything from silent films to vaudeville to Broadway to radio, Milton Berle qualifies as one of the personifications of "show business". Despite making a mark in each of the aforesaid media, Berle achieved his greatest success as the first acknowledged superstar of television. Between 1948 and 1956, Tuesday nights belonged to the comedian. The success of his weekly variety show earned him the honorific titles of "Mr. Television" and "Uncle Miltie." Famous for his extremely high energy level and for a series of outlandish characterizations--especially those featuring the star in drag--Berle was at the top of the TV ratings for several seasons, but when the inevitable fade occurred, he was unable to find a subsequent suitable vehicle for his talents. He did, however, stay prominent in the public eye via many TV specials, both those built around him and in guest star spots, where his trademark cigar, snide wisecracks, unctuous manner and withering glare at the camera were put to good use.

    Berle began his career as a child model, posing for the advertising campaign for Buster Brown shoes. He entered films in 1914, appearing in the serial The Perils of Pauline and Mack Sennett's Tillie's Punctured Romance. Reportedly, he appeared in over 50 silent films as a child performer. Berle began to perform on stage in 1920 in the Broadway production of Floradora. Appearances in vaudeville, where the comedian perfected his wiseguy persona, led to engagements in editions of Earl Carroll Vanities and the Ziegfeld Follies. He returned to features in New Faces of 1937 (1937) and made sporadic appearances in the 1940s, including Sun Valley Serenade (1941) and Always Leave Them Laughing (1949).

    After establishing himself in the developing medium of TV, Berle returned to features and the stage, searching for the role that would duplicate his success on the small screen. Like others comics who became TV personalities (e.g., Lucille Ball, Red Skelton, Carol Burnett, Sid Caesar), Berle had trouble shaking the public's perception of him as anything other than Uncle Miltie. His return to Broadway in Herb Gardner's play The Goodbye People (1968) was short-lived. He had moderate success touring in Neil Simon's Last of the Red Hot Lovers (1970) and later in the sex farce Norman, Is That You? (1975).

    His feature work since 1960 has also been sporadic. He appeared as himself, hired to coach a showgirl (Marilyn Monroe) in comedy in George Cukor's Let's Make Love (1960), was a henpecked motorist in Stanley Kramer's all-star It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), partnered with Margaret Leighton as a mourner in Tony Richardson's sardonic The Loved One (1965), and delivered a dramatic portrayal of a Jewish gangster in Lepke (1975). He has continued to work into the 1990s, appearing in the 1995 direct-to-video children's film Storybook.

    On TV, Berle has made numerous guest appearances on comedies, variety shows and specials and dramas. An attempt to revive his variety show in the mid-60s failed to attract audience attention. Berle has proven himself capable as a dramatic performer on the small screen. He earned a Best Actor Emmy nomination for his dramatic performance in the Doyle Against the House episode of The Dick Powell Show (NBC, 1961) and a Best Guest Actor Emmy nomination for his turn as a veteran actor struggling with Alzheimer's Disease in an episode of Beverly Hills, 90210 (Fox, 1995).

    Uncle Miltie succumbed to colon cancer on March 27, 2002 at his home in Los Angeles, California, USA.moreless
  • Paul Lynde

    Himself

    9.2
    Paul had three brothers (Richard, Corydon, Johnny) and two sisters (Helen, Grace). Parents: Hoy & Silvia. Paul's father was a sheriff & a butcher. Paul's nickname as a child was "chicken plucker" because his father was the local butcher. (Lynde attempted to glorify his father's occupation by referring to him as a "cattle surgeon".) From the time he was a small child, he was obsessed with being rich and famous. Graduated (barely) from Northwestern University, where he befriended Cloris Leachman & Charlotte Rae. On the day of commencement, he was not scheduled to graduate. It was only by appealing to the student senate (which held a special session while the orchestra was rehearsing the processional), that Paul was able to graduate. Starred in the 1960 Broadway production of "Bye, Bye Birdie" which featured his hit song, "Kids". Paul & Dick Van Dyke were the only two people in the Broadway production to have been featured in the movie version. Lynde's most public relationship was with his dog, Harry MacAfee, a Dandie Dinmont named after the character he played in "Bye Bye Birdie". Harry (the dog) earned his championship in the canine world and had a string of trophies to match his master's citations.moreless
  • Paul Lynde

    Himself/Sub-Regular (1/4-6/1967)

    9.2
    Paul had three brothers (Richard, Corydon, Johnny) and two sisters (Helen, Grace). Parents: Hoy & Silvia. Paul's father was a sheriff & a butcher. Paul's nickname as a child was "chicken plucker" because his father was the local butcher. (Lynde attempted to glorify his father's occupation by referring to him as a "cattle surgeon".) From the time he was a small child, he was obsessed with being rich and famous. Graduated (barely) from Northwestern University, where he befriended Cloris Leachman & Charlotte Rae. On the day of commencement, he was not scheduled to graduate. It was only by appealing to the student senate (which held a special session while the orchestra was rehearsing the processional), that Paul was able to graduate. Starred in the 1960 Broadway production of "Bye, Bye Birdie" which featured his hit song, "Kids". Paul & Dick Van Dyke were the only two people in the Broadway production to have been featured in the movie version. Lynde's most public relationship was with his dog, Harry MacAfee, a Dandie Dinmont named after the character he played in "Bye Bye Birdie". Harry (the dog) earned his championship in the canine world and had a string of trophies to match his master's citations.moreless
  • Paul Lynde

    The Center Square

    9.2
    Paul had three brothers (Richard, Corydon, Johnny) and two sisters (Helen, Grace). Parents: Hoy & Silvia. Paul's father was a sheriff & a butcher. Paul's nickname as a child was "chicken plucker" because his father was the local butcher. (Lynde attempted to glorify his father's occupation by referring to him as a "cattle surgeon".) From the time he was a small child, he was obsessed with being rich and famous. Graduated (barely) from Northwestern University, where he befriended Cloris Leachman & Charlotte Rae. On the day of commencement, he was not scheduled to graduate. It was only by appealing to the student senate (which held a special session while the orchestra was rehearsing the processional), that Paul was able to graduate. Starred in the 1960 Broadway production of "Bye, Bye Birdie" which featured his hit song, "Kids". Paul & Dick Van Dyke were the only two people in the Broadway production to have been featured in the movie version. Lynde's most public relationship was with his dog, Harry MacAfee, a Dandie Dinmont named after the character he played in "Bye Bye Birdie". Harry (the dog) earned his championship in the canine world and had a string of trophies to match his master's citations.moreless
  • Barbara Feldon

    Herself

    8.7
    Barbara Feldon was born on March 12, 1932. She was born in Bethel Park, PA. She was a dancer for Ziegfeld Follies. And better known as "Agent 99" in the spy sitcom: Get Smart
  • Arte Johnson

    Himself

    8.1
    Arte Johnson began his television career in the 1950's usually appearing as the hapless nitwit in several television shows from It's Always Jan, December Bride, The Danny Thomas Show andHennesey. He appeared in small parts in the films as well. But it wasn't until Laugh-In that Arte would make his biggest splash winning an EMMY for his work on the television series. Arte continued appearing on various television programs from games shows to lending his voice in cartoons.moreless
  • Adrienne Barbeau

    Herself

    8.0
    Adrienne was active in theatre both in high school and at Foothills Junior College; by age 19 she was touring Pacific military bases as a member of the San Jose Light Opera. After a job with a termite-control company, Adrienne set out for New York, working in a variety of jobs including go-go dancing in New Jersey nightclubs. In 1968 she was cast as Hodel in the long-running Broadway production Fiddler on the Roof, and three years later was featured in Grease, winning a Tony nomination through her rendition of "Look at Me, I'm Sandra Dee." She was then hired by Norman Lear to replace first-choice actress Marcia Rodd in the role of the divorced daughter on the TV sitcom Maude. She played the role from 1972 through the cancellation in 1978, she thenbegan a whole new career as a successful horror-film star and pin-up model. Adrienne married film director John Carpenter in 1979; most of her subsequent screen appearances were in such Carpenter-directed horror films as The Fog (1980), Escape from New York (1981) and Creepshow (1982). She then played the Marlon Brando counterpart in an parody of Apocalypse Now, called Cannibal Women in the Avocado Jungle of Death (1989). She also played in Swamp Thing (1981), a foliage covered superhero created by science and the wetlands--Based on the DC comic book. Adrienne is the voice of Catwoman in "Batman, The Animated Series"; the spokesperson for various television and radio commercials and the narrator of many books on tape, television documentaries, and the Imax film "The Living Sea". In March of 1997, Adrienne gave birth to identical twin boys. and she now lives in Los Angeles with her husband, Billy Van Zandt, the twins, William and Walker, and her older son, Cody.moreless
  • Shirley Jones

    Herself

    8.0
    Academy award winning actress Shirley Jones began her career on stage as a chorus girl in the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical South Pacific. Rodgers and Hammerstein saw great potential in the fledgling singer-actress and signed her under a personal contract with them. Shirley appeared in several musicals during the late 50's which established her career. Shirley's role in the film Elmer Gantry won her the Academy Award. It was her role in the ABC television series The Partridge Family which she is perhaps most remembered.moreless
  • Ernest Borgnine

    The Center Square

    9.2
    Academy Award winning actor Ernest Borgnine began his acting career after his 10 year service as Gunner's Mate 1st Class aboard the USS Lamberton during World War II. Ernest Borgnine's first stage performance was in 1947 in the production of "State of the Union", leading to his next role in "The Glass Menagerie" and finally Broadway in 1949 in "Harvey". Ernie's big film break came in 1953 in "From Here to Eternity" where he commanded much admiration and further roles in films that has lasted 60 years. In 1955 Ernie won the Academy Award for "Marty" winning against Frank Sinatra, Spencer Tracy and James Cagney. On television Ernest made his debut on the Captain Video and His Video Rangers program. He appeared in over 100 television programs over the years and gained much success in his television program McHale's Navy which ran from 1962-1966. Receiving an EMMY nomination for his role, he would be nominated several more times throughout the years with his last nomination in 2009 for the finale of ER.moreless
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