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Doodles Weaver

 
Artist: Doodles Weaver

Worked With:

Formal Connection With:

  • Born: May 11, 1911, Los Angeles, CA
  • Died: January 17, 1983, Burbank, CA
  • Active: '30s, '40s, '50s, '60s
  • Genres: Comedy
  • Instrument: Vocals, Arranger, Commentary

Biography

Comedian Doodles Weaver was a key member of Spike Jones' City Slickers during the years following World War II. Born Winstead Sheffield Weaver in Los Angeles on May 11, 1911, he earned the childhood nickname "Doodlebug" from his mother in reference to his odd, malleable looks. While attending Stanford University, Weaver reportedly spent more time playing pranks and practical jokes than studying, and by the late '30s he had racked up a series of small film roles and was a regular guest on Rudy Vallée's radio show. He also toured nightclubs, developing a routine highlighted by a series of manic, absurd sports commentaries, and was thus the logical choice to narrate the 1945 Disney animated short Hockey Homicide. Upon joining Jones and his musical pranksters the City Slickers in 1946, Weaver specialized in horse and auto racing routines, delivering rapid-fire spoonerisms that galvanized such fan-favorite routines as "The Man on the Flying Trapeze," "The William Tell Overture," and "Dance of the Hours." Weaver also co-starred from 1947 to 1949 on The Spike Jones Radio Show, there honing his popular horse character Feetlebaum. However, his relentlessly cornball material was best enjoyed in small doses, and Jones used him sparingly. Moreover, Weaver suffered from alcoholism, and after he took a live television routine too far, Jones let him go in 1951, although he returned to the fold often in the years leading up to the bandleader's 1965 death.

Despite the terms of his exit from Jones' show, Weaver was awarded his own summer replacement series in 1951. The Doodles Weaver Show aired for three months on NBC, the television network headed by the comedian's brother Pat. The series was refreshingly high-concept. Weaver is told to produce his own variety program, but given only costumes and sets from other NBC series currently on hiatus. But ratings were poor, and after the show's cancellation he joined the cast of The Horace Heidt Show. He also hosted Doodles' Club House, a local children's program produced for the Los Angeles market, and in 1956 starred in A Day with Doodles, a collection of six-minute silent comedies syndicated to other local kids' shows as an alternative to cartoons. By the late '50s, Weaver's drinking problem made his career and personal life shambles, and when he appeared as a contestant on Groucho Marx's hit quiz show You Bet Your Life, he admitted he hadn't worked in three years. During the 1960s, he scored a handful of television guest roles, most notably appearing as "Crier Tuck" on two episodes of the smash Batman. Near the end of the decade, Weaver also cut a comedy LP, Feetlebaum Returns, for the tiny Fremont label. Apart from a two-episode guest appearance on Starsky and Hutch and a clutch of small film roles, the 1970s were no less unkind to Weaver, and he committed suicide at his L.A. home on January 17, 1983. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Actor: Doodles Weaver
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  • Born: May 11, 1912 in Los Angeles, California
  • Died: Jan 13, 1983 in Burbank, California
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '30s-'70s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Drama
  • Career Highlights: The Pied Piper of Hamelin, The Andy Griffith Show: Aunt Bee's Brief Encounter
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Pied Piper of Hamelin (1957)

Biography

Wacky comic actor Doodles Weaver started appearing in films in the late '30s, usually playing country-bumpkin bits. He rose to fame as a musician/comedian with the Spike Jones Orchestra, regaling audiences with his double-talk renditions of such tunes as "The Man on the Flying Trapeze" and "The Whiffenpoof Song." His most popular routine was his mile-a-minute parody of an overly excited sports announcer ("And the winnerrrrrrrr....Bei-del-baum!!!!). So valuable was Weaver to Jones' aggregation that Doodles was the only member of the group who was allowed to drink while on tour. This indulgence, alas, proved to be Weaver's undoing; though he'd scaled the heights as a radio and TV star in the 1940s and 1950s, Doodles had lost most of his comic expertise by the 1960s thanks to his fondness for the bottle. A bitter, broken man in his last years, Weaver died of an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound at the age of 71. Doodles Weaver was the brother of TV executive Sylvester "Pat" Weaver, and the uncle of actress Sigourney Weaver. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Doodles Weaver
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Doodles Weaver

Doodles Weaver on The Andy Griffith Show
Born Winstead Sheffield Weaver
May 11, 1911(1911-05-11)
Los Angeles, California, United States
Died January 17, 1983 (aged 71)
Los Angeles, California, United States
Other name(s) Doodles Win Weaver
Winstead Weaver

Winstead Sheffield "Doodles" Weaver (May 11, 1911 – January 17, 1983) was an American comedian on radio and television. He was the brother of NBC-TV executive Sylvester "Pat" Weaver and the uncle of actress Sigourney Weaver.

Contents

Biography

Born in Los Angeles, Weaver attended Stanford University, where he was a contributor to the Stanford Chaparral humor magazine. After he signed on as a member of Spike Jones's band, the City Slickers, in 1946, he was heard on Jones's 1947-49 radio shows. He toured the country with the Spike Jones Music Depreciation Revue until 1951. The radio programs were often broadcast from cities where the Revue was staged.[1]

His satire of horse race announcers (William Tell Overture) received continual airplay ("It's Girdle in the stretch! Locomotive is on the rail! Apartment House is second with plenty of room! It's Cabbage by a head!"), segueing into an impression of the gravelly-voiced Clem McCarthy, who forgets whether he's covering a horse race or a boxing match. The race features an apparent nag called "Feetlebaum", who begins at long odds, runs almost the entire race a distant last—and yet suddenly emerges as the winner. Weaver also portrayed a character in the Jones troupe called Professor Feetlebaum. Part of the Professor's schtick was mixing up words and sentences in various songs and recitations, as if he were suffering from myopia and/or dyslexia.

Suicide

He committed suicide on January 17, 1983, shooting himself with a gun.[2] Rudy Vallee delivered the eulogy.

Madness

Weaver was a contributor to the early Mad, as described by Time's Richard Corliss:

Among the funny stuff: Doodles Weaver's strict copyediting of the Gettysburg Address, advising Lincoln to change "fourscore and seven" to eighty-seven ("Be specific"), noting that there are six "dedicates" ("Study your Roget"), wondering if "proposition" isn't misspelled and, finally exasperated, urging the writer to omit "of the people, by the people, and for the people" as "superfluous." [3]

Films and TV

Appearing on The Colgate Comedy Hour, Weaver did an Ajax cleanser commercial with a pig, and the audience reaction prompted the network to give him his own series. In 1951, The Doodles Weaver Show was NBC's summer replacement for Sid Caesar's Your Show of Shows, telecast from June to September with Weaver, his wife Lois, vocalist Marion Colby and the comedy team of Dick Dana and Peanuts Mann. The show's premise involved Doodles dealing with an assignment to stage a no-budget television series using only the discarded costumes, sets and props left behind by more popular network TV shows off for the summer.[4]

He also hosted several children's television shows. In 1965, he starred in A Day with Doodles, a series of six-minute shorts sold as alternative fare to cartoons for locally hosted kiddie television programs. Each episode featured Weaver in a first-person plural adventure (e.g., "Today we are a movie actor"), portraying himself and, behind false mustaches and costume hats, all the other characters in slapstick comedy situations with a voiceover narration and minimal sets.[4] The ending credits would invariably list "Doodles .... Doodles Weaver" and "Everybody Else .... Doodles Weaver".

He portrayed eccentric characters in guest appearances on such TV shows as Batman (where he played The Archer's henchman Crier Tuck), Land of the Giants, Dragnet 1967 and The Monkees. He appeared in more than 90 films, including The Great Imposter (1961), Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds (1963) as man helping the Tippi Hedren character with her rental boat, and Jerry Lewis' The Nutty Professor (1963) and a quick cameo in the 1963 blockbuster It's A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World. His last movie was Under the Rainbow (1981).

In 1966, Weaver recorded a novelty version of "Eleanor Rigby" — singing, mixing up the words, insulting and interrupting, while playing the piano, injuring his hand and getting booed while his doodle hurt.

Weaver's book, Golden Spike, remains unpublished.[5]

The four DVD collector's boxed set, Spike Jones: The Legend, was released October 30, 2007. It features Weaver's appearances on 1951-52 Spike Jones TV specials.[6]

Legacy

Doodles' horse race number has been quoted and parodied by many performers over the years.

  • A children's board game called "Homestrech" featured horses named Cabbage, Banana, Girdle and the misspelled/simplified "Beetle Bohm". The commercial was a direct lift of Weaver's number, with Cabbage "leading by a head", and Beetle Bohm eventually winning the race.

Quotations

  • "On the radio this year I hope to score / With some funny jokes you've never heard before / I resolve not to tell a corny joke / [phone rings] Hello, what's that? The church burned down? Holy smoke!" (From "Happy New Year," available on various Christmas novelty CDs)
  • "A man came up to me today and said, 'Doodles, your hair is getting thin," and I said, "Well, who wants fat hair"?" (From "The Man on the Flying Trapeze" on the CD The Best of Spike Jones, RCA, 1967. The antics of Doodles and "Feitlebaum" are also to be found on this Best of... album.)
  • "(A man said) 'Doodles... did you put the cat out?' I said, 'I didn't know he was on fire.'" (From "the man on the flying Trapeze").
  • (In a motor race at Indianapolis): "Every eye is glued onto that car. It looks very funny with all those eyes glued on it." (From "Dance of the Hours," ibid).
  • "You dig sixteen tons and what do you get...FILTHY!" (from "Elanor Rigby")

References

  1. ^ Dunning, John (1998). On The Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio. New York: Oxford University Press, 1998. ISBN 0-19-507678-8.
  2. ^ "Doodles Weaver, 71". New York Times. 1983-01-18. http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F40A14FC3A5C0C7B8DDDA80894DB484D81. Retrieved 2008-06-26. "Doodles Weaver, a rubber-faced comedian and musician who helped pioneer improvisational television comedy with his show in 1951, has died of what the police believed were self-inflicted gunshot wounds. He was 71 years old. Mr. Weaver also pioneered comedy recordings in the 50's." 
  3. ^ Corliss, Richard. "That Old Feeling: Hail, Harvey!" Time, May 5, 2004.
  4. ^ a b TV Party: Lost Kids Shows
  5. ^ Doodles Weaver at the Internet Movie Database
  6. ^ Amazon

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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 "Doodles Weaver" Read more