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| Paul Lynde Biography and Filmography |
Paul Lynde
Birthday: June 13, 1926
Birth Place: Mount Vernon, Ohio, USA
Height: 5' 1"
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Below
is a complete filmography (list of movies he's appeared in)
for Paul Lynde.
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We'd also be interested in any trivia or other information you have. |
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| Biography |
Biting, sarcastic comic actor Paul Lynde made his Broadway debut in Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1952, which was transferred to film virtually intact in 1953. Far heavier than most of his fans remember him (he tipped the scales at 260 pounds), Lynde scored with a "sick" monologue in which he described the various injuries that had befallen him. The undercurrent of pain inherent in his comedy has been attributed by some observers to Lynde's lifelong insecurities, many of these stemming from the time when his father, mother, and favorite brother all died within a three-month period. By the time Lynde was cast as the long-suffering father in the 1961 Broadway play Bye Bye Birdie, he had slimmed down considerably and his comic gifts had sharpened to a fine point. Beginning with the 1963 Disney film Son of Flubber, Lynde played a series of movie character parts in which he made snide, cynical comments about everyone and everything. Funny in small doses, Lynde's screen character was a bit too much to take on an extended basis, though he was very funny in the recurring character of Uncle Arthur on the '60s TV sitcom Bewitched, and, after several busted pilots, managed to survive a full season with The Paul Lynde Show in 1972. He also provided a number of cartoon voices, notably the villainous Sylvester Sneakley on Hanna-Barbera's Saturday morning opus The Perils of Penelope Pitstop (1969). During the late '70s, Lynde cultivated a fan following for his wisecracking appearances as the "center square" on the TV celebrity game show The Hollywood Squares. He died in 1982 at the age of 55. |
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| Filmography |
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| Trivia |
- Attended Northwestern University (Evanston, IL).
- Interred at Amity Cemetery in Amity, Ohio.
- Posthumously "outed" by Boze Hadleigh, who has written extensively about previously closeted Hollywood actors/actresses.
- The coroner who examined his body said he had the heart of an eighty-eight year old man.
- Told his agent shortly before his death that he had given up cigarettes and alcohol.
- Long-time "center square" and court jester in residence on the original "Hollywood Squares", Paul Lynde's quips on that show are still quoted, and laughed at, to this day.
- A fan once set up a museum full of Paul Lynde memorabilia in his home town on Mount Vernon, Ohio
- His older brother Cordon died in World War 2
- In 1965, his longtime companion, John, accidentally fell to his death out of Lynde's hotel room window. They are buried next to each other in Amity Cemetary in Ohio.
- Lynde left Hollywood Squares in 1979, in a dispute over his salary. When tabloids ran stories claiming he had been fired for his drinking as well as on-set problems, he sued them for libel, seeking million in damages.
- Explained his lifelong bachelorhood to fans (in the days before "coming out") by telling them his high-school sweetheart had broken his heart, and he was still too hurt to give other women a chance.
- His classmates at Northwestern University included Cloris Leachman and Charlton Heston.
- He had a weight problem that he fought to control his entire life.
- When he first went to New York, he lived in an apartment building that housed many other struggling actors. The building had communal kitchens, kitchens shared by all the tenants of a floor. One of the other actors in the building claimed that Lynde used to steal his food from the refrigerator. That actor was a young Marlon Brando.
- The song he sang about appearing on "The Ed Sullivan Show" in the musical play "Bye Bye, Birdie" he got to sing on "The Ed Sullivan Show"!
- In "Center Square: The Paul Lynde Story," biographers Steve Wilson and Joe Florenski lay to rest rumors that there was something odd about Lynde's death at the age of 55. Dismissing such rumors that the comedian was murdered by a hustler who robbed Lynde's house and left him dead and naked, the authors say that Lynde did die of a heart attack, as the coroner's report contended he did. Lynde expired at almost the same age as his father, who also died from a heart attack. The authors express surprise that Lynde didn't have a heart attack sooner, what with his transgressive lifestyle. Lynde was heavily into alcohol, and also used drugs. He claimed to have quit these habits cold-turkey not long before his death, having been transformed by a personal event that he never revealed.
- The sign proclaiming Mount Vernon, Ohio, as the birthplace of Paul Lynde was recently changed to read: "Home of Daniel Decatur Emmett, Author of [the song] 'Dixie.'"
- Lynde and his friend, Bing Davidson were staying at the Drake hotel in San Francisco, California on July 17, 1965. The two went out the next day for a good time and got very drunk. Davidson decided to show Lynde a trick and dangled off the hotel balcony by his fingers. He was slipping and Paul desperately tried to help him in but Davidson fell to his death.
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