mitzi
Well-Known Member
Max Wright, who played Willie Tanner on TV's 'ALF', dies at 75
Max Wright, who starred as the straight-man to a party animal alien in "ALF," has died at 75.
news.yahoo.com
ALF's Dad!Max Wright, who played Willie Tanner on TV's 'ALF', dies at 75
Max Wright, who starred as the straight-man to a party animal alien in "ALF," has died at 75.news.yahoo.com
ALF's Dad!
I used to have the same spectacles.ALF's Dad!
Arte Johnson, the comic best known for the hilarious characters he created for the 1960s NBC smash hit Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, has died. He was 90.
The 5-foot-4 Johnson, a master of ad libs, double-talk and dialects who was content to be a "second banana," died Wednesday at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles of heart failure following a three-year battle with bladder and prostate cancer, his family announced.
Johnson cracked up Laugh-In audiences with his portrayal of Wolfgang, a former German storm trooper who muttered "Verry interesting" to the most cracked proposals (or, "Verry interesting … but stupid"). He said he got the idea for the character while watching Errol Flynn and Ronald Reagan battle the Nazis in the 1942 movie Desperate Journey.
Outfitted in a comic combination of Charlie Chaplin and Albert Einstein — walking stick, bad suit, frizzy hair, odd top hat — Johnson also was delightful as Tyrone F. Horneigh, a dirty old man who propositioned the spinster Gladys (Ruth Buzzi) on a park bench. After his suggestive mutterings, she would swat him with her oversized purse.
Johnson had a repertoire of more than 60 comic characters, including Piotr Rosmenko, an Eastern European song-and-dance man; Rabbi Shankar, an addled Indian guru; and a man in a yellow raincoat who could not help falling off his tricycle.
Rip Rip.Rip Torn. Dead at 88
Rip Rip.
Denise Nickerson, who played Violet Beauregarde in 'Willy Wonka,' dead at 62
Nickerson starred as the gum-obsessed, self-centered Violet opposite Gene Wilder as Willy Wonka.www.nbcnews.com
Damn. I didn’t know he knew Chris.Wesley Pruden would have undoubtedly wanted to spend his final hours at his keyboard, deftly deflating the pompous, entitled and arrogant