Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Paul Winchell was quite famous, when I was a kid. He was on variety shows such as Laugh-In, Ed Sullivan etc. with his puppet Jerry Mahoney all the time.

 

A great cartoon voice, much like Mel Blanc. RIP.

Posted

They say the Tigger voice guy was a pretty prolific inventor, too. Apparently had a patent on an early artificial heart. WTF?

Posted

He had a TV show on Saturday mornings in the mid 1950's. He was very funny and very hip for the time. He had "Jerry Mahoney'' & Knucklehaed Smif as his main dummy characters, and he didn't move his lips! I had no idea he later worked for Disney.

Posted

he played the hippie director Skip Farnum in the Brady Bunch episode where he "discovers" the Bradys in a supermarket parking lot and decides to use them in a laundry detergent commercial

Posted

man, this guy was all over the 70's Saturday morning cartoon map. I wonder if him and Scatman Crothers hung out

Posted

Wow, very sad news indeed.

 

Paul Winchell did so many voices on cartoons, but will always be best remembered as Tigger.

 

John Fiedler of course is best known for the voice Piglet, but I will also remember his roles in 12 Angry Men & The Odd Couple.

Posted
Wow, very sad news indeed.

 

Paul Winchell did so many voices on cartoons, but will always be best remembered as Tigger.

 

John Fiedler of course is best known for the voice Piglet, but I will also remember his roles in 12 Angry Men & The Odd Couple.

369396[/snapback]

 

Feidler also was one of the characters in the group sessions on the Bob Newhart show.

Posted
What misguided priorities this country has.

 

Winchell patents the artificial heart yet becomes rich and famous being a dummy operator.

369433[/snapback]

 

And Hedy Lamarr...

 

"Hedwig Keisler Markey, a.k.a. glamorous Hollywood actress Hedy Lamarr, (not to be confused with Hedley Lamarr of Blazing Saddles fame), made a single but significant engineering contribution to today's microwave wireless networks. At her Austrian husband Fritz Mandl's armament company, she observed that radio-guided torpedoes were susceptible to jamming. Leaving der Vaterland in order to avoid personal participation in the Holocaust, she later obtained a secret U.S. patent on the idea of frequency hopping, shared with artist George Antheil. Their scheme used a mechanical device similar to the guts of a player piano to modulate the RF signal. Stonewalled by the good-old-boys of the Pentagon, Ms. Keisler's invention was not put to use by the military until the mid 1950s, after the patent expired. However, her work is regarded as the basis for all spread-spectrum techniques, including those used in today's wireless networks."

Posted
Feidler also was one of the characters in the group sessions on the Bob Newhart show.

369431[/snapback]

 

And on countless sitcoms and TV shows. He was the villan in the Star Trek episode "Wolf in the Fold" where Scotty was accused of murder.

×
×
  • Create New...