- Jackie Gleason
Infobox actor
imagesize = 200px
caption = Gleason as Minnesota Fats in "The Hustler" (1961).
birthname = Herbert Walton Gleason, Jr.
birthdate = birth date|1916|02|26
birthplace =Bushwick, Brooklyn ,New York
deathdate = death date and age|1987|6|24|1916|2|26
deathplace =Lauderhill, Florida
yearsactive = 1941–1986
spouse = Genevieve Halford
(1936–1970)
Beverly McKittrick (1970–1975)
Marilyn Taylor (1975–1987)
tonyawards = Best Leading Actor in a Musical
1960 "Take Me Along "
awards = NBR Award for Best Supporting Actor
1961 "The Hustler"Herbert Walton Gleason, Jr. , baptized John Herbert "Jackie" Gleason (
February 26 ,1916 –June 24 ,1987 ) was an Americancomedian ,actor andmusician .One of the most popular stars of early
television , Gleason was respected for both comedic and dramatic roles. However, his major legacy was his brash visual and verbal comedy styling, especially as delivered by the characterRalph Kramden on the pioneering sitcom "The Honeymooners ".Biography
The early years
Gleason was born while his parents lived at 364 Chauncey Street in
Bushwick, Brooklyn ,New York , the son of Mae, a subway change-booth attendant, and Herb Gleason, an insurance auditor. [ [http://www.filmreference.com/film/85/Jackie-Gleason.html Jackie Gleason Biography (1916-1987) ] ] One of two sons of a father from Ireland who abandoned the family (his brother died when Jackie was a boy), Gleason was raised by a loving, but troubled, overworked Irish mother who died when he was 19. (Gleason sometimes pushed the date of death up three years to 16; biographerWilliam A. Henry III wrote of Gleason's tendency to both exaggerate and obscure his hardscrabble childhood.) He attended but did not graduate from Bushwick High School. His first recognition as an entertainer came on Broadway, when he appeared in "Follow the Girls". In his 1985 appearance on the "Tonight Show", Gleason toldJohnny Carson that he had played pool frequently, since childhood; he later utilized his experiences when he appeared in the film "The Hustler " asMinnesota Fats .By the 1940s, Gleason was in the movies, first at
Warner Brothers as "Jackie C. Gleason" in such films as "Navy Blues" withAnn Sheridan andMartha Raye and "All Through the Night" withHumphrey Bogart ; then atColumbia Pictures for the B military comedy "Tramp, Tramp, Tramp"; and finally, atTwentieth Century-Fox (Gleason played theGlenn Miller band's bassist in "Orchestra Wives").But Gleason—whom
Orson Welles in due course tagged "The Great One"—didn't make a strong impression in Hollywood at first. At the same time, he developed a well-received nightclub act that included both comedy and music. He also became somewhat known for hosting all-night parties—swapping stories while flanked by attractive women—at his hotel suite. "Anyone who knew Jackie Gleason in the 1940s," wroteCBS historian Robert Metz, "would tell you The Fat Man would never make it. His pals at Lindy's watched him spend money as fast as he soaked up the booze." Metz also noted the legend that Gleason one night hired a full orchestra just to keep him company. Henry has written that Gleason had a reputation as a paradox even then: a man who could be excessively generous one moment and excessively cruel the next.Enter television
Gleason's first big break arrived in 1949, when he landed the role of blunt but softhearted aircraft worker Chester A. Riley for the first television version of the radio hit "
The Life of Riley ". (William Bendix originated the role on radio, but was unable to take the television role at first because of film commitments.) The show received modest ratings but positive reviews; however, Gleason, according to Metz, left the show, thinking he could do better things."The Life of Riley" finally became a television hit in the early 1950s with William Bendix in the role he popularized on radio; this version has been widely rebroadcast. A film-originated program, the original Gleason version survives, but episodes have rarely been aired on cable television. By that time, however, Gleason's nightclub act began receiving attention from
New York City 's inner circle and the smallDuMont Television Network ."And awaaay we go!"
Gleason was hired to host DuMont's "
Cavalcade of Stars " variety hour in 1950, balancing glitzy entertainment with his comic versatility. He framed the show with splashy dance numbers, developed sketch characters he would refine over the next decade, and became enough of a presence that CBS wooed and won him over to their network in 1952 (his show was one of DuMont's few major hits).Renamed "
The Jackie Gleason Show ", it soon became the country's second-highest-rated television show. Gleason amplified the show with even splashier opening dance numbers, inspired byBusby Berkeley screen dance routines and featuring the precision-choreographed June Taylor Dancers . Following the dance performance, he did an opening monologue. Then, accompanied by "a little travelin' music" ("That's A-Plenty," a Dixieland chestnut from 1914), he would shuffle toward the wing, clapping his hands inversely and hollering, "And awaaay we go!" The phrase became one of his trademarks and a national catchphrase. Theona Bryant, former Powers Model , became Gleason's "And awaaay we go," girl logo opening to sold out audiences. Ray Bloch was Gleason's first music director, followed bySammy Spear , who stayed with Gleason through the 1960s; Gleason often kidded both men during his opening monologues.Gleason continued developing comic characters, including Reginald Van Gleason III, the top-hatted millionaire with a taste for both the good life ("Ummmmmmm-"boy!" That's "good" booze!") and the wild invention or fantasy; boisterous, boorish Rudy the Repairman; gregarious Joe the Bartender, with friendly words for the never-seen Mr. Dennehy, who always entered his bar first; and, especially, the Poor Soul, a silent character who could and often did come to grief in the least expected places or show sweet gratitude at things no more complicated than being allowed to share a newspaper on a subway. He also used pantomime in portraying the bumbling Rum Dum, a character with a brush-like mustache who often stumbled around as if he were drunk and confused.
A regular riot: The Honeymoon begins
By far his most popular character was blustery bus driver
Ralph Kramden , who lived with his tart but tenderhearted wife,Alice Kramden , in a two-room Brooklyn walkup, one floor below his best friend, sense-challenged New York City sewer worker Ed Norton ("The first time I took the test for the sewer, I flunked. I couldn't even float!") and his likewise tart wife, Trixie. Norton was portrayed from the start byArt Carney .Possibly inspired by another radio hit, "
The Bickersons ", and largely drawn from Gleason's harsh Brooklyn childhood ("Every neighborhood in Brooklyn had its Ralph Kramdens," he said years later), these sketches became known as "The Honeymooners" and customarily centered on Ralph's incessant get-rich-quick schemes, the tensions between his ambitiousness and Norton's scatterbrained aid and comfort, and the inevitable clash ("Bang! "Zoooooom!"; "One of these days... one of these days... "pow! Right in the kisser!"; "I'll give you the world of tomorrow, Alice—"you're goin' to the moon!") when sensible Alice tried pulling her husband's head back down from the clouds. However, in the later episodes, it was always clear that Kramden's threats were the bluffs of a blowhard; Alice never backed down, and invariably he would hug her at the end of the show, proclaiming, "Baby, you're the greatest!""The Honeymooners" first appeared on "
Cavalcade of Stars " on October 5, 1951, with Carney as Norton (a cop in the first sketch) and spirited character actressPert Kelton as Alice. Darker and fiercer than they later became withAudrey Meadows as Alice, the sketches proved popular with critics and viewers. As Kramden, Gleason played a frustrated bus driver with a battle-ax wife in harrowingly realistic arguments; when Meadows (who was 19 years younger than Kelton) took over the role after Kelton was blacklisted, the tone softened considerably. In fact, early sketches come as something of a shock to some modern critics.When Gleason moved to CBS, Kelton was not part of the move, since her name had turned up in "
Red Channels ", the book that listed and described reputed Communists and/or Communist sympathizers in television and radio. Gleason reluctantly let her leave the cast, with a cover story for the media that she had "heart trouble." He also turned down Audrey Meadows as Kelton's replacement, at least at first. Meadows wrote in her memoir that she slipped back to audition again and frumped herself up to convince Gleason that she could handle the role of a frustrated but loving working-class wife (although this story has been disputed repeatedly). Rounding out the cast with an understated but effective role,Joyce Randolph played Trixie Norton.Elaine Stritch had played the role as a tall and attractive blonde in the first sketch, but she was quickly replaced by the plainer-looking Randolph (some critics have speculated that Gleason didn't want Carney's character to have a more attractive wife). Randolph went on to make the character her own, just as Meadows did with Alice."The Honeymooners" sketches proved popular enough that Gleason gambled on making it a separate series entirely in 1955. These are the so-called Classic 39 episodes, although they only became "classic" years after they aired, since the show didn't draw strongly in the ratings at the time. But they were filmed with a new DuMont process,
Electronicam , which allowed live television to be preserved on high-quality film. That turned out to be the most prescient move the show made, since—a decade after they first aired—the half-hour "Honeymooners" in syndicated reruns started to build a loyal and growing audience that made the show a television icon. Its popularity was such that even today, a life-size statue of Jackie Gleason, in full uniform as bus driverRalph Kramden , stands outside thePort Authority Bus Terminal inNew York City .The mood musician
Throughout the 1950s and '60s, Gleason enjoyed a secondary music career, lending his name to a series of best-selling "
mood music " albums withjazz overtones forCapitol Records . Gleason felt there was a ready market for romantic instrumentals. He recalled seeingClark Gable play love scenes in movies, and the romance was, in his words, "magnified a thousand percent" by background music. Gleason reasoned, "If "Gable" needs music, a guy in Brooklyn must be "desperate!"Gleason could not read or write music in a conventional sense; he was said to have conceived melodies in his head and described them vocally to assistants. These included the well-remembered themes of both "The Jackie Gleason Show" ("Melancholy Serenade") and "The Honeymooners" ("You're My Greatest Love"). There has been some controversy over the years as to how much credit Gleason should have received for the finished products; Henry has written that beyond the possible conceptualizing of many of the songs, Gleason had no direct involvement (such as conducting) in the making of these recordings.
Red Nichols , a jazz great who had fallen into hard times and led one of the groups recorded, did not even get session-leader pay from Gleason.Some of that music turns up once in a while today. "It's Such a Happy Day," which often turned up as a theme behind numerous Gleason television sketches, was used as background music for a jaunty scene involving heart transplant recipient
Minnie Driver bicycling around her Chicago neighborhood in the 2000 romantic comedy "Return to Me ". "Melancholy Serenade" is used as the closing theme for the "Camelot " episode of "The Sopranos " (Episode 59, Season 5)."The American Scene Magazine"
Gleason restored his original variety hour—including "The Honeymooners"—in 1956, but abandoned the show in 1957, leaving weekly television for a year. He returned in 1958 with a half-hour show that featured
Buddy Hackett (Carney and Meadows were not part of this program). However, this version of the Gleason show did not catch on.His next foray into television was with a game show, "
You're in the Picture ", which survived its disastrous premiere episode only because of Gleason's now-legendary humorous on-the-air apology in the following week's time slot. ("It laid... the biggest... "bomb"!") For the rest of the scheduled run, the program became a talk show that was once again named "The Jackie Gleason Show".In 1962, he resurrected his variety show with a little more splashiness (the June Taylor Dancers' routines became more elaborately choreographed and costumed than before) and a new hook—a fictitious general-interest magazine through whose format Gleason trotted out his old characters in new scenarios. He also added another catchphrase to the American vernacular, first uttered in the 1962 film "
Papa's Delicate Condition ": "How sweet it is!""The Jackie Gleason Show: The American Scene Magazine" was a hit and continued in this format for four seasons. Each show began with Gleason delivering a monologue and commenting on the loud outfits of bandleader Sammy Spear. Then the "magazine" features would be trotted out, from Hollywood gossip (reported by comedienne Barbara Heller) to news flashes (played for laughs with a stock company of second bananas, chorus girls, and midgets). Comedienne
Alice Ghostley occasionally appeared as a downtrodden tenement resident, sitting on her front step and listening to boorish boyfriend Gleason for several minutes. After the boyfriend took his leave, the smitten Ghostley would exclaim, "I'm the luckiest girl in the world!" Veteran comics Johnny Morgan, Sid Fields, and Hank Ladd were occasionally seen opposite Gleason in comedy sketches.The final sketch was always set in Joe the Bartender's saloon, with Joe singing "My Gal Sal" and greeting his regular customer, the unseen Mr. Dennehy (actually the TV audience, with Gleason speaking to the camera), who was named after a neighbor who took Gleason in after he was orphaned. During the sketch, Joe the Bartender would tell Dennehy about an article he read in the fictitious "American Scene" magazine, holding a copy across the bar. It had two covers: one featured the New York skyline and the other palm trees (after the show was moved to Florida in 1964). Then, Joe would bring out
Frank Fontaine as Crazy Guggenheim, who would regale Joe with the latest adventures of his neighborhood pals and sometimes showed Joe his current "Top Cat " comic book. Joe usually asked Crazy to sing, almost always a sentimental ballad sung in a lilting baritone. (Fontaine had played the same sort of goofyBrooklynite character, then called "John L.C. Sivoney," on radio's "TheJack Benny Program"; his wider exposure on Gleason's show resulted in the release of his recordings of "old standards" on the ABC-Paramount record label.)Gleason also revived "The Honeymooners", first with
Sue Ane Langdon and then withSheila MacRae as Alice and withJane Kean as Trixie. By 1964, Gleason had moved the production fromNew York toMiami Beach , reportedly because he liked the year-round access to the golf course at the nearby Inverrary Country Club inLauderhill, Florida , where he built his final home. His closing line became, almost invariably, "As always, the Miami Beach audience is the greatest audience in the world!" In 1966, he finally abandoned the "American Scene Magazine" format and converted the show into a standard variety hour with guest performers.Gleason kicked off the 1966–67 season with new, color episodes of "The Honeymooners." Art Carney returned as Ed Norton, with Sheila MacRae as Alice and Jane Kean as Trixie. The stories were remakes of the 1950s "world tour" episodes, in which Kramden and Norton win a slogan contest and take their wives to international destinations. Each of the nine episodes was a full-scale musical comedy, with Gleason and company performing original songs by Lyn Duddy and Jerry Bresler. Occasionally, the Gleason hour would be devoted to musicals with a single theme (a college comedy, a political satire, etc.), with the stars abandoning their "Honeymooners" roles for different (and sometimes seriocomic) character roles.
This was the format of the show until its cancellation in 1970, except for the 1968–69 season, which had no hour-long "Honeymooners" episodes. In that season, "The Honeymooners"—as in the beginning—was presented only in short sketches.
At first, the musicals pushed Gleason back into the top five ratings, but it wasn't long before audiences began declining. The reasons varied, from MacRae and Kean being seen as subpar in relation to Audrey Meadows and Joyce Randolph (with opportunities for comparison heightened by the expanding syndication of the Classic 39) to increasing recycling of old "Honeymooners" plots into new musical settings. In the last original "Honeymooners" episode aired on
CBS , "Operation Protest," Ralph encounters the youth-protest movement of the late 1960s and early 1970s.According to Metz, Gleason, who had signed a deal in the 1950s that included a guaranteed $100,000 annual payment for 20 years even if he never went on the air, wanted "The Honeymooners" to be just a portion of his format, but CBS wanted another season of nothing but "The Honeymooners". The network had just canceled mainstay variety shows hosted by
Red Skelton andEd Sullivan because they had become too expensive to produce and attracted(in the executives' estimation) too old an audience. Gleason simply stopped doing the show by 1970 and finally left CBS when his contract expired. As Metz noted, Gleason was "anxious" to get a deal "more to his liking than another year of "The Honeymooners"."Dramatic Gleason
Gleason had a dramatic side that the comic pathos of the Poor Soul often hinted at. He earned acclaim for live television drama performances in "
The Laugh Maker " on CBS' "Studio One" (where he played a semiautobiographical role as fictional TV comedian Jerry Giles) and inWilliam Saroyan 's "The Time of Your Life ", also forCBS as an episode of the legendary anthology "Playhouse 90 ".But he won acclaim plus an award nomination for his portrayal of
Minnesota Fats in the 1961Paul Newman movie "The Hustler," in which Gleason (who had hustled pool growing up in Brooklyn) made his own pool shots. He earned an Academy Award nomination as Best Supporting Actor for the role. He was also well-received as a beleaguered boxing manager in the movie version ofRod Serling 's "Requiem for a Heavyweight " (1962), which also featuredAnthony Quinn ,Mickey Rooney , and (under his birth name,Cassius Clay )Muhammad Ali . Gleason also played a world-weary Army sergeant, with Steve McQueen supporting him as aGomer Pyle -like private andTuesday Weld as his love interest, in "Soldier in the Rain " (1962). He wrote, produced, and starred in his own film, "Gigot ", a notorious box office disaster in 1962, in which he plays a poor, mute janitor who befriends and rescues a prostitute and her small daughter (the film was directed by Gene Kelly). He played the lead in theOtto Preminger all-star flop "Skidoo" (1968), costarringGroucho Marx , in which Gleason's character and half the cast is imprisoned inAlcatraz and trips onLSD (including the guards, played bySlim Pickens ,Harry Nilsson , andFred Clark ). Three years later,William Friedkin wanted to cast Gleason as "Popeye" Doyle in "The French Connection" (Friedkin's second choice afterPaul Newman ); but between "Gigot" and "Skidoo", the studio refused to offer Gleason the lead in the film, even though he wanted to play it. Instead, that year Gleason wound up in "How to Commit Marriage " (1969) withBob Hope and the movie version ofWoody Allen 's play "Don't Drink the Water" (1969), both flops.More than a decade passed before Gleason had another hit film. Then, he turned up as vulgar sheriff
Buford T. Justice in the popular "Smokey and the Bandit " series. (AfterBurt Reynolds declined to do the third film in the series, Gleason was signed up for a dual role as Smokey "and" the Bandit—but preview audiences are said to have been confused, andJerry Reed 's role from the first two movies was promptly beefed up to replace Gleason's footage as the Bandit and make up for Reynolds' absence.)In the 1980s, Gleason earned positive reviews playing opposite
Laurence Olivier in theHBO dramatic two-man special, "Mr. Halpern and Mr. Johnson ". He also delivered a critically acclaimed performance as an infirm but acerbic and somewhatArchie Bunker -like character in theTom Hanks comedy-drama "Nothing in Common " (Gleason had turned down the "All in the Family " television series in the previous decade).The Honeymoon wasn't over yet
Gleason did two "Jackie Gleason Show" specials for CBS after giving up his regular show in the 1970s, including "Honeymooners segments" and a Reginald Van Gleason III sketch in which the gregarious millionaire was shown as a clinical alcoholic. When the CBS deal expired, Gleason signed with NBC, but ideas reportedly came and went before he ended up doing a series of "Honeymooners" specials for ABC. Art Carney and Audrey Meadows reprised their original roles, but for no clear reason,
Jane Kean was cast as Trixie instead of Joyce Randolph. Gleason helmed four of these ABC specials during the mid-1970s. Gleason and Art Carney also made a television movie, "Izzy and Moe ", which aired on CBS in 1985.In April 1974, Gleason revived several classic characters, including Ralph Kramden, Joe the Bartender, and Reginald Van Gleason III, in a television special with
Julie Andrews . In one song-and-dance route, the two performed "Take Me Along" from Gleason's Broadway musical.In 1985, three decades after the Classic 39 began filming, Gleason revealed he had carefully preserved
kinescopes of his live 1950s programs in a vault for future use—including "Honeymooners" sketches withPert Kelton as Alice. These "Lost Episodes," as they came to be called, were initially previewed at theMuseum of Television and Radio inNew York City , then first aired on theShowtime cable network in 1985 and were later syndicated to local TV stations. They were also released on home video.Some of these include earlier and arguably livelier and fresher versions of exactly the same plotlines later copied for the Classic 39 episodes. One of them, a Christmas holiday episode that was duplicated several years later with Audrey Meadows as Alice, delivered every one of Gleason's best-known characters—Ralph Kramden, the Poor Soul, Reginald Van Gleason, and Joe the Bartender—in and out of the Kramden apartment, the storyline hooking around a wild Christmas party being thrown up the block from the Kramdens' building by Reginald Van Gleason at Joe the Bartender's place. In one memorable "Honeymooners" segment (originally televised on CBS on December 26, 1953), Gleason as Kramden was forced to work on New Year's Eve, when he desperately wanted to accompany Alice to a show featuring Tommy and
Jimmy Dorsey (who later hosted their own CBS program, "Stage Show ", produced by Gleason, from 1954 to 1956); typically, Kramden told his boss (portrayed by veteran character actorRobert Middleton ) he was sick and went home, then took Alice to the show, only to be discovered by his boss.Death
"Nothing in Common" proved to be Gleason's final film role. He was fighting colon cancer (a heavy smoker, he consumed as much as six packs of cigarettes per day), liver cancer, and
thrombosed hemorrhoids even while he worked on the film. He was hospitalized at one point in 1986–87, but checked himself out and died quietly at his Inverrary home. In the same year,Miami Beach honored his contributions to the city and its tourism by renaming the Miami Beach Auditorium—where he had done his television show after moving to Florida—as theJackie Gleason Theater of the Performing Arts . Jackie Gleason is interred in an outdoor mausoleum at Our Lady of Mercy Catholic Cemetery inMiami ,Florida . Below the graceful Roman columns, at the base, is the inscription, "And Away We Go."Tributes
On
June 30 ,1988 , the Sunset Park Bus Depot in Brooklyn was renamed theJackie Gleason Bus Depot in honor of the nativeBrooklynite . (Ralph Kramden worked for the fictitious Gotham Bus Company.) A statue of Gleason as Ralph in his bus driver's uniform was dedicated in August 2000 inNew York City by the cable TV channelTV Land . The statue is located at 40th St. and 8th Ave., at the entrance of the Port Authority of New York andNew Jersey bus terminal. The inscription reads, "Ralph Kramden: New Yorker, Bus Driver, Dreamer," and it was featured briefly in the film World Trade Center. Another such statue stands at theAcademy of Television Arts & Sciences Hall of Fame inNorth Hollywood, California , showing Gleason in his famous "And a-waay we go!" pose.Local signs on the
Brooklyn Bridge , which indicate to the driver that they are entering Brooklyn, have the Gleason phrase "How Sweet It Is!" as part of the sign.A city park with racquetball and basketball courts (and a children's playground) near his home in an Inverrary neiborhood of Lauderhill, Florida was named "Jackie Gleason Park."
A television movie called "Gleason" was aired by CBS on
October 13 ,2002 , taking a deeper look into Gleason's life; it took liberties with some of the Gleason story, but featured his troubled home life, a side of Gleason few really saw. He had two daughters by his first wife (Gleason's daughter Linda is the mother of actorJason Patric ); they divorced, and Gleason endured a brief second marriage before finding a happy union with his third wife, June Taylor's sister Marilyn. The film also showed backstage scenes from his best-known work.Brad Garrett , from "Everybody Loves Raymond ", portrayed Gleason afterMark Addy had to drop out. Garrett was effectively made up to resemble Gleason in his prime. His height (6′8″, about eight inches taller than Gleason) created some logistical problems on the sets, which had to be specially made so that Garrett did not tower over everyone else. Also, cast members wore platform shoes when standing next to Garrett; the shoes can be seen in one shot during a Honeymooners sequence on Alice.In 2003, after an absence of more than thirty years, the color, musical versions of "
The Honeymooners " from the 1960s "Jackie Gleason Show" inMiami Beach were returned to television over the Good Life TV (now AmericanLife TV) cable network. In 2005, a movie version of "The Honeymooners" appeared in theatres, with a twist: a primarily African-American cast, headed byCedric the Entertainer . (There had been reports a few years earlier that "Roseanne" costarJohn Goodman would bring "The Honeymooners" to film, playing Ralph, but these plans never materialized.) This version, however, bore only a passing resemblance to Gleason's original series and was widely panned by critics.Interest in the paranormal
Gleason was a voracious reader of books on the
paranormal , includingparapsychology andufology .cite web|url=http://scholar.library.miami.edu/jg/|title=The Jackie Gleason Collecton|publisher=University of Miami ] He even had a house built in the shape of aUFO which he named "The Mothership". [cite web|url=http://www.moderndrunkardmagazine.com/issues/03-05/03_05_great_drunk.htm|title=The Great Drunk|publisher="Modern Drunkard Magazine "|author=Rich, Frank Kelly|authorlink=Frank Kelly Rich|date=March 2005|accessdate=2008-08-10] During the 1950s, he was a semi-regular guest on the paranormal-themed overnight radio show hosted byJohn Nebel , and wrote the introduction to Donald Bain's biography of Nebel. [Bain, Donald, "Long John Nebel: radio talk king, master salesman, and magnificent charlatan", New York: Macmillan, ISBN 0025059505] After his death, his large book collection was donated to the library of theUniversity of Miami . Gleason was a good friend of U.S. President Richard Nixon and, one day, while the two were playing golf together, the subject of UFOs came up. Nixon said little at the time but, later that day; he took Gleason with him on a special visit to Homestead Air Force Base. There, Gleason allegedly witnessed dead extra-terrestrials. Gleason’s wife told the full story in an interview with Esquire magazineWork
Television
*"
The Life of Riley " (TV) (1949)
*"Cavalcade of Stars " (1950)
*"The Jackie Gleason Show " (1952)
*"The Laugh Maker " (1953)
*"Short Cut" (1954)
*"Uncle Ed and Circumstances" (1955)
*"The Show-Off" (1955)
*"The Time of Your Life " (1958)
*"You're in the Picture " (1961)
*"Mr. Halpern and Mr. Johnson " (1983)
*"Izzy and Moe " (1985)tage productions
*"
Keep Off the Grass " (1940)
*"Artists and Models" (1943)
*"Follow the Girls " (1944)
*"Along Fifth Avenue " (1949)
*"Take Me Along " (1959)Filmography
*"
Navy Blues " (1941)
*"Steel Against the Sky " (1941)
*"All Through the Night" (1942)
*"Lady Gangster " (1942)
*"Tramp, Tramp, Tramp " (1942)
*"Larceny, Inc. " (1942)
*"Escape from Crime " (1942)
*"Orchestra Wives " (1942)
*"Springtime in the Rockies " (1942)
*"The Desert Hawk " (1950)
*"The Hustler" (1961)
*"Gigot " (1962) (also writer)
*"Requiem for a Heavyweight " (1962)
*"Papa's Delicate Condition " (1963)
*"Soldier in the Rain " (1963)
*"Skidoo" (1968)
*"How to Commit Marriage " (1969)
*"Don't Drink the Water" (1969)
*"How Do I Love Thee? " (1970)
*"Mr. Billion " (1977)
*"Smokey and the Bandit " (1977)
*"Smokey and the Bandit II " (1980)
*"The Toy " (1982)
*"The Sting II " (1983)
*"Smokey and the Bandit Part 3 " (1983)
*"Nothing in Common " (1986)Discography
*"Music for Lovers Only" (1953)
*"Music, Martinis and Memories" (1954)
*"Music to Make You Misty" (1954)
*"Tawny" (1954)
*"Lover's Rhapsody" (1955)
*"And Awaaay We Go!" (1955)
*"Romantic Jazz" (1955)
*"Music to Remember Her" (1955)
*"Lonesome Echo" (1955)
*"Music to Change Her Mind" (1956)
*"Night Winds" (1956)
*"Merry Christmas" (1956)
*"Music for the Love Hours" (1957)
*"Velvet Brass" (1957)
*"Oooo!" (1957)
*"The Torch with the Blue Flame" (1958)
*"Riff Jazz" (1958)
*"Rebound" (1959)
*"That Moment" (1959)
*"Aphrodisia" (1960)
*"Opiate d'Amour" (1960)
*"Lazy Lively Lovely" (1961)
*"The Gentle Touch" (1961)
*"A Lover's Portfolio" (1962)
*"Love, Embers and Flame" (1962)
*"Champagne, Candlelight and Kisses" (1963)
*"Movie Themes for Lovers Only" (1963)
*"Today's Romantic Hits for Lovers Only" (1963)
*"Today's Romantic Hits for Lovers Only, Vol. 2" (1964)
*"Last Dance for Lovers Only" (1964)
*"Silk 'n' Brass" (1965)
*"Music from Around the World for Lovers Only" (1966)
*"How Sweet It Is for Lovers" (1966) (World Records label)
*"A Taste of Brass for Lovers Only" (1967)
*"'Tis the Season" (1967)
*"The Best of Jackie Gleason" (1968)
*"Doublin' in Brass" (1968)
*"White Christmas"
*"All I Want For Christmas" (1969)
*"The Best of Jackie Gleason, Vol. 2" (1969)
*"The Now Sound" (1969)
*"Romeo and Juliet" (1970)
*"Come Saturday Morning" (1970)
*"Words of Love" (1971)Further reading
*William A. Henry III, "The Great One: The Life and Legend of Jackie Gleason" (New York: Doubleday, 1992).
*Robert Metz, "CBS: Reflections in a Bloodshot Eye" (New York, 1975).References
External links
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* [http://www.spaceagepop.com/gleason.htm Jackie Gleason discography]
* [http://www.briansbelly.com/halloffame/jackiegleason.shtml]
* [http://www.fiftiesweb.com/honeymnr.htm]Persondata
NAME= Gleason, Jackie
ALTERNATIVE NAMES= Gleason, Herbert John
SHORT DESCRIPTION=comedian ,actor , andmusician
DATE OF BIRTH= 1916-02-26
PLACE OF BIRTH=Bushwick, Brooklyn ,New York
DATE OF DEATH= 1987-6-24
PLACE OF DEATH=Lauderhill, Florida
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