Looking at the famous, infamous, not-so-famous, and unique lives that have shuffled off this mortal coil.
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Obit of the Day: He Was Gumby (Dammit)
and Speedy, the Alka-Seltzer mascot, and Davey from Davey and Goliath, and Richie Rich’s annoying rival, Rollo, and the voice of dozens of other children on television and film. Dick Beals, who passed away at 87, suffered from a glandular disorder that limited his height (4’ 7”) and never allowed his voice to mature. But he parlayed that unique vocal characteristic into a six-decade career.
A graduate of Michigan State University, Beals got his start playing boys on various radio programs that were originally broadcast from Detroit including The Lone Ranger and The Green Hornet. He would end up in Hollywood and his first film was the animated cartoon, From A to Z-Z-Z-Z (see above). Although he plays the lead character, Ralph Phillips, Beals is uncredited. The cartoon would earn a 1953 Academy Award nomination. (Toot, Whistle, Plunk, and Boom from Disney won the Oscar.)
In an unusual move for the voice-over industry, Mr. Beals would always wear a suit and tie to recording sessions. Mark Evanier, who wrote the obit to which this post links, thought it was Mr. Beals’ way of reminded people that he was an adult not just a boy. (Mr. Evanier’s post has a link to an old Alka-Seltzer commercial featuring “Speedy” and…Buster Keaton. Brilliant.)
(From A to Z-Z-Z-Z is copyright of Warner Brothers and courtesy of abloink on YouTube.com. I recommend watching it. Note: There is a scene of Ralph being chased by stereotypical “Indians” that is tasteless by 21st century standards by acceptable in 1953.)
Obit of the Day: Two-Time Caldecott Award Winner
Leo and Diane Dillon were the only back-to-back winners of the Caldecott Medal, given to the illustrators of “the most distinguished American picture book for children.” In 1976, the Dillons won the award for Why Mosquitoes Buzz in People’s Ears by Verna Aardema and followed up the next year with an award for their illustrations of Margaret Musgrove’s Ashanti to Zulu: African Traditions.
Leo Dilllon and Diane Sorber met while students at Parsons School of Design in New York City and married in 1957. They began working freelance before working co-illustrating their first children’s book, The Ring in the Prairie by John Bierhorst, in 1970. Their final book together, If Kids Ran the World, will be published in 2014. In between the couple illustrated more than 40 books for children.
Leo Dillon passed away at the age of 79.
Random Note: The Dillons also illustrated covers for various novels including works by Leo Tolstoy and Harlan Ellison. To see examples, click here.
(Why Mosquitoes Buzz in Peoples Ears is copyright Dial Books, an imprint of Penguin Books and courtesy of indiebound.org)
In May 2012 we lost 1964 Caldecott Medal winner Maurice Sendak and in January 2012 OOTD recognized 2000 Caldecott Medal winner (and Happy Meal box designer) Simms Taback. You can find a full list of Caldecott Award winners here.
Obit of the Day: Survivor’s Tale
Otis Clark died just ten days before the 91st anniversary of one of the worst episodes of racial hatred in American history. An event he not only witnessed but managed to escape with his life. On May 30, 1921, a nineteen-year-old black man named Dick Rowland entered a Tulsa elevator to ride to the 3rd floor bathroom - segregated for black use only. Operating the elevator was Sarah Page a white seventeen-year-old. No one knows what happened but not long afterwards, Sarah Page was in tears and Dick Rowland was nowhere to be found. He was later arrested for assault; most presumed rape.
Dick Rowland’s arrest would then ignite a conflagration both literal and figurative. The African American neighborhood Greenwood, located within Tulsa, was called “Black Wall Street” for its affluence - relative to other segregated neighborhoods in the South. But the arrest of Dick Rowland gave Tulsa’s Ku Klux Klan an opportunity to teach the residents of Greenwood a “lesson.” Beginning on May 31 and ending on June 1 Greenwood was razed to the ground. As you can see in the image above a fire set by the KKK leveled the neighborhood, leaving most of the residents homeless. When it was over 300 people were dead, approximately 270 of those were black. Greenwood was in ruins. And Tulsa would remain silent about it for 8- years.*
One of those who survived was Otis Clark. He spent the two days running through Greenwood, ducking down alleys, jumping into cars, racing through buildings to avoid the armed, white mobs. Eventually Mr. Clark jumped onto a freight train and ended up in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Mr. Clark would head west not long after and was hired as the butler of Ms. Joan Crawford, the Oscar-winning actress. Through his connection with Ms. Crawford, Mr. Clark met stars of Hollywood’s Golden Age including Clark Gable and Charlie Chaplin. He also developed a personal friendship with Stepin Fetchit - the first African American actor to become a millionaire.
Mr. Clark’s life changed after an arrest for selling liquor during Prohibition. Converting to Christianity while in jail, he would spend the rest of his life as an evangelist. “The rest of his life” ended up being 80 more years. He was able to travel as a missionary to Africa in 2006 - when he was 103. He made his final trip abroad in 2010 to Jamaica at the age of 107.
Otis Clark - riot survivor, butler to the stars, and “world’s oldest evangelist” - died at the age of 109.
(Image of a devastated Greenwood section of Tulsa following the riots is courtesy of sfbayview.com)
* It was not until 2001 that the city of Tulsa undertook a complete investigation of the riots. Following the report issued by the investigating commission, the Oklahoma State Legislature passed a bill offering scholarships to 300 descendants of Greenwood residents, a memorial, and additional economic development for the neighborhood. It was recommended that survivors of the riots and their descendants be given reparations but the legislature did not agree. For more information on the riots, here is the Wikipedia entry.
Obit of the Day: Most Decorated Athlete in the History of the Olympics
Edoardo Mangiarotti won his first Olympic gold medal as part of Italy’s épée team at the 1936 Berlin Olympics. At 17, he was the youngest medalist at the Games. Mangiarotti would participate in every Games that followed (excluding the 1940 and 1944 Games that were cancelled due to World War II) ending his athletic career after the 1960 Rome Games. When everything was totaled up he had accumulated 13 Olympics medals (six gold, five silver, and two bronze). When his world championship medals were included, Mangiarotti had earned 39 medals, more than any other athlete in any Olympic sport.*
Mangiarotti was the son of an Olympic fencer (1908 London) and the brother of two more: Dario, who won the silver in épée in 1952 - Edoardo won gold - and Carola who participated, but did not medal, in the 1976 and 1980 Olympics.
Although his career as an athlete ended in 1960, he would continue to attend the Games in a variety of roles. By the time he passed away on May 25, 2012 at the age of 93, Edoardo Mangiarotti had attended 17 consecutive Summer Games from Berlin through Beijing. Sadly he missed the London Olympics Games by only 63 days.
(Image courtesy of Sport e Motori 2.0)
* The record for most individual Olympic medals earned is held by Soviet gymnast Larissa Latynina who earned eighteen over three Summer Olympics: Melbourne-1956, Rome-1960, and Tokyo-1964. American swimmer Michael Phelps has 17 medals but also has the most gold medals with fourteen.