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Actor:

Art Carney

  • Born: Nov 04, 1918 in Mount Vernon, New York
  • Died: Nov 09, 2003
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '50s-'80s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Drama
  • Career Highlights: Going in Style, The Late Show, Firestarter
  • First Major Screen Credit: Playhouse 90: Charley's Aunt (1957)

Biography

Though Art Carney would grow up to become a shy, retiring, self-effacing man, he was quite the class clown in school. HIs grades never rising above mediocre, Carney excelled in mimicry, performing astonishingly accurate imitations of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Fred Allen, Ned Sparks, and other 1930s luminaries. This skill enabled him to win a number of New York-based amateur contests, and in 1938 landed him a spot as musician/comedian with the Horace Heidt orchestra. Extensive radio work followed, notably Heidt's weekly quiz show Pot of Gold, which when made into a film in 1941 featured Carney in an uncredited role. While serving in WWII, Carney endured a serious leg wound which left him with a permanent limp. Fortunately this infliction did not impede his postwar radio work; he acted on such dramatic programs as Gangbusters and Dimension X, and appeared as a comedy foil for such major stars as Bert Lahr and Henry Morgan. He moved into television in 1948, playing a comic waiter on The Morey Amsterdam Show. Full-fledged stardom came his way in 1951 when he was hired as supporting player for a roly-poly comedian named Jackie Gleason on the Dumont TV Network's Cavalcade of Stars. Though they were never any more than fast friends off-stage, Gleason and Carney immediately developed a warm on-camera rapport that was to remain intact until Gleason's death in 1987. When Gleason moved from Dumont to CBS in 1952, Carney joined him, playing a remarkable array of sharply defined characters on The Jackie Gleason Show, the most famous of which was goofy, gesticulating sewer worker Ed Norton in the series' classic Honeymooners sketches. Ultimately, Carney was to win six Emmy awards, not only for his work on the Gleason show but also for his dramatic performances in such projects as the 1984 TV movie Terrible Joe Moran. He made a successful transition to the Broadway stage in 1959's The Rope Dancers, subsequently appearing in such stage hits as Take Her She's Mine, The Odd Couple (originating the role of Felix Unger), and Lovers. He returned to films in 1965, and nine years later won an Academy Award for his portrayal of an irascible senior citizen in Harry and Tonto. Even at the height of his popularity and activity, Carney suffered from profound emotional problems; a quiet, introspective sort not given to venting anger or displeasure, he assuaged his rage and insecurities with liquor. His alcoholic intake eventually impaired his ability to perform, forcing him to periodically dry out and take stock in himself in various sanitariums and clinics. Though Art Carney was eventually able to overcome his difficulties, he became more reclusive and less active as the years rolled on. The 1980s proved Carney's final active decade in front of the camera, and following roles in St. Helens, The Muppets Take Manhattan, and Firestarted (not to mention numerous small-screen appearances) Carney called it quits following an appearance in the 1993 action flop The Last Action Hero.

His subsequent retirement proving a restful departure from the high energy entertainment industry, the beloved Honeymooners star died of natural causes in November of 2003. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

 
 
Wikipedia: Art Carney
Art Carney
Saundann.JPG
Art as Saun Dann in The Star Wars Holiday Special
Birth name Arthur William Matthew Carney
Born November 4 1918(1918--)
Mount Vernon, New York Flag of the United States United States
Died November 9 2003 (aged 85)
Chester, Connecticut
Resting place Riverside Cemetery Old Saybrook, Connecticut
Years active 1940s - 1993
Spouse(s) Jean Myers (1980 – 2003 his death)

Barbara Isaac (1966 - 1977) (divorced)
Jean Myers (1940 - 1965) (divorced)

Children Brian Carney
Eileen Carney
Paul Carney

Arthur William Matthew Carney (November 4, 1918November 9, 2003) was an Academy Award-winning American actor in film, stage, television and radio.

About

Carney was born in Mount Vernon, New York to Helen Farrell and Edward M. Carney,[1] a newspaper man and publicist. His family was Irish American and Catholic.[2] He attended A B Davis High School.[3] Carney was drafted as an infantryman during World War II. During the Battle of Normandy, he was wounded in the leg by shrapnel and walked with a limp for the rest of his life.

Carney was married three times to two women: Jean Myers, from 1940 to 1965; and again from 1980 to his death: three children; and Barbara Isaac from December 21, 1966 to 1977.

Radio

Carney was a busy radio actor before and after his military service in World War II. In 1941 he was the house comic on the dance band remote series, Matinee at Meadowbrook. One of his radio roles during the 1940s was the fish Red Lantern on Land of the Lost. In 1943 he played Billy Oldham on Joe and Ethel Turp, based on Damon Runyon stories. He appeared on The Henry Morgan Show in 1946-47. He impersonated FDR on The March of Time and Dwight D. Eisenhower on Living 1948. In 1950-51 he played Montague's father on The Magnificent Montague. He was a supporting player on Casey, Crime Photographer and Gang Busters. As Charlie the doorman on The Morey Amsterdam Show (on both radio and TV in 1948-50), he uttered the catchphrase, "Ya know what I mean?"

Films and Television

The main cast of The Honeymooners during its 1955–56 run (from left to right): Jackie Gleason, Audrey Meadows, Carney, and Joyce Randolph
Enlarge
The main cast of The Honeymooners during its 1955–56 run (from left to right): Jackie Gleason, Audrey Meadows, Carney, and Joyce Randolph

Carney began his film career in 1941 with a uncredited role in Pot o' Gold, a minor film starring James Stewart and Paulette Goddard, playing one of her brothers. In the season two opening episode of the television series Batman, titled "Shoot a Crooked Arrow" (1966), Carney gave a memorable performance as the newly-introduced villain "The Archer". In 1974 he won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance as Harry Coombes, an elderly man going on the road with his pet cat, in Harry and Tonto. In 1978, Carney appeared in The Star Wars Holiday Special, a spin-off film to the Star Wars series. In it, he played Trader Saun Dann, a member of the Rebel Alliance who was a close friend of Chewbacca and his family. He also appeared in such films as W.W. and the Dixie Dancekings, The Late Show, House Calls, Movie Movie and Going in Style. Later movies included The Muppets Take Manhattan, and the thriller Firestarter.

Carney gained lifelong fame for his portrayal of upstairs neighbor and sewer worker, Ed Norton, opposite Jackie Gleason's Ralph Kramden in the popular television comedy show The Honeymooners and on the Gleason variety shows that preceded and followed the sitcom. Beyond The Honeymooners, Carney served as Gleason's sidekick and troupe member during many of the Gleason's years on television, which included several CBS runs of the Gleason variety show and some Honeymooners specials on ABC.

His portrayal of Norton continues to influence pop culture, particularly by inspiring the Hanna-Barbera characters, Yogi Bear and Barney Rubble. Art Carney also had many screen and stage roles, including the portrayal on Broadway of Felix Unger in The Odd Couple (opposite Walter Matthau as Oscar). He was nominated for seven Emmy Awards and won six.

In 1981, he portrayed Harry Truman, an 84-year-old lodge owner in the half-fictional/half-real account of events leading to the eruption of Mount St. Helens, in the movie titled St. Helens. Although he retired in the late 1980s, he returned in 1993 to make a small cameo in the Arnold Schwarzenegger film, Last Action Hero.

Death

Carney died of natural causes at a rest home near his home in Westbrook, Connecticut, five days after his 85th birthday; he was survived by his widow and children. Carney is interred at Riverside Cemetery in Old Saybrook, Middlesex County, Connecticut.

Awards and tributes


Awards
Preceded by
Jack Lemmon
for Save the Tiger
Academy Award for Best Actor
1974
for Harry and Tonto
Succeeded by
Jack Nicholson
for One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest

References

External links


 
 

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Actor. Copyright © 2006 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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