ARTE JOHNSON

'Arte Johnson' (born January 20, 1929), full name 'Arthur Stanton Eric Johnson', is a comic actor.

Contents
Biography
References
External links

Biography


He was born in Benton Harbor, Michigan and attended the University of Illinois, graduating in 1949 after working on the campus radio station and the U of I Theater Guild with his brother, Cos.
He initially sought employment in Chicago working for advertising agencies, but left for New York to work for Viking Press. His first "show business" job came when he impulsively stepped into an audition line and was cast in a revival of ''Gentlemen Prefer Blondes''.
He is best known for his work on ''Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In'', an American television show (1968-1973), in which he played various characters including a smoking Nazi soldier with the catch phrase "Verrry interesting... but stupid!" Johnson indicated later that the phrase came from ''Desperate Journey'', a 1942 World War II film with Errol Flynn and Ronald Reagan playing Royal Air Force pilots shot down in Nazi Germany; they managed to cross much of the country without speaking German or knowing the territory, but when captured, their Nazi interrogator doubts their story with the phrase. [1] Johnson reprised the role while voicing the Nazi-inspired character Virman Vunderbarr on an episode of ''Justice League Unlimited''.
His other iconic ''Laugh-In'' character was "Tyrone F. Horneigh" (the last name pronounced "horn-eye"--a "clean" variant of the vulgar term "horny"), the white-haired, trenchcoat-wearing 'dirty old man' who repeatedly sought to seduce "Gladys Ormphby" (Ruth Buzzi's brown-clad 'spinster' character) on a park bench. Tyrone would enter the scene, muttering a song, and, spying Gladys on the bench, would sit next to her. He would ask two related 'leading questions,' each earning him a hard whack from a shocked Gladys using her purse. His third statement would be an appeal for medical assistance, at which time he would fall off the bench. An example:

★ TYRONE: "You want to go to ''my'' place, and see where ''I'' sleep?" [WHACK!]

★ TYRONE: "You want to go to ''your'' place, and see where ''you'' sleep?" [WHACK!]

★ TYRONE: "You mind if I go to sleep right here?" [moans, and falls off bench]
Undoubtedly his most memorable exchange with Gladys was the following:
Tyrone asks, "Do you believe in the hereafter?"
Gladys says, "Of course I do!"
Pleased, Tyrone exclaims, "Then you know what I'm here after!"
Years after ''Laugh-In'' ended its run, the 2 characters were made into an animated Saturday-morning children's show, ''Baggy Pants & The Nitwits'' with Tyrone as a helpful, muttering 'superhero.'[2]
Arte and his brother, Cos, earned their Emmy Awards while working on ''Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In''.
In 1976, Johnson voiced the cartoon character "Misterjaw", a blue German accented shark (with a bow tie and top hat) who liked to leap out of the water and shout "HEEGotcha!" or "Gotcha!" at unsuspecting folks on the DePatie-Freleng Enterprises produced ''The Pink Panther Laugh and a Half Hour and a Half Show''.
Later in the seventies, he hosted the NBC game show ''Knockout''.
In the 1990s Johnson voiced "Newt", a hunting dog on the cartoon ''Animaniacs'', who futilely became enamoured of his target, a sexy female mink named Minerva.
Arte has performed some memorable audiobook readings, including Gary Shteyngart's "Absurdistan" (2006), and more than eighty other books.
In 2005, he has appeared in an episode of ''Justice League Unlimited'' as the voice of Virman Vundabar.

References


1. http://www.usatoday.com/community/chat/2002-04-05-oldfaces.htm
2. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0075480/

External links









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