Edgar Bergen
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Edgar John Berggren
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Feb 16 1903 - Sep 30 1978 age 75
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Official Site: n/a
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Edgar
Bergen was still in grammar school when he sent away for a 25-cent
ventriloquism instruction book. By the time he was 11, Bergen was
driving his family crazy with his prankish voice-throwing. While
attending medical school at Northwestern University, Bergen paid his
tuition by performing a small-time ventriloquist act; it wasn't long
before he dropped out of college to hit the vaudeville and tent-show
circuit. After a tour of Europe and South America, Bergen filmed a
series of one-reel short subjects for Vitaphone between 1930 and 1935;
even in these early efforts, top billing went not to Bergen but to his
creation, the impish, top-hatted dummy Charlie McCarthy. From
time-to-time Bergen would test out other wooden alter egos, including
hayseed Mortimer Snerd and man-hungry Effie Clinker, but Charlie would
remain his star attraction. After gaining nationwide fame through his
appearances on Rudy Vallee's radio program, Bergen launched his own
radio series, The Charlie McCarthy Show, a top-rated endeavor which ran
from 1937 through 1955. Bergen and Charlie made their feature film
debuts in The Goldwyn Follies
(1938). They went on to appear together in eight more films between in
1938 and 1948; curiously, however, Charlie McCarthy came across better
on radio than he did on screen--partly due to the inescapable fact that
Bergen tended to move his lips while throwing his voice. At his peak,
Bergen was pulling down $10,000 weekly from his radio series and an
additional $100,000 from Charlie McCarthy toys and merchandise. He was
also the recipient of the only wooden Academy Award in history, a
special Oscar bestowed upon himself and the pine-headed Charlie. On his
own, Bergen co-starred in I Remember Mama (1948) as the shy Norwegian suitor of spinster Ellen Corby; he also played supporting parts in Captain ChinaDon't Make Waves (1949) and (1965).
After the cancellation of their radio series, Bergen and Charlie played nightclubs, summer stock and state fairs. They also hosted the 1956 TV quiz show Do You Trust Your Wife?. Emerging from a long professional slump, Bergen made a triumphant Las Vegas comeback in 1978--the evening before his death at the age of 75. His last screen appearance was in Jim Henson's The Muppet Movie (1979), which was dedicated to his memory. Edgar Bergen was the husband of actress Frances Bergen, and the father of film and TV star Candice Bergen. Source: AllRovi
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After the cancellation of their radio series, Bergen and Charlie played nightclubs, summer stock and state fairs. They also hosted the 1956 TV quiz show Do You Trust Your Wife?. Emerging from a long professional slump, Bergen made a triumphant Las Vegas comeback in 1978--the evening before his death at the age of 75. His last screen appearance was in Jim Henson's The Muppet Movie (1979), which was dedicated to his memory. Edgar Bergen was the husband of actress Frances Bergen, and the father of film and TV star Candice Bergen. Source: AllRovi
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Stand-up
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Enjoy!
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