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Bill Daily

 
Actor: Bill Daily
  • Born: Aug 30, 1927 in Des Moines, Iowa
  • Occupation: Actor, Writer
  • Active: '70s
  • Major Genres: Comedy
  • Career Highlights: In Name Only, I Still Dream of Jeannie, The Bob Newhart Show: Group on a Hot Tin Roof
  • First Major Screen Credit: I Dream of Jeannie: Season 01 (1965)

Biography

From the late '60s through the mid-'70s, first on I Dream of Jeannie and later on The Bob Newhart Show, Bill Daily was one of the most visible comic acting talents in television, despite the fact that he'd always intended on a career in music. Born in Des Moines, IA, in 1928, he was raised by his mother with help from several aunts and uncles after the death of his father and he gravitated toward music as a teenager. Following a stint in the army in the late '40s, Daily became a professional musician, playing upright bass with different groups in the Midwest, and he eventually added little bits of stand-up comedy to his repertory in the course of performing. He hooked up with an NBC station in Chicago, first working behind the camera as a writer and musician and then doing comedy on the air. Eventually, he became a regular guest as a comedian on The Mike Douglas Show, which originated from Chicago. From there, he was discovered by Steve Allen who brought him onto his show as a comedian and sidekick. Daily subsequently credited his musical side with providing him with the sense of timing to become a successful comedian. During the early and mid-'60s, Daily moved into acting roles on programs like Bewitched -- on which he debuted in a straight dramatic role, in a Christmas episode in which he was highly effective -- and was given a small role in the pilot of I Dream of Jeannie. That part, of Major Roger Healy, turned into the co-starring role after the program's first season. Following five successful seasons on that program, he moved to The Bob Newhart Show as Howard Borden, providing comedic support similar to the part he'd played on I Dream Of Jeannie, as Newhart's befuddled, constantly jet-lagged next door neighbor. Daily has only ever appeared in two feature films, both of them comedies -- the made-for-television In Name Only in 1969, as a carefree bachelor (clearly modeled after one aspect of his character on I Dream of Jeannie) and in Disney's release of The Barefoot Executive in 1971. Since the first Bob Newhart series left the air, his television appearances have been infrequent and always in supporting, guest starring roles, although he did appear on Nick-at-Nite helping to promote The Bob Newhart Show when it aired on the channel. He has since reportedly become a theatrical actor and director in the Albuquerque, NM, area. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Bill Daily
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Bill Daily
Born August 30, 1927 (1927-08-30) (age 82)
Des Moines, Iowa, U.S.
Occupation Actor/Comedian
Years active 1953–present
Spouse(s) Becky Daily (m. 1993–present) «start: (1993)»"Marriage: Becky Daily to Bill Daily" Location: (linkback:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Daily) 2 children

Bill Daily (born August 30, 1927; Des Moines, Iowa) is an American comedian and dramatic actor, and a veteran of many television sitcoms.

Biography

Daily's father died when Bill was very young, and consequently he was raised by his mother and various other family members. In 1939, Daily and his family moved to Chicago, where he spent the rest of his youth. Upon high school graduation, Daily left home to try to carve out a life as a musician, playing bass with jazz bands in numerous clubs across the Midwest.

Bill was drafted into the Army and served in Korea with an artillery unit.

It was in his traveling-musician days that Daily found his true calling: comedy. He began to do stand-up in the same clubs he had once filled with music, and he soon moved up in the comedy ranks to the point where he was playing some of the bigger clubs in the country.

After graduating from the Goodman Theatre School, Daily worked for the NBC television station in Chicago, WMAQ, as an announcer and floor manager. He eventually became a staff director. Daily recently recalled for PBS how one day, preparing for a Chicago-area Emmy Award telecast, he asked a young local comedian to come up with a routine about press agents. The bit, "Abe Lincoln vs. Madison Avenue," became an early hit for the performer—a young Bob Newhart.

Television executives liked Daily's clean-cut looks and superb comic timing (due to his brief role as Steve Allen's announcer/sidekick on his daily syndicated talk show in 1964), so by the mid-1960s he earned guest spots on sitcoms like My Mother the Car, The Farmer's Daughter, and Bewitched. Veteran sitcom writer Sidney Sheldon noticed Daily in one of his myriad small roles, and decided that he would be perfect for a character in his new sitcom, I Dream of Jeannie. Looking back, it was the moment that made Daily's career.

The part on Jeannie was that of a U.S. Army test pilot Roger Healey is often erroneously said to be in the U.S. Air Force, but the military uniform he wears is U.S. Army, as indicated by its color, pant leg braid, and other insignia -- specifically, the Corps of Engineers lapel brass. While NASA astronauts up through the Apollo era included Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps officers, as well as a smattering of civilians, the first Army astronaut was not selected by NASA until 1978 for the space shuttle program (more than a dozen years after the pilot episode had aired). In fact, on the 1969 Jeannie episode ‘Around the World in 80 Blinks,’ Richard Mulligan portrays an astronaut named ‘Commander Wingate’; commander is a rank in the U.S. Navy.</ref> and NASA astronaut named Roger Healey, who would be sidekick and best friend to Larry Hagman's main character, Tony Nelson. It was a dream part for Daily, who made playing Healey look effortless; it was said that Daily never won any awards for his portrayals because he made it look too easy -- people thought he was simply playing himself. While Daily enjoyed his work on Jeannie, Hagman decidedly did not. Daily was witness to multiple Hagman tantrums on the set, but he and Barbara Eden stood behind Hagman, citing a substance problem and the progressively poorer scripts on Jeannie as the roots of Hagman's fits.

In 1972, two years after Jeannie was canceled, Daily was back at work and back in an aviator's uniform, in what is perhaps his signature role -- commercial-airline navigator (later cargo airline navigator) Howard Borden in The Bob Newhart Show. Borden, who lived across the hall from Bob Newhart's Bob Hartley character, was a divorced father struggling to care for his son while keeping his flying schedule; Borden and Hartley eventually became brothers-in-law when the former married the latter's sister. Daily would also occasionally serve as a panelist on the 1970s CBS game show The Match Game, more often than not giving bizarre answers that seldom matched the contestants. After Richard Dawson's departure, Daily was a regular in the lower tier middle seat for the last three-plus years of the show's CBS and syndicated run. After six years of success, The Bob Newhart Show ended its run.

For the two years that followed The Bob Newhart Show, Daily returned to stand-up, but in 1980, after years of making a living as a second banana, Daily was offered his own show. Called Small and Frye, the show featured Daily as a neurotic doctor; it lasted only three months before being canceled. In 1988, Daily tried his hand again at starring roles, this time as another doctor on the sitcom Starting From Scratch. It fared only mildly better than Frye, and was canceled after one season. Ironically, Daily's most notable post-Newhart role was another supporting one, that of Larry the Psychiatrist on the cult favorite ALF (1986).

During the 1980s-90s, Daily reprised his I Dream of Jeannie role of Roger Healey in two made-for-TV reunion movies: I Dream of Jeannie: 15 Years Later (1985) and I Still Dream of Jeannie (1991). Also in 1991, he reprised the role of Howard Borden in "The Bob Newhart Show: 19th Anniversary", which aired in February of that year.

Personal life

Daily was married to his wife Pat in the late 1940s. In 1976, Pat and Bill divorced. Daily has one daughter, actress and singer Elizabeth Daily; along with two adopted children, a son, Patrick, and a daughter, Kimberley. His son is a key grip and stunt pilot in Hollywood and daughter is a teacher in Colorado. He married again in the late 1970s to Vivian Sanchez, with whom he traveled on the road performing "Lover's Leap" for two years. He later divorced her. In 1993 he married Becky, with whom he currently lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Though retired, he still does some comedy and the occasional TV guest appearances. Also, from 2006-February 2009, he was a guest-host on KBQI 107.9 radio station in Albuquerque on Thursday mornings.


 
 

 

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Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bill Daily" Read more