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| Buddy Ebsen Biography and Filmography |
Buddy Ebsen
Birthday: April 2, 1908
Birth Place: Belleville, Illinois, USA
Height: 6' 3"
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Below
is a complete filmography (list of movies he's appeared in)
for Buddy Ebsen.
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| Biography |
A dancer from childhood, Buddy Ebsen headlined in vaudeville in an act with his sister Velma. In 1935, Ebsen was signed by MGM as a specialty performer in The Broadway Melody of 1936, wherein he was shown to good advantage in several solos. He worked in a number of subsequent musicals, including Shirley Temple's Captain January (1936), teaming with Shirley for the delightful number "At the Codfish Ball." MGM assigned Ebsen to the role of the Scarecrow in 1939's The Wizard of Oz, but Ray Bolger, who'd been cast as the Tin Man, talked Ebsen into switching roles. The move proved to be Ebsen's undoing; he found that he was allergic to the silver makeup required for the Tin Man, fell ill, and was forced to bow out of the film, to be replaced by Jack Haley (however, Ebsen's voice can still be heard in the reprises of "We're Off to See the Wizard").Ebsen then returned to the stage, taking time out to provide the dancing model for a electronically operated wooden marionette which later was used at Disneyland. In 1950 Ebsen returned to films as comical sidekick to Rex Allen, gradually working his way into good character parts in "A" pictures like Night People (1955). Walt Disney, who'd remembered Ebsen from the dancing marionette, offered the actor the lead in his 1954 three-part TV production of Davy Crockett, but at the last moment engaged Fess Parker as Davy and recast Buddy as Crockett's pal George Russel. Ebsen continued to pop up in films like 1961's Breakfast at Tiffany's (as Audrey Hepburn's abandoned hometown husband), and in TV westerns, where he often cast his image to the winds by playing cold-blooded murderers. Comfortably wealthy in 1962 thanks to his film work and wise business investments, Ebsen added to his riches by signing on to play Jed Clampett in the TV sitcom The Beverly Hillbillies, which ran for nine years to excellent ratings. A millionaire several times over, Ebsen planned to ease off after Hillbillies, but in 1972 he was back in TV in the title role of Barnaby Jones. Few observers gave this easygoing detective series much of a chance, but they weren't counting on Ebsen's built-in popularity; Barnaby Jones lasted until 1980. The actor now confined himself to special events appearances and occasional guest-star roles, though he did play the recurring part of Lee Horsley's uncle in the final season of the TV mystery show Matt Houston (1983-85). One of Buddy Ebsen's final roles was in the 1993 theatrical film version of The Beverly Hillbillies — not as Jed Clampett but in a cameo as Barnaby Jones! |
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| Filmography |
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| Trivia |
- First wife, Ruth, was Walter Winchell's original Girl Friday.
- Father of Bonnie Ebsen, Kiki Ebsen and Alix Ebsen.
- One chorus of "We're Off to See the Wizard" in The Wizard of Oz (1939) and its soundtrack album retain Ebsen's original vocals as the Tin Man, recorded before he was forced to leave the production due to health problems.
- In the 1930s, Disney animators filmed him dancing in front of a grid to "choreograph" Mickey Mouse's dance steps in the "Silly Symphony" cartoons.
- Attended Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida shortly before starting his film career.
- Had surgery on June 10, 1998 to repair an aortic valve in his heart.
- Has become a best-selling author at the age of 93. [2001]
- Originally cast as the Tin Man in The Wizard of Oz (1939), Buddy was hospitalized as a result of inhaling aluminium powder used as part of his make-up. Because of the prolonged hospitalization, he was replaced by Jack Haley (whose make-up used pre-mixed aluminium dust), and his scenes were re-shot using Haley. Footage of Ebsen as the Tin Man still exists, and was included as an extra with the U.S. 50th anniversary video release of The Wizard of Oz (1939).
- An outspoken Republican, he helped defeat Nancy Kulp, his co-star in "The Beverly Hillbillies" (1962), in her congressional bid, in which she ran as a Democrat. Ebsen made a radio ad that accused Kulp of being too "liberal" and not good for the district. The two did not speak for years after the incident.
- After seeing Ebsen in Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961), the creator of "The Beverly Hillbillies" (1962) wanted him to play family patriarch Jed Clampett. At the time, Ebsen was thinking of retiring, but the producers sent him a copy of the script, and he changed his mind.
- In 1938 MGM offered him a seven-year contract, starting at ,000 a week but requiring him to give the studio absolute control over his career. He rejected it. MGM blackballed him and his film career went into eclipse for nearly 20 years, until Walt Disney hired him to play Georgie Russel, Davy Crockett's sidekick, in Davy Crockett, King of the Wild Frontier (1954).
- Wanted to become a doctor, he took premedical courses at Rollins College and the University of Florida, but his mother pushed him into showbusiness.
- Director Norman Foster first recommended Ebsen to Walt Disney to play Davy Crockett, and Disney was "half sold" on the idea. Then he saw Fess Parker in the sci-fi film Them! (1954) and cast the strapping actor as the famed frontiersman. Ebsen was crestfallen because he knew how big the picture would be. The next day the studio signed Ebsen on as Crockett's weatherbeaten sidekick, Georgie Russel. The part helped to turn his career around and was instrumental in Ebsen's getting the part of the equally equally grizzled and popular Jed Clampett character.
- His father owned a dance studio, and when Ebsen was a young boy insisted that he take dance lessons.
- One of his last roles was a gag cameo in The Beverly Hillbillies (1993) in which Jim Varney played Jed. Ebsen showed up as Barnaby Jones.
- Wrote a half dozen plays, five of which were produced, including a farce called "Honest John" in 1948 and "Champagne General" in 1973, a Civil War story. Also a part-time songwriter, he became a newly-published author of a romantic novel at the age of 93, entitled "Kelly's Quest ."
- Was initiated into DeMolay at the John M. Cheney Chapter in Orlando Florida, in 1926. DeMolay is a Masonic youth organization for young men between 12 and 21.
- Was inducted into the DeMolay Hall of Fame on June 21st, 1996.
- Is the last survivor of 'The Wizard of Oz'
- Brother of Vilma Ebsen
- Appeared in three musical film extravaganzas starring tap great Eleanor Powell.
- Taught Judy Garland the shim-sham shimmy while he was at MGM.
- In the last two years of his life, he recorded his first CD in which he sang some of his own songs.
- Set up the Ebsen School of Dance in Pacific Palisades, California. When Buddy was young, his father, a physical fitness advocate, taught dance in West Palm Beach, Floria. This is where Buddy and younger sister Vilma learned their craft and appeared in local and school productions.
- Had four sisters - Helga, Norma, Vilma and Leslie. He was the middle child.
- He and sister Vilma Ebsen performed in vaudeville doing variations on the same theme -- with Vilma playing a dancing instructor who teaches the seemingly uncoordinated country doofas Buddy how to dance. A vaudeville showstopper in such shows as "Whoopee!," "Flying Colors" and "The Ziegfeld Follies of 1934," they were known for a time as "The Baby Astaires."
- His film career was ruined by Louis B. Mayer when Ebsen refused to sign an MGM contract that would "own" him to the studio.
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