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Ed Wynn 1886-1966

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    Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — Ed Wynn


    bkoganbing — 20 years ago(September 23, 2005 10:46 PM)

    It took long enough for Ed Wynn's zany character to finally reach screen stardom
    but it was worth the wait.
    The closest I've ever seen anyone touch Ed Wynn's particular brand of zaniness
    was the British comedian Eric Morecambe. He did a double act though with his
    partner Ernie Wise. No straight man ever held Ed Wynn in any kind of check.
    His character the scatterbrained fire chief was honed to an edge on the stage
    of a thousand vaudeville theatres. He had an early start in film, but for some
    reason never became a box office draw there the way, say Eddie Cantor did.
    He hit it big in radio though. For 25 years he came into American homes as the
    Texaco fire chief. Like Jack Benny he always worked Texaco plugs into the
    body of his show. Texaco never complained, they never sold so much gas in the
    life of that company.
    When he came back to film it was as a voice only. But what a voice and what a
    character. Who else could possibly have given his voice to the Mad Hatter in
    Walt Disney's cartoon feature film adaption of Alice in Wonderland? This started an association with Disney that lasted the rest of his life.
    Wynn also hit it big as a dramatic actor, first on television in Requiem for
    a Heavyweight and then in fib68lms in Marjorie Morningstar, The Great Man and in
    The Diary of Anne Frank. Took Home an Oscar Nomination for that one.
    Ed Wynn also left us a living legacy with his son actor Keenan Wynn and Keenan's
    sons. The Wynn family carries on.
    I wonder if Ed Wynn ever met up with Gracie Allen on radio. If anyone out there
    has a tape of that summit conference of zaniness, it's your duty to the world
    to get it copied and sold. What a meeting of minds, turn that over in your
    own mind.
    Ed Wynn, RIP you gave us laughter and drama and a fine family to carry on.

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        bkoganbing — 20 years ago(September 24, 2005 04:49 AM)

        Thanks for that. I've seen clips of Morecambe&Wise and wish they were available
        in the States. They were funny from what little I've seen and Morecambe does
        remind me of Ed Wynn. I'll bet he was influenced him.
        Bureaucrats need love

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          simpfann — 20 years ago(October 01, 2005 08:04 PM)

          I've just recently listened to the handful of Wynn's "Fire Chief" radio broadcasts from the early 30s available on www.radiolovers.com- his jokes are so completely silly, but doggone it, ya gotta love the guy! His show is like a time capsule of Depression-era America- no plot to the show, just dozens and dozens of shamlessly silly jokes, a bit of music and Ed and his straight man Graham MacNamee giggling at their own jokes- just what America needed at that time to say "hey, let's forget about the economy for a half hour and have a little fun!" Wonderful stuff. I wish I could find more recordings of Wynn's early 30s shows. God bless him.

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