Arnold Stang

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Arnold Stang
Born September 28, 1925 (1925-09-28) (age 83)
Flag of the United States Chelsea, Massachusetts, U.S.
Spouse(s) Joanne Stang (1948 - present) 2 children

Arnold Stang (born September 28, 1925) is a comic actor who plays a small and bespectacled, yet brash and knowing big-city type. Never known as a solo performer (despite the existence of an unsold television pilot called The Arnold Stang Show), he works best in an ensemble cast in which he plays one of a diverse group of comic characters.

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[edit] Early beginnings

Stang was born in Chelsea, Massachusetts, a son of Harold and Anna (Chest) Stang. He began performing at the age of nine in radio shows such as Let's Pretend, but playing in dramas and mysteries as what he once called "little killers," according to radio historian Gerald Nachman (Raised on Radio). He told Nachman that he knew his voice was his meal-ticket. "I'm kind of attached to it," he quipped to Nachman. "My personal logo. It's like Jell-O or Xerox." He also told Nachman that the bulk of his fan mail doesn't even address his film or television work. "All about my radio career," he said.

[edit] Career

He was popular on radio in the 1940s as a sidekick to cantankerous comedian Henry Morgan. During television's Golden Age, Stang became a supporting star on Milton Berle's groundbreaking Texaco Star Theater.

In films, he played Sparrow in The Man with the Golden Arm (1955) alongside Frank Sinatra and Kim Novak. In It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963) he played Ray, who along with his partner Irwin (played by Marvin Kaplan), owns a gas station that is destroyed by Jonathan Winters. He appeared in Hello Down There (1969). In one of the oddest movie pairings, he was teamed with Arnold Schwarzenegger (billed as "Arnold Strong") in the latter's first film, the camp classic Hercules in New York (1970).

As a voice actor for animated cartoons, Stang provided the voice for Popeye's pal Shorty (who looked somewhat like Stang), Herman the mouse in a number of Famous Studios cartoons, the famous Hanna-Barbera lead character Top Cat (modeled explicitly on Phil Silvers's popular television character as scheming, wisecracking Sgt. Bilko), and Catfish on Misterjaw. He also provided many extra voices for the Cartoon Network series Courage the Cowardly Dog. In television commercials, he was spokesman for the Chunky candy bar, when he would list the ingredients) smile, and say, "Chunky, what a chunk of chocolate!" He provided the voice of the Honey Nut Cheerios Bee in the 1980s and also spoke for Vicks Vapo-Rub.

Stang appeared on an episode of The Cosby Show with guest star Sammy Davis Jr. In one TV ad he played Luther Burbank, proudly showing off his newly-invented "square tomato" to fit neatly in typical square slices of commercial bread, then being informed that the advertising bakery had beat him to it by producing round loaves of bread. He played the photographer in Dennis The Menace.

[edit] Family

Arnold and his wife, the former JoAnne Taggart, reside in New Rochelle, New York. Joanne Stang writes for the New York Times. They have two children.

[edit] External links

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