HMVNipper
Mar 27, 2002, 06:00 PM
And so, more legendary enterainers leave us...and since these things always happen in threes, if I were Bob Hope, I'd be pretty worried...anyway, here are two articles:
******************
Actor Dudley Moore Dies at 66
By SHEILA HOTCHKIN
Associated Press Writer
TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — Dudley Moore, the cuddly little Englishman who pined for Bo Derek in ``10'' and portrayed a lovably forlorn drunk in ``Arthur,'' died Wednesday of complications from a rare and incurable brain disorder. He was 66.
The comic actor died at a friend's home in Plainfield of pneumonia stemming from progressive supranuclear palsy, which is similar to Parkinson's disease and affects one of every 100,000 people. He was diagnosed with the disease in 1999.
Before breaking into the movies, the 5-foot-2 1/2 -inch classically trained pianist found success in comedy revues in London and on Broadway as part of a legendary British troupe that also included the surrealist comic talent Peter Cook.
In the 1979 hit movie ``10,'' he played a musician determined to marry a perfect woman, embodied by Derek. His film career peaked in 1981 with the smash ``Arthur,'' in which he played a rich drunk who falls for Liza Minnelli. He was nominated for a best actor Oscar. Co-star John Gielgud, who played Arthur's valet, won the supporting actor Oscar.
``He had a little-boy-lost quality about him, which women loved, and there was always something slightly forlorn about Dudley, even when he was being funny,'' said Michael Parkinson, a British talk-show host. ``He was a lovely man.''
Moore's other films included ``Foul Play,'' 1978; ``Lovesick,'' 1983; ``Unfaithfully Yours,'' 1984; and ``Best Defense,'' 1984.
In a statement, Minnelli said: ``I am deeply saddened by the death of my dear friend, Dudley Moore. He was a unique individual that was multitalented. He could make the world laugh and brought joy to millions. I will miss him dearly.''
There was more than a touch of autobiography in ``10.'' But the happy ending eluded him in real life. Four marriages ended in divorce.
He confessed to being driven by feelings of inferiority because of his working-class origins in Dagenham, East London, and because of his height. He also spoke of the pain of being rejected by his mother because he was born with a deformed left foot.
Comedians, he said in an interview in 1980, are often driven by such feelings. ``I guess if I'd been able to hit somebody in the nose, I wouldn't have been a comic,'' he said.
It was music that gave Moore his entrance to public performance, first as a chorister and organist in his church, then in 1960 as a young Oxford graduate recruited for the four-man comedy revue ``Beyond the Fringe.''
``Fringe,'' which played two years in London and then moved to Broadway, was perhaps the greatest assembly of young comic talent in Britain in the 20th century. Moore was teamed with Cook; Alan Bennett, later a successful playwright; and Jonathan Miller, the opera producer and medical doctor.
Moore's whimsical sense of humor fitted oddly with the more savage satirical style of his partners. ``Apart from his musical contributions to the show,'' Cook wrote in 1974, ``Dudley's suggestions were treated with benign contempt by the rest of us.''
Moore and Cook formed a fast friendship and later teamed on television as Dud and Pete on ``Not Only ... but Also,'' a sketch comedy series. They also plumbed the depths of taste and decency in a series of recordings as ``Derek and Clive.''
Cook and Moore both made their screen debuts in ``The Wrong Box'' in 1966.
Moore and Cook teamed again in 1971 for a comedy revue titled ``Beyond the Fridge,'' which was a success in London and a smash two years later on Broadway, retitled ``Good Evening.'' The pair won a special Tony Award for their ``unique contribution to the theater of comedy.''
Big screen success came after Moore settled in Southern California and met director Blake Edwards in a therapy group. When George Segal walked out of Edwards' production of ``10,'' the director turned to Moore and he was soon a Hollywood star.
``He was such a wonderful spirit,'' Derek recalled Wednesday. ``He could make you laugh hysterically with his jokes and make you cry with his music. He was so gifted.''
While his comedy brought him the most attention, he was a talented pianist, with degrees in music and composition from Oxford. In 1992, he performed with the New World Symphony in Miami and other orchestras.
One of the goals of the concerts, he said, was ``to break the bubble of pomposity that can emerge. I think it's one thing that keeps people away from serious music.''
``I can't imagine not having music in my life, playing for myself or for other people. If I was asked, `Which would you give up?' I'd have to say acting,'' he said in 1988.
Moore married Suzy Kendall in 1958, Tuesday Weld in 1975, Brogan Lane in 1988 and Nicole Rothschild in 1994. He had a son, Patrick, by his second marriage and a son, Nicholas, by his fourth.
Moore was diagnosed with PSP after suffering balance problems and other symptoms.
Ellen Katz, executive director of the Society for Progressive Supranuclear Palsy, said the disorder would have affected his movement, balance, vision, speech and swallowing, while leaving his mind clear.
Even as Moore fought the symptoms, he raised nearly $100,000 for two PSP research funds, said Katz, who met Moore several times.
``He came forward with a diagnosis right away because he wanted to help other people who have the disease and aren't diagnosed,'' she said. ``It's such a tragic loss for us to lose someone like him, and to such a cruel disease.''
*****************
Comedian Milton Berle Dies at 93
By BOB THOMAS
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Milton Berle, the acerbic, cigar-smoking vaudevillian who eagerly embraced a new medium and became ``Mr. Television'' when the technology was in its infancy, died Wednesday. He was 93.
Berle was diagnosed with colon cancer last year and had been under hospice care for the past few weeks. Berle's wife, Lorna, and several family members were at his side when he died at home after a lengthy illness, publicist Warren Cowan said.
``He was responsible for the television set in your home today,'' Cowan said. ``He put television on the map.''
``Uncle Miltie'' was the king of Tuesday nights in the late 1940s, and store owners put up signs: ``Closed tonight to watch Milton Berle.''
At 8 p.m., four Texaco service attendants sang the ``Texaco Star Theater'' theme, and then came Berle, dressed for laughs: a caveman introduced as ``the man with jokes from the Stone Age''; a man in a barrel ``who had just paid his taxes.''
If the audience thought he looked funny in a dress, Berle was happy to oblige, and skits in drag became a trademark. The NBC program's popularity spurred sales of television sets and helped make TV a medium for the masses.
``From the first days of my career, he was one of my comedic heroes,'' Don Rickles said. ``He was always a great mentor. His style of comedy will never be replaced.''
Berle was called the ``Thief of Bad Gags'' and even joked about stealing quips. ``I laughed so hard I nearly dropped my pencil,'' he once said of a rival comedian, and he stopped at nothing for a laugh.
``Good evening, ladies and germs,'' Berle would say to his audience. ``I mean ladies and gentlemen. I call you ladies and gentlemen, but you know what you really are.''
In his debut season in 1948, Berle's show was watched on four out of every five sets in the nation, and he was the new medium's highest-paid funny man.
The magic faded in the '50s, and in recent years, Berle played fairs, night clubs, college campuses and the private Friars clubs in Beverly Hills and New York. In 1983, he was among the first seven inductees into the TV Hall of Fame of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.
He admitted his humor wasn't subtle or gentle: ``I guess you'd call my style flippancy, aggressiveness ... a put-downer.''
Flowers were left on Berle's star on the Walk of Fame along Hollywood Boulevard. Earlier Wednesday, flowers were placed on comic actor Dudley Moore's star after word of his death in New Jersey.
``It's really the day the laughter died,'' said Playboy founder Hugh Hefner. ``It's a loss from two generations of very, very funny people.''
Born Mendel Berlinger in New York's Harlem on July 12, 1908, Berle remembered his mother, Sandra, bouncing him on her knee and telling him, ``Make me laugh.''
His mother was a thwarted entertainer; his father Moses, Berle recalled, was a ``charming, rather helpless man who suffered from rheumatism and could never keep a job. ... He always dreamed of the big chance around the corner, but it never came.''
Berle's first taste of show business came at age 5, when he won a vaudeville contest by imitating Charlie Chaplin. Soon he was doing child leads in films with Mary Pickford and Mabel Normand, and was the kid rescued from the railroad tracks in the nick of time in the Pearl White movies.
He appeared with Chaplin and Marie Dressler in the movie, ``Tillie's Punctured Romance,'' and with Pickford in ``Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm.''
His Broadway debut came in 1920 in ``The Floradora Girl.''
He attended New York's Professional Children's School, and as a teen-ager toured the vaudeville circuit as a stand-up comic, taking his jokes from College Humor and Captain Billy's Whiz Bang.
``I studied stars like Eddie Cantor, Al Jolson, Lou Holtz and others,'' Berle said in a 1984 interview. ``I have eight or 10 press books of bad notices from those years, but it was a good education in learning what not to do.''
In 1936, Berle was a headliner with the Ziegfeld Follies. He played a long run with Earl Carroll's Vanities and began bringing his brand of humor to radio with guest spots on humor shows. He also appeared in several minor film comedies, such as ``New Faces of 1937'' and 1949's ``Always Leave Them Laughing'' (based on his autobiography). But he never really made it on the big screen.
Then came the advent of television.
Berle was signed as host of the first show of a variety series — the ``Texaco Star Theater.'' He was supposed to alternate with several other hosts, including Henny Youngman and Morey Amsterdam, but Berle drew so much fan mail that NBC soon gave him the spot permanently.
Berle's hour-long ``Texaco Star Theater'' began June 8, 1948, and was renamed ``The Milton Berle Show'' before it ended in June 1956.
He won an Emmy for the program, which was truly his own.
``Our star, besides performing, conducted the orchestra, made countless little changes, like revamping the dances, redesigning the costumes, rewriting and improvising one-liners and exit cues,'' recalled Goodman Ace, one of Berle's writers. ``Dress rehearsals were classic exercises in wild frenzy. He wore a traffic cop's whistle around his neck and blew the show to so many stops that a rehearsal often lasted from noon until 10 minutes before air time.''
Berle's sister, Rosalind, designed many of the costumes, and his mother was a fixture in the studio audience.
``When I started out with the Texaco series in 1948, television was brand new, and I knew just as much about it as anybody else,'' Berle once said. ``I was in charge of everything because I wanted to be. ... We didn't have any experts in 1948.''
In 1951, NBC signed him to an unprecedented contract calling for $100,000 a year for 30 years — whether Berle worked or not. The network agreed in 1965 to let him work elsewhere, and Berle accepted a pay cut to $60,000 a year.
In 1960, Berle lasted six months in ``Jackpot Bowling Starring Milton Berle,'' sandwiching comedy bits between play-by-play of a bowling match. He jumped to ABC in 1966 with a new variety show that lasted only a few months.
He made more movies in the 1960s, notably ``It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World'' in 1963. Other films included ``The Oscar,'' ``The Happening,'' ``Who's Minding the Mint?,'' ``Where Angels Go, Trouble Follows,'' ``For Singles Only,'' ``Hieronymus Merkin,'' ``Lepke'' and ``The Muppet Movie.''
In 1984, he played himself in ``Broadway Danny Rose.''
Berle married, divorced and remarried show girl Joyce Matthews, and they adopted a daughter, Vicki. Their second marriage lasted six years. In 1953 Berle married former publicist Ruth Cosgrove. They had an adopted son, Bill. She died in 1989, and Berle married fashion designer Lorna Adams in 1991.
In later years, Berle said he found much solace in Christian Science, and called himself a Jew and a Christian Scientist. He became the national chairman of the American Longevity Association in 1982, and was president of The Friars Club.
A pioneer in television, Berle always was ready to try something new.
``Too many people simply give up too easily,'' he once said. ``You have to keep the desire to forge ahead, and you have to be able to take the bruises of unsuccess. Success is just one long street fight.''
Services were planned at Hillside Memorial Park.
******************
Actor Dudley Moore Dies at 66
By SHEILA HOTCHKIN
Associated Press Writer
TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — Dudley Moore, the cuddly little Englishman who pined for Bo Derek in ``10'' and portrayed a lovably forlorn drunk in ``Arthur,'' died Wednesday of complications from a rare and incurable brain disorder. He was 66.
The comic actor died at a friend's home in Plainfield of pneumonia stemming from progressive supranuclear palsy, which is similar to Parkinson's disease and affects one of every 100,000 people. He was diagnosed with the disease in 1999.
Before breaking into the movies, the 5-foot-2 1/2 -inch classically trained pianist found success in comedy revues in London and on Broadway as part of a legendary British troupe that also included the surrealist comic talent Peter Cook.
In the 1979 hit movie ``10,'' he played a musician determined to marry a perfect woman, embodied by Derek. His film career peaked in 1981 with the smash ``Arthur,'' in which he played a rich drunk who falls for Liza Minnelli. He was nominated for a best actor Oscar. Co-star John Gielgud, who played Arthur's valet, won the supporting actor Oscar.
``He had a little-boy-lost quality about him, which women loved, and there was always something slightly forlorn about Dudley, even when he was being funny,'' said Michael Parkinson, a British talk-show host. ``He was a lovely man.''
Moore's other films included ``Foul Play,'' 1978; ``Lovesick,'' 1983; ``Unfaithfully Yours,'' 1984; and ``Best Defense,'' 1984.
In a statement, Minnelli said: ``I am deeply saddened by the death of my dear friend, Dudley Moore. He was a unique individual that was multitalented. He could make the world laugh and brought joy to millions. I will miss him dearly.''
There was more than a touch of autobiography in ``10.'' But the happy ending eluded him in real life. Four marriages ended in divorce.
He confessed to being driven by feelings of inferiority because of his working-class origins in Dagenham, East London, and because of his height. He also spoke of the pain of being rejected by his mother because he was born with a deformed left foot.
Comedians, he said in an interview in 1980, are often driven by such feelings. ``I guess if I'd been able to hit somebody in the nose, I wouldn't have been a comic,'' he said.
It was music that gave Moore his entrance to public performance, first as a chorister and organist in his church, then in 1960 as a young Oxford graduate recruited for the four-man comedy revue ``Beyond the Fringe.''
``Fringe,'' which played two years in London and then moved to Broadway, was perhaps the greatest assembly of young comic talent in Britain in the 20th century. Moore was teamed with Cook; Alan Bennett, later a successful playwright; and Jonathan Miller, the opera producer and medical doctor.
Moore's whimsical sense of humor fitted oddly with the more savage satirical style of his partners. ``Apart from his musical contributions to the show,'' Cook wrote in 1974, ``Dudley's suggestions were treated with benign contempt by the rest of us.''
Moore and Cook formed a fast friendship and later teamed on television as Dud and Pete on ``Not Only ... but Also,'' a sketch comedy series. They also plumbed the depths of taste and decency in a series of recordings as ``Derek and Clive.''
Cook and Moore both made their screen debuts in ``The Wrong Box'' in 1966.
Moore and Cook teamed again in 1971 for a comedy revue titled ``Beyond the Fridge,'' which was a success in London and a smash two years later on Broadway, retitled ``Good Evening.'' The pair won a special Tony Award for their ``unique contribution to the theater of comedy.''
Big screen success came after Moore settled in Southern California and met director Blake Edwards in a therapy group. When George Segal walked out of Edwards' production of ``10,'' the director turned to Moore and he was soon a Hollywood star.
``He was such a wonderful spirit,'' Derek recalled Wednesday. ``He could make you laugh hysterically with his jokes and make you cry with his music. He was so gifted.''
While his comedy brought him the most attention, he was a talented pianist, with degrees in music and composition from Oxford. In 1992, he performed with the New World Symphony in Miami and other orchestras.
One of the goals of the concerts, he said, was ``to break the bubble of pomposity that can emerge. I think it's one thing that keeps people away from serious music.''
``I can't imagine not having music in my life, playing for myself or for other people. If I was asked, `Which would you give up?' I'd have to say acting,'' he said in 1988.
Moore married Suzy Kendall in 1958, Tuesday Weld in 1975, Brogan Lane in 1988 and Nicole Rothschild in 1994. He had a son, Patrick, by his second marriage and a son, Nicholas, by his fourth.
Moore was diagnosed with PSP after suffering balance problems and other symptoms.
Ellen Katz, executive director of the Society for Progressive Supranuclear Palsy, said the disorder would have affected his movement, balance, vision, speech and swallowing, while leaving his mind clear.
Even as Moore fought the symptoms, he raised nearly $100,000 for two PSP research funds, said Katz, who met Moore several times.
``He came forward with a diagnosis right away because he wanted to help other people who have the disease and aren't diagnosed,'' she said. ``It's such a tragic loss for us to lose someone like him, and to such a cruel disease.''
*****************
Comedian Milton Berle Dies at 93
By BOB THOMAS
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Milton Berle, the acerbic, cigar-smoking vaudevillian who eagerly embraced a new medium and became ``Mr. Television'' when the technology was in its infancy, died Wednesday. He was 93.
Berle was diagnosed with colon cancer last year and had been under hospice care for the past few weeks. Berle's wife, Lorna, and several family members were at his side when he died at home after a lengthy illness, publicist Warren Cowan said.
``He was responsible for the television set in your home today,'' Cowan said. ``He put television on the map.''
``Uncle Miltie'' was the king of Tuesday nights in the late 1940s, and store owners put up signs: ``Closed tonight to watch Milton Berle.''
At 8 p.m., four Texaco service attendants sang the ``Texaco Star Theater'' theme, and then came Berle, dressed for laughs: a caveman introduced as ``the man with jokes from the Stone Age''; a man in a barrel ``who had just paid his taxes.''
If the audience thought he looked funny in a dress, Berle was happy to oblige, and skits in drag became a trademark. The NBC program's popularity spurred sales of television sets and helped make TV a medium for the masses.
``From the first days of my career, he was one of my comedic heroes,'' Don Rickles said. ``He was always a great mentor. His style of comedy will never be replaced.''
Berle was called the ``Thief of Bad Gags'' and even joked about stealing quips. ``I laughed so hard I nearly dropped my pencil,'' he once said of a rival comedian, and he stopped at nothing for a laugh.
``Good evening, ladies and germs,'' Berle would say to his audience. ``I mean ladies and gentlemen. I call you ladies and gentlemen, but you know what you really are.''
In his debut season in 1948, Berle's show was watched on four out of every five sets in the nation, and he was the new medium's highest-paid funny man.
The magic faded in the '50s, and in recent years, Berle played fairs, night clubs, college campuses and the private Friars clubs in Beverly Hills and New York. In 1983, he was among the first seven inductees into the TV Hall of Fame of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.
He admitted his humor wasn't subtle or gentle: ``I guess you'd call my style flippancy, aggressiveness ... a put-downer.''
Flowers were left on Berle's star on the Walk of Fame along Hollywood Boulevard. Earlier Wednesday, flowers were placed on comic actor Dudley Moore's star after word of his death in New Jersey.
``It's really the day the laughter died,'' said Playboy founder Hugh Hefner. ``It's a loss from two generations of very, very funny people.''
Born Mendel Berlinger in New York's Harlem on July 12, 1908, Berle remembered his mother, Sandra, bouncing him on her knee and telling him, ``Make me laugh.''
His mother was a thwarted entertainer; his father Moses, Berle recalled, was a ``charming, rather helpless man who suffered from rheumatism and could never keep a job. ... He always dreamed of the big chance around the corner, but it never came.''
Berle's first taste of show business came at age 5, when he won a vaudeville contest by imitating Charlie Chaplin. Soon he was doing child leads in films with Mary Pickford and Mabel Normand, and was the kid rescued from the railroad tracks in the nick of time in the Pearl White movies.
He appeared with Chaplin and Marie Dressler in the movie, ``Tillie's Punctured Romance,'' and with Pickford in ``Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm.''
His Broadway debut came in 1920 in ``The Floradora Girl.''
He attended New York's Professional Children's School, and as a teen-ager toured the vaudeville circuit as a stand-up comic, taking his jokes from College Humor and Captain Billy's Whiz Bang.
``I studied stars like Eddie Cantor, Al Jolson, Lou Holtz and others,'' Berle said in a 1984 interview. ``I have eight or 10 press books of bad notices from those years, but it was a good education in learning what not to do.''
In 1936, Berle was a headliner with the Ziegfeld Follies. He played a long run with Earl Carroll's Vanities and began bringing his brand of humor to radio with guest spots on humor shows. He also appeared in several minor film comedies, such as ``New Faces of 1937'' and 1949's ``Always Leave Them Laughing'' (based on his autobiography). But he never really made it on the big screen.
Then came the advent of television.
Berle was signed as host of the first show of a variety series — the ``Texaco Star Theater.'' He was supposed to alternate with several other hosts, including Henny Youngman and Morey Amsterdam, but Berle drew so much fan mail that NBC soon gave him the spot permanently.
Berle's hour-long ``Texaco Star Theater'' began June 8, 1948, and was renamed ``The Milton Berle Show'' before it ended in June 1956.
He won an Emmy for the program, which was truly his own.
``Our star, besides performing, conducted the orchestra, made countless little changes, like revamping the dances, redesigning the costumes, rewriting and improvising one-liners and exit cues,'' recalled Goodman Ace, one of Berle's writers. ``Dress rehearsals were classic exercises in wild frenzy. He wore a traffic cop's whistle around his neck and blew the show to so many stops that a rehearsal often lasted from noon until 10 minutes before air time.''
Berle's sister, Rosalind, designed many of the costumes, and his mother was a fixture in the studio audience.
``When I started out with the Texaco series in 1948, television was brand new, and I knew just as much about it as anybody else,'' Berle once said. ``I was in charge of everything because I wanted to be. ... We didn't have any experts in 1948.''
In 1951, NBC signed him to an unprecedented contract calling for $100,000 a year for 30 years — whether Berle worked or not. The network agreed in 1965 to let him work elsewhere, and Berle accepted a pay cut to $60,000 a year.
In 1960, Berle lasted six months in ``Jackpot Bowling Starring Milton Berle,'' sandwiching comedy bits between play-by-play of a bowling match. He jumped to ABC in 1966 with a new variety show that lasted only a few months.
He made more movies in the 1960s, notably ``It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World'' in 1963. Other films included ``The Oscar,'' ``The Happening,'' ``Who's Minding the Mint?,'' ``Where Angels Go, Trouble Follows,'' ``For Singles Only,'' ``Hieronymus Merkin,'' ``Lepke'' and ``The Muppet Movie.''
In 1984, he played himself in ``Broadway Danny Rose.''
Berle married, divorced and remarried show girl Joyce Matthews, and they adopted a daughter, Vicki. Their second marriage lasted six years. In 1953 Berle married former publicist Ruth Cosgrove. They had an adopted son, Bill. She died in 1989, and Berle married fashion designer Lorna Adams in 1991.
In later years, Berle said he found much solace in Christian Science, and called himself a Jew and a Christian Scientist. He became the national chairman of the American Longevity Association in 1982, and was president of The Friars Club.
A pioneer in television, Berle always was ready to try something new.
``Too many people simply give up too easily,'' he once said. ``You have to keep the desire to forge ahead, and you have to be able to take the bruises of unsuccess. Success is just one long street fight.''
Services were planned at Hillside Memorial Park.