Tony Randall

TDWoj

Administrator
Staff member
Actor Tony Randall Dies at 84
By CHRISTY LEMIRE

20020505NYET140.jpg


NEW YORK (AP) - Tony Randall, the comic actor best known for playing fastidious photographer Felix Unger on ``The Odd Couple,'' has died. He was 84.

Randall died in his sleep Monday night at NYU Medical Center of complications from a long illness, according to his publicity firm, Springer Associates.

He is survived by his wife, Heather Harlan Randall, who made him a father for the first time at age 77, and their two children, 7-year-old Julia Laurette and 5-year-old Jefferson Salvini.

Randall won an Emmy for playing Unger on the sitcom based on Neil Simon's play and movie. The show ran from 1970-75, but Randall won after it had been canceled, prompting him to quip at the awards ceremony: ``I'm so happy I won. Now if I only had a job.''

The show's charm sprang from Randall's chemistry and conflict with Jack Klugman as sloppy sportswriter Oscar Madison, with whom he's forced to share an apartment after both men get divorced.

Before that, Randall was best known as the fastidious ``best friend'' figure in several Rock Hudson-Doris Day movies, including 1959's ``Pillow Talk'' and 1961's ``Lover Come Back.''

The actor became a fixture on David Letterman's late-night talk shows, appearing a record 70 times on the ``Late Show'' alone. He made fun of his own prim image by taking part in Letterman's wacky antics, including allowing himself to be covered in mud.

And in 1993, when Conan O'Brien took over the time slot at NBC that Letterman had vacated for a new show at CBS, Randall was a guest on O'Brien's debut episode.

After ``The Odd Couple,'' Randall had two short-lived sitcoms, one of which was ``The Tony Randall Show,'' in which he played a stuffy Philadelphia judge, from 1976-78.

From 1981-83, he played the title role in the sitcom ``Love, Sidney,'' as a single, middle-aged commercial artist helping a female friend care for her young daughter.

The show was based on a TV movie in which Sidney was gay; in the TV show, the character's sexual orientation was implied, but never specified. This occurred more than a decade before the much-hyped coming-out on ``Ellen'' in 1997, which made Ellen DeGeneres' character the first openly gay central figure on a network series.

For his television work, Randall got a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1998.

In an effort to bring classic theater back to Broadway, Randall founded and was artistic director of the non-profit National Actors Theatre in 1991, using $1 million of his own money and $2 million from corporations and foundations. The company's first production was a revival of Arthur Miller's ``The Crucible,'' starring Martin Sheen and Michael York, which hadn't been staged on Broadway in 40 years.

The next year, Randall's production of Ibsen's ``The Master Builder'' didn't exactly draw raves. AP Drama Critic Michael Kuchwara called it ``deadly earnest - and dull.''

Subsequent performances included ``Night Must Fall,'' ``The Gin Game'' and ``The Sunshine Boys,'' in which Randall reunited with Klugman, in 1998. Randall also starred in his company's Tony Award-winning staging of ``M. Butterfly.''

The actor also was socially active, lobbying against smoking in public places, marching in Washington against apartheid in the '80s, and helping raise money for AIDS research in the '90s.

Born Leonard Rosenberg on Feb. 26, 1920, Randall was drawn as a teenager to roadshows that came through his hometown of Tulsa, Okla.

``One night, the entire town turned out to see the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo perform Swan Lake and Sheherezade,'' he wrote. ``I - and most of the audience - had never seen a ballet before. We stood and cheered, thinking it was a 'once in a lifetime' event.''

Randall attended Northwestern University before heading to New York at 19, where he made his stage debut in 1941 in ``The Circle of Chalk.''

After Army service during World War II from 1942-46, he returned to New York, where he appeared on radio and early television. He got his start in movies in 1957.

He was married to his college sweetheart, Florence Randall, for 54 years until she died of cancer in 1992.

"I saw her in a bank - I never saw another girl in my life. She was gorgeous, the most beautiful girl I ever saw,'' Randall said in a TV interview in 1995.

Later that year, he married Harlan, who was 50 years his junior. Randall met her through his National Actors Theatre; former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani performed the ceremony.

Harlan gave birth to their first child, Julia Laurette Randall, in April 1997. Their second child, Jefferson Salvini Randall, was born in June 1998.
 

Amos Stevens

New Member
Yeah saw the sad news upon getting online-here is some more info on the man:

Actor Tony Randall Dead at 83
Tue May 18, 2004 10:49 AM ET


NEW YORK (Reuters) - Emmy award-winning actor Tony Randall, known for his comic role in "The Odd Couple" as the lovable but fussy Felix Unger has died, an associate said on Tuesday.
Maria Somma, spokeswoman for Actor's Equity, said, "Mr. Randall has passed away." She had no other details and his representative was not immediately available.

Randall underwent heart surgery late last year, which left him suffering from pneumonia.

© Reuters 2004. All Rights Reserved.

RANDALL, TONY

U.S. Actor

Tony Randall, an Emmy-award winning television and film actor, is most noted for his role as the anal-retentive Felix Unger in the ABC sitcom The Odd Couple. A popular guest on numerous variety and talk shows, Randall has been connected with all three major broadcast networks, as well as with PBS.

Randall began his career in radio in the 1940s, appearing on such shows as the Henry Morgan Program and Opera Quiz. From 1950-52, Randall played Mac on the melodramatic TV serial One Man's Family. He then went on to play Harvey Weskit, the brash, over-confident best friend of Robinson Peepers (Wally Cox) in the live sitcom Mr. Peepers (1952-1955). After finding a niche in films, including numerous roles in romantic comedies, Randall won the part of Felix Unger in the ABC television version of The Odd Couple (1970-75).

Although the Broadway and film versions of The Odd Couple became established hits with different stars (Randall, however, did play Felix in a Chicago production), Randall lent numerous additions to the Felix character. Drawing upon his interest in opera, Randall had Felix become an opera lover. Randall also added the comedic honking noises that accompanied Felix's ever-present sinus attacks. Much like Jack Klugman's close connection to the Oscar Madison role, Randall became synonymous with Unger.

Despite low ratings for the series, ABC, then the third-place network, allowed The Odd Couple a five season run. In 1975, Randall won an Emmy as lead actor for his role as Felix. A popular guest on numerous variety shows, Randall was present on two Emmy award winning variety show episodes in 1970 (The Flip Wilson Show) and 1971 (The Sonny and Cher Show). Randall's frequent appearances as a guest on the Tonight Show won him a role playing himself in Martin Scorsese's King of Comedy (1983).

In 1976, Randall starred in the short-lived CBS sitcom The Tony Randall Show. Randall played Walter Franklin, a judge who deliberated over his troubled family as much as he did over the cases presented to him in his mythical Philadelphia courtroom. In 1981, Randall returned to television playing Sidney Shorr in NBC's Love, Sidney, a critically-acclaimed yet commercially unsuccessful sitcom canceled in 1983. The series did attract some criticism from the religious and culturally conservative communities. In Sidney Shorr, the made-for-television movie which preceded the series, Randall's character was presented as homosexual. In the series this was simply dropped.

Randall reprised his Felix Unger role in a 1993 TV-movie version of The Odd Couple. He has also hosted the PBS opera series Live From The Met.

-Michael B. Kassel


TONY RANDALL. Born Leonard Rosenbergin Tulsa, Oklahoma, U.S.A., 26 February 1920. Educated at Northwestern University, Chicago; Columbia University, New York; the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre, New York City, 1938-40; and the Officer Candidate School at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey. Married 1) Florence Gibbs (died, 1992); 2) Heather Harlan, 1995; one child. Served as private and first lieutenant in U.S. Army Signal Corps, 1942-46. Announcer and actor in radio soap operas; New York debut as stage actor, A Circle of Chalk, 1941; various theater and radio work, 1947-52; television actor, from 1952; continues to star in film, on stage, and on television. Member: Actors' Equity Association; Screen Actors Guild; American Federation of Television and Radio Artists; Association of the Metropolitan Opera Company; founder and artistic director of the National Actors' Theatre in New York City. Recipient: Emmy Award, 1975. Address: c/o National Actors' Theatre, 1560 Broadway, Suite 409, New York, New York 10036, U.S.A.

TELEVISION SERIES

1949-52 One Man's Family
1952-55 Mr. Peepers
1970-75 The Odd Couple
1976-78 The Tony Randall Show
1981-83 Love, Sidney

MADE-FOR-TELEVISION MOVIES

1978 Kate Bliss and the Ticker Tape Kid
1981 Sidney Shorr: A Girl's Best Friend
1984 Off Sides
1985 Hitler's SS: Portrait in Evil
1986 Sunday Drive
1988 Save the Dog
1989 The Man in the Brown Suit
1993 The Odd Couple: Together Again

TELEVISION SPECIALS (selection)

1956 Heaven Will Protect the Working Girl (host)
1960 Four For Tonight (co-star)
1960 So Help Me Aphrodite (Ernest)
1962 Arsenic and Old Lace (Mortimer Brewster
1967 The Wide Open Door (Inspector Berry/Geoffrey Judge)
1969 The Littlest Angel (Democritus)
1977 They Said it With Music: Yankee Doodle to Ragtime (co-host)
1981 Tony Randall's All-Star Circus (host)
1985 Curtain's Up (host)
1987 Walt Disney World Celebrity Circus (host)

FILMS

Oh Men, Oh Women, 1957, Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter, 1957, The Mating Game, 1959, Pillow Talk, 1959, Let's Make Love, 1960, Lover Come Back, 1962, Send Me No Flowers, 1964, The Brass Bottle, 1964, Fluffy, 1965, Bang, Bang, You're Dead, 1966, Hello Down There, 1969, Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex..., 1972; Huckleberry Finn, 1974, Scavenger Hunt, 1979, Foolin' Around, 1980, The King of Comedy, 1983, My Little Pony, 1986, That's Adequate, 1989, Gremlins 2: The New Batch (voice), 1990, Fatal Instinct, 1993.

STAGE (selection)

Circle of Chalk, 1941, Candida, 1941, The Corn Is Green, 1942, The Barretts of Wimpole Street, 1947, Anthony and Cleopatra, 1948, Caesar and Cleopatra, 1950, Oh Men, Oh Women, 1954, Inherit the Wind, 1955-56, Oh Captain, 1958, UTBU, 1966, Two Into One, 1988, M. Butterfly, 1989, A Little Hotel on the Side, 1992, Three Men on a Horse, 1993, The Government Inspector, 1994, The Odd Couple, 1994.

RADIO

I Love a Mystery; Portia Faces Life; When a Girl Marries; Life's True Story

PUBLICATION

Which Reminds Me, with Michael Mindlin. New York: Delacorte Press, 1989.
 

Mama San

Administrator
It is very sad. But like Anna Lee he had
a long productive life!! Rest in peace, Tony!!
God bless,
Mama san
 

KATHYPURDOM

Steven Seagal Fan
I was so sad when I heard about Tony Randall. I loved watching him in The Odd Couple. I would never miss an episode. He will be missed by many, many people. Tony Randall was very talented. Just seeing all that he has done in his life.
 

TDWoj

Administrator
Staff member
I noticed from the filmography in Amos' post, they left out The Seven Faces of Dr. Lao. That is such a classic - how could they have left that out?
 

ORANGATUANG

Wildfire
I saw this on my local news and at least he went in his sleep..He might be gone but people can and should celebrate his life not his death..that is what i was told any way..Heather.
 

Lotussan

I Belong To Steven
I heard it in the car, and my mom thought it was Tony Orlando, so I told her about the "odd couple" show, do you get that where you live, Heather? Anyway, she immediately knew who he was...He was such a funny man...How's everything with you, Heather? Hope all is well...:)
Love and Hugs...
 

ORANGATUANG

Wildfire
Iam ok..Thanks lotussan now..My mum and dad used to see that show..but he was such an nice person..and becoming a dad for the first time at over 70 well that just rocks me.
 
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