Friday 20 May 2016

Mister Ed star Alan Young dead at 96: The voice of Scrooge McDuck falls silent

Mr Ed the horse with Alan Young                   (Alamy)

Young's other programmes included The Smurfs and Scooby-Doo, but was best known as the owner of talking horse Mister Ed

Mister Ed star Alan Young has died at 96, his manager said today.

The Emmy award-winning actor, who provided the voice of cartoon characters including Disney's grumpy Scrooge McDuck and co-starred in the classic sci-fi film The Time Machine passed away from natural causes.

Young also provided the voices for characters in programmes including The Smurfs and Scooby-Doo.

But the English-born actor was best known for his role as Wilbur Post, an amiable architect with a talking horse living in his backyard barn, during six seasons on Mister Ed, which still airs in reruns a half century after its original run on CBS ended.

Alan Young said Mister Ed, played by Bamboo Harvester, was a fast learner
(
Everett/REX/Shutterstock)
For decades after the show ended, Young said he was often saddled with questions by fans about how the horse's lips were made to move to look like Mister Ed was talking. Young said the show's producers did not want the secret revealed, so he trotted out the rumor that peanut butter was put in the horse's mouth.

"So I made up the peanut butter story, and everyone bought it," Young told interviewer Nick Thomas in 2009.

Alan Young, pictured at a book signing in 2006, died at his Los Angeles retirement home this week                         (John M. Heller/Getty Images)

"It was initially done by putting a piece of nylon thread in his mouth. But Ed actually learned to move his lips on cue when the trainer touched his hoof. In fact, he soon learned to do it when I stopped talking during a scene. Ed was very smart."

Connie Hines played Wilbur's wife      (Everett/REX/Shutterstock)
The series, which aired from 1961 to 1966, co-starred Connie Hines as Wilbur's wife and Allan Lane as the horse's voice.

Fans of the show also fondly remember its theme song, starting with the lyrics: "A horse is a horse, of course, of course. And no one can talk to a horse, of course. That is, of course, unless the horse is the famous Mister Ed."

Young took a gentle approach to comedy, noting that comic actor Ed Wynn once told him that on television "you're going into somebody's home, so don't be insulting."

Young won an Emmy Award, honoring the best in U.S. television, in 1951 as best actor for The Alan Young Show, beating out Sid Caesar, one of the biggest names in television at the time.

The Alan Young Show won an Emmy for best variety show that year and ran from 1950 to 1953.

Young appeared in films as well, most notably director George Pal's The Time Machine, a 1960 adaptation of the novel by H.G. Wells, starring a time-traveling Rod Taylor.

Young's other films included Chicken Every Sunday (1949) with a young Natalie Wood, Mr. Belvedere Goes to College (1949) with Shirley Temple and Androcles and the Lion (1952) with another animal co-star.

He was born as Angus Young in England on Nov. 19, 1919, and his family moved to Canada when he was 6. He worked in radio in Canada before moving to Los Angeles and changing his name to Alan. He was a naturalized American citizen.

Gene Yusem, his manager for more than 30 years, said Young died this week at the Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital, a Los Angeles retirement facility for those in the movie and TV industry, and had been buried at sea.

He said: "He was an honest, decent man, a pleasure to work with and never a problem."

Emmylite

Author & Editor

I am a music lover, producer, critic, social media expert and also the editor and author @ My Search Lyrics. Working @ DBliss Media. Follow Me Twitter @Emmylite

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Recent Lyrics


Privacy Policy | Terms and Condition | Disclaimer | Contact Us

Copyrights © 2017 My Kranchar - Designed by DBliss Media Software Dept. In Collaboration With