View Today's Active Threads (No Chit Chat/Chit Chat Only) / View New Posts (No Chit Chat/Chit Chat Only) / Mark All Boards Read / Chit Chat Board
Get Smart links and theme songs at Sitcoms Online / Get Smart Photo Gallery
![]() Buy Get Smart - The Complete Series Gift Set (HBO Home Video - same extras as Time-Life) on DVD |
![]() |
|
|||||||
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|
|
#1 |
|
RIP, I'LL NEVER FORGET YOU :(
Moderator
Forum Superstar Join Date: Jul 13, 2003
Location: AT HOME WISHING ALL THIS WAS JUST A DREAM AND THAT I'LL WAKE UP FROM THIS NIGHTMARE.
Posts: 34,342
|
His widow, Dr. Tess Hightower, has made a brief announcement on her Facebook page. A full obit will follow.
https://www.facebook.com/ronna.t.hightower |
|
__________________
'Twas The Night Before Christmas And All Through The Full House Not A Creature Was Stirring, Not Even Mighty Mouse. All My Children We're Nestled All Snug In Their Beds While Visions Of Sugarbakers Danced In Their Heads. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#2 |
|
Member
Forum Regular
Join Date: Dec 30, 2015
Posts: 766
|
So sad. He was a fabulous actor, comedian, and artist. May he rest in peace.
|
|
|
|
|
|
#3 |
|
Accept No Substitutes
Forum Veteran
Join Date: Feb 04, 2009
Location: IL
Posts: 6,708
|
RIP. I remember him fondly from his many appearances on "Love, American Style" and game shows of the 70s.
|
|
__________________
Alex Reiger :[Trying to convince Louie not to antagonize Bobby] "It's not hard to make people feel bad about their lives. What's hard is making people feel good about their lives." |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#4 |
|
Member
Moderator
Forum Veteran Join Date: Jul 26, 2016
Location: United States
Posts: 6,824
|
Very sad.
Dick Gautier
|
|
|
|
|
|
#5 |
|
AKA Hazel Horvath
Forum Addict
Join Date: Jul 10, 2014
Posts: 65,478
|
![]() RIP
|
|
|
|
|
|
#6 |
|
RIP, I'LL NEVER FORGET YOU :(
Moderator
Forum Superstar Join Date: Jul 13, 2003
Location: AT HOME WISHING ALL THIS WAS JUST A DREAM AND THAT I'LL WAKE UP FROM THIS NIGHTMARE.
Posts: 34,342
|
The actor started out as a stand-up comic and received a Tony nomination for playing the Elvis-like singer in the original production of 'Bye, Bye Birdie.'
Link Dick Gautier, who starred on Broadway in the original production of Bye, Bye Birdie and then famously played Hymie the Robot on the sitcom Get Smart, has died. He was 85. Gautier died Friday night at an assisted living facility in Arcadia, Calif., after a long illness, his daughter Denise told The Hollywood Reporter. Gautier, who started his career as a stand-up comic, received a Tony nomination for playing Conrad Birdie, the character based on Elvis Presley, in the memorable, original 1960 production of Bye, Bye Birdie, starring Dick Van Dyke. The handsome actor appeared as Hymie on just six episodes of Get Smart over four seasons, yet he was one of the spy spoof's most popular characters. Hymie, who was incredibly strong and had a supercomputer for a brain and wires and components in a compartment in his chest, originally was built for the evil organization KAOS but came over to CONTROL (the good guys) because Max (Don Adams) was the first one to treat him like a real person. "When I met with the powers that be, I told them that when I was a kid in Canada I saw a man in a storefront window acting like a manikin to drum up business," he said in 2013. "If you could make him smile, you'd get $10. So, I tried, but not by acting crazy - I merely imitated his movements. I didn't win the $10, but I got the part of Hymie, which was a little better." Eventually, Max picked Hymie to be his best man for his wedding with Agent 99 (Barbara Feldon), and Gautier returned as the robot for a 1989 Get Smart TV movie. In 1975, Gautier starred as Robin Hood on the short-lived ABC series When Things Were Rotten, co-created by Mel Brooks, who, of course, had launched Get Smart as well. Gautier was a veteran stand-up performer and working at The Blue Angel nightclub in New York as an opener for headliner and singer Margaret Whiting when he was spotted by Bye, Bye Birdie director Gower Champion and Charles Strouse, who did the music for the production. "They asked me to read for this thing," he recalled in a 2014 interview with Kliph Nesteroff. "I was a little put off because I didn't like rock and roll. Not at that point. I said, 'I don't think it's for me. I like Jerome Kern and George Gershwin.' "They said, 'Will you at least come in and audition?' I went in and they said, 'Would you sing an Elvis song?' I said, 'I don't know any Elvis songs.' So they just played some blues and I ad-libbed and I guess they liked it. Couple months later they called. Gautier told his agent, "'It's not for me. I feel very inhibited and very intimidated by this whole Elvis thing because it's not me.' He said, 'It's a satire.' Then I went, 'Ohhhhh.' When he said that, then I got it. Suddenly it was OK. I got the part, got a Tony nomination, and my career was in a whole different place. I didn't work nightclubs anymore." Gautier was born on Oct. 30, 1931, in Culver City, and his father, a French-Canadian, worked as a grip at MGM. He spent some time growing up in Montreal and sang and did a comedy act with a band that wound up on a local TV show in L.A. He served in the U.S. Navy, where he booked acts, including a young Johnny Mathis. When he got out of the service in San Francisco, he hung out at the hungry i nightclub and decided to try stand-up. He and the legendary Mort Sahl were among the first comics to be booked at the club, which would go on to become a renowned breeding ground for stand-ups. The charming Gautier played clubs all over the country and for a time toured with the folk act Kingston Trio. When he was looking for material for an act in Las Vegas, he paid Jay Leno and David Letterman $100 an hour to write jokes for him, he said in the chat with Nesteroff. Gautier appeared in a guest stint on The Patty Duke Show and was in the Joshua Logan-directed Ensign Pulver (1964), and he had regular roles on the short-lived series Mr. Terrific and Here We Go Again, starring Larry Hagman. He also played an amorous sportscaster on an episode The Mary Tyler Moore Show. He co-wrote the 1968 pot movie Maryjane (1968) with future Hollywood Squares host Peter Marshall and the 1972 film Wild in the Sky (1972), starring Georg Stanford Brown. Gautier also appeared in such films as Divorce American Style (1967) - playing Van Dyke's attorney - Fun With Dick and Jane (1977) and Billy Jack Goes to Washington (1977) and on TV shows like Charlie's Angels, The Love Boat, Murder, She Wrote, Silk Stalkings and Nip/Tuck. He also was a guest on many game shows, including Tattletales, on which he appeared with his then-wife, actress Barbara Stuart. Starting in the mid-1980s, Gautier worked often as a voice actor on such shows as Galtar and the Golden Lance, G.I. Joe, The Transformers, The New Yogi Bear Show and The Addams Family. An accomplished artist, Gautier also wrote and illustrated several books about drawing and how to become a cartoonist. "Cartooning has been my hobby, my therapy, a delicious pastime and on occasion my salvation - it got me through some tight financial spots when I was a struggling actor," he wrote in the introduction to his 1989 book, The Creative Cartoonist. In addition to Denise, survivors include his wife Tess, daughter Chris and son Rand. |
|
|
|
|
|
#7 |
|
I'm NOT a Blockhead!
Forum Celebrity
Join Date: May 17, 2002
Location: The Great White North
Posts: 21,452
|
I wil always remeber him best as Hymie the Robot on Get Smart.
Dick Gautier
|
|
__________________
Only a life lived for others is worth living. Albert Einstein A life isn't worth living unless it has impact on other lives. Jackie Robinson Be always at war with your vices, at peace with your neighbors, and let each new year find you a better man. Benjamin Franklin |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#8 |
|
Member
Forum 4000 Club Member
Join Date: Jun 22, 2014
Posts: 4,779
|
Loved him as Hymie. I can't find the clip but there was one scene where Hymie participates in a track and field meet. The other high jumpers are jumping around 6' 5" - 6'10". Hymie goes up to the official and asks him to raise the bar to something like 8' 4", way above the world record even today. Then he calmly walks up to the high bar in his suit and dress shoes with no run up and jumps straight over it landing, on his feet.
He was a great stand up comedian too. I don't know if he was ever on Johnny Carson but he was a regular on Merv Griffin. I still remember one his best stories about a Japanese torture that made enemy soldiers stand for hours saying "Tick tock, tick tock", while rocking back and forth. While the rest passed out from exhaustion one soldier was fine, saying "Tick, tick, tick, tick." The Japanese commander went over to him and in a deadly serious tone said, "We have ways to make you tock." |
|
__________________
. I just nailed Mrs. Trumbull
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#9 |
|
Member
Eternal Member
![]() Forum Icon Join Date: Dec 26, 2006
Location: The South
Posts: 59,429
|
Rest in peace.
|
|
|
|
|
|
#10 |
|
22 Years at Sitcoms Online
Forum Icon
Join Date: Jun 06, 2003
Location: Somewhere you're Not
Posts: 62,127
|
R.I.P. Dick.
|
|
__________________
Sonny |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#11 | |
|
Member
Forum Idol
Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 124,928
|
Quote:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#12 |
|
Forum Legend
Join Date: Nov 05, 2013
Posts: 35,640
|
Very sad......
|
|
|
|
![]() |
|
|