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Actor:

Wally Cox

  • Born: Dec 06, 1924 in Detroit, Michigan
  • Died: Feb 15, 1973 in Los Angeles, California
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '50s-'70s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Western
  • Career Highlights: Ironside, The Bedford Incident, The Barefoot Executive
  • First Major Screen Credit: Mr. Peepers: Season 02 (1953)

Biography

American actor Wally Cox looked and played the role of the bespectacled, introverted intellectual both before the cameras and in life. Fascinated with all things scientific and devoted to the study of insects, Cox seemed as unlikely a candidate for major stardom as he was an improbable roommate for Marlon Brando. In fact, he was both. While building his reputation in small clubs as a monologist, Cox shared quarters with Brando, his best friend since childhood. Cox didn't really tell jokes in his club act; he would relate the offbeat exploits of his boyhood pal Dufo or do a dead-on imitation of his humorless, doltish Army drill sergeant; these were characterizations rather than routines, a gentler version of the sort of work done years later by Whoopi Goldberg. Playing occasional small parts on TV (he appeared very briefly as a baker in the 1952 film The Sniper, minus his familiar eyeglasses), Cox was tapped by producer Fred Coe to appear in a 1952 summer-replacement comedy series on NBC, Mr. Peepers, where he played Robinson Peepers, the shy, knowledgeable high school teacher at Jefferson High. Mr. Peepers garnered excellent ratings and won numerous awards, including an Emmy for Cox. As big a star as he would ever be, Cox was rushed into numerous nightclub engagements, which unfortunately fell flat because of inappropriate bookings and because audiences didn't want to see Cox as anyone other than Peepers. A 1955 sitcom, The Adventures of Hiram Holliday, starred Wally as an unlikely globe-trotting adventurer; alas, it was scheduled directly opposite ABC's powerhouse Disneyland. Cox would spend most of the rest of his career playing variations of Peepers on other star's sitcoms and variety series, occasionally breaking the mold by playing a murderer or bon vivant. He also tried his hand as a playwright, a field in which he displayed considerable skill. Once again under contract to NBC in the mid '60s, Cox became a regular on the comedy quiz show Hollywood Squares, where he adopted the image of a bored know-it-all. It is this Wally Cox that most viewers remember, not the brilliant comic actor who convinced his '50s fans that he was Mr. Peepers, not just a man playing a part. Wally Cox died of a sudden heart attack in 1973; he was cremated, and his ashes were discreetly scattered at an undisclosed spot (and in defiance of municipal laws) by his old friend and ex-roommate Marlon Brando. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

 
 
Wikipedia: Wally Cox
Wallace Cox
Wcox.jpg
Birth name Wallace Maynard Cox
Born December 6, 1924
Detroit, Michigan
Died February 15, 1973
Years active 1948 - 1973

Wallace Maynard Cox (December 6, 1924February 15, 1973) was a television and motion picture actor.

Biography

Cox was born in Detroit, Michigan. He moved with his divorced mother, mystery author Eleanor Atkinson and a younger sister to Evanston, Illinois, when he was about 10, where he met and became close friends with another neighborhood child, Marlon Brando. Cox's family moved fairly frequently, eventually to Chicago, then New York City, then back to Detroit where he graduated from Denby High School.

During World War II he and his family returned to New York City, where Cox attended CCNY, had four months of Army service, and then attended New York University. He supported his invalid mother and sister by making and selling jewelry, in a small shop, and at parties — where he started doing comedy monologues for the guests, which were well-received enough to lead to regular performances at nightclubs such as the Village Vanguard, beginning in December of 1948. At one point, he became the roommate of his boyhood friend, Marlon Brando. Brando encouraged him to study acting with Stella Adler. Cox and Brando remained very close friends for the rest of Cox's life, and Brando is reported [1] to have kept Cox's ashes in his bedroom and conversed with them nightly.

Cox appeared in Broadway musical reviews, night clubs, and early TV comedy-variety programs in the period 1949–1951, creating a huge impact with a starring role as a well-meaning but ineffective policeman on Philco Television Playhouse in 1951. Producer Fred Coe approached Cox about a starring role in a proposed live TV sitcom, Mr. Peepers, which he accepted. Peepers ran on NBC for three years and made Cox a household name in the US.

Other notable roles were as the eponymous hero of The Adventures of Hiram Holliday (1956-1957), based on a series of short stories of Paul Gallico, collected into a book of the same name; a regular occupant of the upper left square on the television game show Hollywood Squares (1966-1973); and the voice of the animated cartoon character Underdog, (1964-1973). He also guested on the game show What's My Line and on the pilot of Mission: Impossible (1966). He also made several appearances on Here's Lucy as well as The Beverly Hillbillies and evening talk shows.

He played character roles in more than 20 motion pictures and worked frequently in guest-star roles in a large number of TV drama, comedy and variety series in the 1960s and early 1970s. Among these was a role as a down-on-his-luck prospector seeking a better life for his family in an episode of Alias Smith and Jones, the western comedy. His television and screen persona was that of a shy, timid but kind man who wore thick eyeglasses and spoke in a pedantic, high-pitched voice.

Cox published a number of books, including Mr. Peepers (1955), a novel created by adapting several scripts from the TV series; My Life as a Small Boy, an idealized depiction of his childhood (1961); a parody and update of Horatio Alger in Ralph Makes Good (1966), which was probably originally a screen treatment for an unmade film intended to star Cox; and a children's book, The Tenth Life of Osiris Oakes (1972). Cox also wrote and performed songs, and even had a yodeling routine.

Cox protested in vain to reporters and interviewers over the years that he was nothing like Peepers; he was physically quite strong, hiked and rode a motorcycle and especially in his later years sometimes displayed a sarcastic and peevish personality. In a 1975 "Tonite Show" appearance, actor Robert Blake spoke of how much he missed Cox, who was described as being adventuresome and athletic.

Cox died of a heart attack, rumored (but not proven) to have been brought on by a sleeping pill overdose, in Los Angeles at the age of 48. Eventually his ashes were mingled with those of Brando and another friend and scattered in Death Valley, California.

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