Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Wimoweh - Wimobits

Here are a few dead people who fell by the wayside. Time to pick 'em up and give 'em a proper send-off.

Harold Gould
1923-2010



He was certainly one of the most academically educated actors in the field, having earned both a Masters and a PhD in Theatre from Cornell. After his graduation in the early 50s, he taught for a time in Virginia, before relocated to California to teach at UC-Riverside. He took that opportunity to become a professional actor. By the 1960s, his career was up and running, with appearances on the big and small screen. He worked often on television, but had some poor luck with two sitcom pilots. He appeared as Marlo Thomas's father in the 1965 pilot That Girl, but was replaced by Lew Parker when the series was picked up. In 1972, he appeared as Howard Cunningham in the pilot for Happy Days. Initially, ABC did not pick up the series, but the unexpected success of the feature film American Graffiti (starring Ron Howard, who also starred in Happy Days) encouraged the network to run the pilot as an episode of their comedy anthology series, Love, American Style. The show played well, and Happy Days went to series, but Gould had by then made other commitments, and the role was recast with Tom Bosley.

Harold earned five Emmy nominations in his career, several for his work as Rhoda's father on the sitcom of the same name.

He played opposite Katherine Hepburn in the television film Mrs. Delafield Wants to Marry, and had a recurring role on Golden Girls for a time. He played Louis B. Meyer in Moviola, for which he was again nominated, and appeared in countless TV episodics over the years. The big screen saw him in The Sting, Silent Movie, Stuart Little, Patch Adams and many others. His Broadway career including plays by Neil Simon, Tom Stoppard, and Jules Feiffer, and he won the Obie for his Off-Broadway performance in Vaclav Havel's The Increased Difficulty of Concentration. He died last Saturday at the age of 86, after a long battle with prostate cancer.

SUZANNE GROSSMAN

1938-2010


She was born in Switzerland, and was never a household name, but she did yeoman's work on stage early in her career. She held her own opposite Robert Preston and Rosemary Harris in the original Broadway production of The Lion in Winter, playing the French princess Alais (did you know Christopher Walken played the young Prince Phillip in that original production?).




She went on to appear in Broadway revivals of Cyrano de Bergerac and Private Lives. She turned her hand to the written word, and adapted several Feydeau farces with writing partner and fellow actor Paxton Whitehead; those adaptations played Broadway, and were also seen at major regional theatres such as the Old Globe and the Mark Taper Forum. She wrote many teleplays, and penned over a hundred episodes of Ryan's Hope. Suzanne died August 19 at the age of 72.


NANCY DOLMAN

1951-2010


This Canadian actress and musical performer was probably best known to American audiences for her recurring role on the 70's sitcom Soap. And for her marriage. In her early life, she appeared in several musicals in Canada, and landed in the Toronto production of Godspell, in which she understudied Gilda Radner. It was in that production that she met Martin Short, who would become her husband in 1980.


Five years later, she retired from the business in order to raise their children. Nancy died from cancer on August 21, about a month shy of her 59th birthday.

Here's a guy whose work, I am ashamed to admit, I did not know, but he deserves a mention as the founder of one of the UK's leading theaters:

Mick Lally

1946-2010


He was one of Ireland's most recognizable natives, appearing for years on an Irish soap called Glenroe. American audiences might know him from appearances in the feature films The Secret of Roan Irish and Circle of Friends. But his biggest contribution was to the stage, where he spent most of his career. In 1975, he was a co-founder of the Druid Theatre Company in Galway, which specializes in native Irish plays. He played the title character in the theater's first production, The Playboy of the Western World, and created the role of Mick Dowd in the world premiere production of Martin McDonagh's A Skull in Connemara. He was also in the world premiere of Brian Friel's Translations. The Druid's cultivation of Irish playwrights such as McDonagh and Friel helped their work become internationally known. Lally died August 31 at the age of 64.

Enough of the actors! Here's a guy who had a hand in some of the best known standards from the mid-20th century:

George David Weiss

1921-2010



He earned a degree in music theory from Julliard before turning his attentions to songwriting back in the 1950s. He provided Elvis Presley with one of his signature tunes, "Can't Help Falling in Love," and did the same for Louis Armstrong with "What a Wonderful World." He took a South African Zulu song from the 20s, and reworked it to become "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" (the opening phrase of the song, "Wimoweh, Wimoweh," is roughly translated from the Zulu to mean "I bet I can sell a million copies of this stupid song"). Weiss was elected to the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1984, which meant they must have forgiven him for his Broadway scores. His biggest stage hit was Mr. Wonderful, starring Sammy Davis, Jr., and he provided the score for the Shirley Jones/Jack Cassidy flop, Maggie Flynn. Most egregiously, he hooked up with a group of folks who thought the Jane Austen novel Pride and Prejudice would make a good musical. It didn't, and the final product, First Impressions (which was actually the novel's working title) remains a footnote in the careers of its stars, Polly Bergen and Hermione Gingold.

Weiss served as president of the Songwriters Guild of America for

almost 20 years, during which time he fought to preserve composers' copyrights in the digital age. He died last month at the age of 89.