Arnold Stang

Arnold Stang

Stang and Henry Morgan in 1951
Born (1918-09-28)September 28, 1918
New York City, New York, U.S.
Died December 20, 2009(2009-12-20) (aged 91)
Newton, Massachusetts, U.S.
Occupation Actor
Years active 1927–2009
Known for Top Cat
The Milton Berle Show
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World
[Nabisco Norman Cereal character's voice]
Spouse(s) JoAnne Taggart Stang (1949[1]–2009)
Children 2 children

Arnold Stang (September 28, 1918 – December 20, 2009)[1] was an American comic actor, whose comic persona was a small and bespectacled, yet brash and knowing big-city type.

Career

Stang once claimed he got his break in radio by sending a postcard to a New York station requesting an audition, was accepted, and then bought his own ticket to New York from Chelsea, Massachusetts with the money set aside for his mother's anniversary gift.[2] True or not, Stang worked on New York-based network radio shows as a boy, appearing on children's programs such as The Horn and Hardart Children's Hour and Let's Pretend.[3] By 1940, he had graduated to teenaged roles, appearing as Seymour[4] on The Goldbergs. Director Don Bernard hired him in October 1941 to do the commercials on the CBS program Meet Mr. Meek but decided his constantly cracking voice would hurt the commercial so he ordered scriptwriters to come up with a role for him.[5] He next appeared on the summer replacement show The Remarkable Miss Tuttle with Edna May Oliver in 1942[6] and replaced Eddie Firestone Jr. in the title role of That Brewster Boy when Firestone joined the U.S. Marine Corps in 1943.[7]

Comedian Henry Morgan made him a sidekick on his program in fall of 1946 and Stang appeared in similar roles the following year on radio shows with Eddie Cantor[8] and Milton Berle.[2] He also did the voice of Jughead for a short while on The Archie radio show.

At this time Stang had appeared in a number of movies, including Seven Days Leave, My Sister Eileen, So This Is New York with Henry Morgan, and They Got Me Covered. He had also appeared on the Broadway stage in Sailor Beware, All In Favor and Same Time Next Week where he first worked with Berle.[9]

Stang moved to television at the start of the Golden Age. He had a recurring role in the TV show The School House on the DuMont Television Network in 1949. He was a regular on Eddie Mayehoff's short-lived situation comedy Doc Corkle in fall of 1952[10] as well as comedy relief on Captain Video and His Video Rangers as Clumsy McGee. Then he made a guest appearance on Milton Berle's Texaco Star Theater on May 12, 1953[11] and joined him as a regular as Francis the Stagehand the following September, often berating or heckling the big-egoed star for big laughs. Stang also had guest roles on several variety shows of the day including The Colgate Comedy Hour. In early 1951, Stang appeared on Henry Morgan's Great Talent Hunt, a take-off of The Original Amateur Hour, as "Gerard", supposedly recruiting "talent" for Morgan.

In films, he played Sparrow in The Man with the Golden Arm (1955) with Frank Sinatra and Kim Novak. In It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), he played Ray, who along with his partner Irwin (Marvin Kaplan), owns a gas station that Jonathan Winters destroys. He appeared in Hello Down There (1969). In one of the oddest movie pairings, he partnered with Arnold Schwarzenegger (billed as "Arnold Strong 'Mr. Universe'") in the latter's first film, the camp classic Hercules in New York (1969).

Stang worked often as a voice actor for animated cartoons.[12] He is perhaps best known in this field as the voice of "T.C.," the sly alley cat in the Hanna-Barbera series Top Cat (modeled explicitly after Sgt. Bilko in The Phil Silvers Show). More tragically, however, while Hanna-Barbera were planning on renewing the show for a second series, Maurice Gosfield, who played Benny the Ball on the show and who had been friends with Stang, died of a heart attack in 1964 after suffering from ill health. Stang was the one who had to inform show's creators William Hanna and Joseph Barbera that Gosfield had died, effectively ending any future plans for a second series of Top Cat. Despite this, the show would continue in the art of comic books, TV specials and even three theatrical features in 1987, 2011 and 2015, with the voice of Benny the Ball being Avery Schreiber (Beverly Hills Cats) and Chris Edgerly (Top Cat: The Movie and Top Cat Begins). He also provided the voice for Popeye's pal Shorty (a caricature of Stang), Herman the mouse in a number of Famous Studios cartoons, Tubby Tompkins in a few Little Lulu shorts, and Catfish on Misterjaw. He also voiced the character Nurtle the Twurtle in the 1965 animated feature "Pinocchio in Outer Space".

On television he appeared in commercials for the Chunky candy bar, where he would list many of its ingredients, smile and say, "Chunky, what a chunk of chocolate!" He provided the voice of the Honey Nut Cheerios Bee in the 1980s and was also a spokesman for Vicks Vapo-Rub. As a pitchman for Alcoa aluminum window screens in the late 1960s, he was known for the tag line "Arnold Stang says don't get stung". Stang also appeared in "The Grave Robber," an episode of the popular horror anthology series Tales from the Darkside, playing Tapok, an ancient Egyptian mummy who encounters some unscrupulous archaeologists that lure him into a game of strip poker.

Stang once described himself as "a frightened chipmunk who's been out in the rain too long."[2] As for his distinctive squawky, nasal Brooklyn voice, he said "I'm kind of attached to it...[it's] a personal logo. It's like your Jell-O or Xerox.[13]

Later career

Arnold Stang reprised Top Cat in Yogi's Treasure Hunt and Top Cat and the Beverly Hills Cats. Stang also appeared on an episode of The Cosby Show with guest star Sammy Davis, Jr. (He also made a cameo appearance in Cosby's 1990 film Ghost Dad.) In one TV advertisement he played Luther Burbank, proudly showing off his newly invented "square tomato" to fit neatly in typical square slices of commercial bread, then being informed that the advertising bakery had beat him to it by producing round loaves of bread. He played the photographer in the 1993 film Dennis the Menace with Walter Matthau. He also provided many voices for the Cartoon Network series Courage the Cowardly Dog and The Turner Program Services's original series, Captain Planet and the Planeteers. He had a small role as Queasy the Parrot in the 1970s film Raggedy Ann and Andy: A Musical Adventure.

In 1994, he guest starred as the voice of Irwin the Mouse in Garfield and Friends episode, "Thoroughly Mixed-Up Mouse".

In 2000, writers Kurt Seligmann, Jr. and Martin Olson asked Stang to use his voice to talk to Pikachu in Hey You, Pikachu!.

In 2004, Arnold Stang made his last appearance in an interview with animator Earl Kress about the making of Top Cat. It is featured on the Top Cat DVD Boxset.

Death

Wikinews has related news: American actor Arnold Stang dies at age 91

Stang died of pneumonia in Newton, Massachusetts, on December 20, 2009.[1] Stang was born in New York City in 1918, but often claimed Chelsea, Massachusetts as his birthplace and 1925 as his birthdate.[1] His ashes were buried in Newton's cemetery.[14]

Personal life

Stang and his wife, the former JoAnne Taggart, lived in New Rochelle, New York and in his later years Greenwich, Connecticut, moving toward the end of his life to Needham, Massachusetts. The Stangs had two children, David and Deborah.[1]

Filmography

Television

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Weber, Bruce. "Arnold Stang, Milquetoast Actor, Dies at 91," The New York Times, Tuesday 22 December 2009.
  2. 1 2 3 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, August 3, 1947
  3. "gaor-51".
  4. Lesser, Jerry (January 10, 1942). "Radio Talent: New York" (PDF). Billboard. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
  5. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Oct. 26. 1941
  6. Chicago Tribune, July 19, 1942
  7. Chicago Tribune, Sept. 3, 1943
  8. Miami News, Sept. 25, 1947
  9. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, August 3, 1947.
  10. Hedda Hopper syndicated column, September 10, 1952
  11. San Mateo Times, May 12, 1953
  12. Obituary London Guardian, March 102010.
  13. Nachman, Raised on Radio (1998), pg. 478; Stang interviewed on Oct. 21, 1997
  14. "Arnold Stang". Find a Grave. Retrieved September 19, 2010.

External links

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