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Buddy hackett
Buddy hackett











buddy hackett
  1. #Buddy hackett movie#
  2. #Buddy hackett series#
  3. #Buddy hackett tv#
buddy hackett buddy hackett

"I waited to tie it in with something worthy, the re-release of 'Little Mermaid' in digital sound. "I got offered this a long time ago," he said. He used the occasion to joke about the mercenary side of show business. In 1995, to help promote the release of "The Little Mermaid" on DVD, Hackett was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

buddy hackett

Hackett also co-starred with Dean Jones in Disney's 1968 hit "The Love Bug." More recently, audiences knew him as the voice of Scuttle in the Disney animated feature "The Little Mermaid." He had Buddy play Cyrano (de Bergerac) and he was very good."

#Buddy hackett tv#

"Stanley took three of the 'Mad World' comics and did a TV show where he directed them in serious drama. "He was very good in 'God's Little Acre,'" she said.

#Buddy hackett movie#

Hackett played Marcellus Washburn in the Oscar-nominated 1962 movie musical "The Music Man." The following year, he joined Milton Berle, Sid Caesar and Spencer Tracy in an all-star lineup for Stanley Kramer's comedy "It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World." Kramer's widow, Karen Sharpe Kramer, told United Press International that Hackett was a "really strong" actor. Hackett's movie resume included the 1961 comedy "All Hands on Deck" and the 1958 drama "God's Little Acre." Law," "The Love Boat," "Murder, She Wrote," "Quincy" and "The Rifleman." He also appeared frequently as a guest on top variety shows - including "The " Andy Williams Show" and "Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In."

#Buddy hackett series#

He guest-starred on dozens of hit TV series - including "Boy Meets World," "L.A. Combining manic energy with his short, round body, cross-eyed gaze and a tendency to speak out of the side of his mouth, he became a comedy icon through countless appearances on TV shows, including most of the latenight comedy-talk shows, where fans knew him simply as "Hackett." Hackett's look set him apart from other comedians. Hackett replaced Art Carney as a member of the cast of "The Jackie Gleason Show" in 1957. Carol Burnett co-starred as Stanley's girlfriend. In 1956, he starred in the TV series "Stanley," as the operator of a newsstand at an upscale New York hotel. Eventually he started working in Broadway musicals - including "Lunatics and Lovers" in 1954. While Hackett is certainly not an old man in the episode, without knowing everyone’s true ages, it’s easy to think he could be the patriarch of this raucous western clan.After a three-year stretch in the Army in the 1940s, Hackett mainly worked at clubs in New York. Though a little unorthodox, the casting works thanks to the acting of all three. Hackett was only 35! Warren Oates, who played second son Jud Malakie, was 31. He was born in 1920, making him 39 when the episode aired. In fact, one was even four years older!Ĭharacter actor Christopher Dark, who was in everything from My Three Sons to Cannon, played oldest son Ben Malakie. The “boys” he was supposed to be the father of were actually around his same age. Perhaps the facial hair is what inspired Hackett’s somewhat unusual casting. Hackett goes against type as the seemingly nice but ultimately ruthless Malakie, sporting a beard and an attitude about as different from his usual goofball characters as could be. Hackett’s character, Daniel Malakie, breaks his two surviving sons out of jail and vows to get revenge against Lucas. When Marshal Torrance and Lucas McCain arrive to restore order, one of the cowboys accidentally shoots his brother and blames it on Lucas. In “Bloodlines,” Hackett played the father of three rowdy young men who trash the North Fork saloon. One such part was in a 1959 episode of The Rifleman, his first of two appearances on the classic western. Comedian Buddy Hackett, hilarious star of favorites like It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World and The Music Man, never shied away from the occasional dramatic role.













Buddy hackett