William Frawley
















William Frawley

William Frawley 1951.JPG
Frawley in 1951, shortly before he assumed the role of Fred Mertz on I Love Lucy.

Born
William Clement Frawley
(1887-02-26)February 26, 1887
Burlington, Iowa, U.S.
Died
March 3, 1966(1966-03-03) (aged 79)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Resting place
San Fernando Mission Cemetery
Other names
Bill Frawley
Occupation
Actor
Years active
1916–1965
Spouse(s)
Edna Louise Broedt
(m. 1914; div. 1927)

William Clement Frawley (February 26, 1887 – March 3, 1966) was an American stage entertainer and screen and television actor best known for playing landlord Fred Mertz in the famous American television sitcom I Love Lucy and Bub in the television comedy series My Three Sons.


Frawley began his career in vaudeville in 1914 with his wife, Edna Louise Broedt. Their comedy act, known as "Frawley and Louise", continued until their divorce in 1927. Frawley performed on Broadway multiple times and signed with Paramount Studios in 1916 to play in silent films. He appeared in more than one hundred films over 35 years.[1]




Contents





  • 1 Early life


  • 2 Early career


  • 3 Television

    • 3.1 I Love Lucy


    • 3.2 My Three Sons



  • 4 Personal life


  • 5 Final years and death

    • 5.1 Legacy



  • 6 Filmography


  • 7 Selected television (actor)


  • 8 Broadway credits


  • 9 Discography

    • 9.1 Albums



  • 10 References


  • 11 External links




Early life


William Clement Frawley was born of Irish ancestry in 1887 in Burlington, Iowa, the second son of four children of Michael A. Frawley (1857–1907) and Mary E. (Brady) Frawley (1859–1921). He attended Catholic schools and sang in the choir at St. Paul's Catholic Church. As he got older, he played small roles in local theater productions at the Burlington Opera House as well as performed in amateur shows, though his mother, a highly religious woman, discouraged such activities.[1]


Frawley's first job was as a stenographer in an office of the Union Pacific Railroad in Omaha, Nebraska.[1] After two years working in that position, he relocated to Chicago, where he found a job as a court reporter. Not long after that move, and against his mother's wishes, he obtained a singing part in a musical comedy, The Flirting Princess. To appease his mother, Frawley relocated to St. Louis, Missouri, to work for another railroad company.[2]


Feeling unfulfilled in that job as well, he continued to hope he would one day be a professional entertainer. He finally decided to act on that desire by forming a vaudeville act with his brother Paul (1889–1973), but six months later Frawley's mother told Paul to return to Iowa. Meanwhile, William wrote and sold a script titled Fun in a Vaudeville Agency, earning more than $500 for his efforts.[citation needed]


After his initial success as a scriptwriter, Frawley decided to relocate yet again, this time to the West, settling in Denver, where he was hired as a singer at a café and teamed with pianist Franz Rath. The duo soon moved to San Francisco with their act, "A Man, a Piano, and a Nut". During his vaudeville career, Frawley introduced and helped popularize the songs "My Mammy",[3] "My Melancholy Baby", and "Carolina in the Morning". Many years later, in 1958, he recorded a selection of his old stage songs on an LP, Bill Frawley Sings the Old Ones.[4]



Early career




With James Cagney in Something to Sing About


Frawley began performing in Broadway theater. His first such show was the musical comedy, Merry, Merry, in 1925. He later made his first dramatic role in 1932, playing press agent Owen O'Malley in the original production of Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur's Twentieth Century. He continued to be a dramatic actor at various locales until 1933.[5]


In 1916, Frawley had appeared in two short subject silent films. He performed subsequently in three other short films, but he had not decided to develop a cinematic career until 1933, beginning with short comedy films and the feature musical Moonlight and Pretzels (Universal Studios, 1933). He relocated to Los Angeles, where he signed a seven-year contract with Paramount Pictures.


Finding much work as a character actor, he had roles in many different genres of films — comedies, dramas, musicals, Westerns, and romances. He appeared in Miracle on 34th Street (1947), portraying Judge Harper's political adviser, who warns his client in great detail of the dire political consequences if he rules that there is no Santa Claus.[6] Some of his other memorable film roles were as the baseball manager in Joe E. Brown's Alibi Ike (1935), as the wedding host in Charlie Chaplin's Monsieur Verdoux (1947), and as a hard-nosed insurance investigator in My Home in San Antone, with Roy Acuff and Lloyd Corrigan.[6]



Television



I Love Lucy




The I Love Lucy cast (clockwise): William Frawley, Desi Arnaz, Lucille Ball, Vivian Vance


By 1951, the 64-year-old Frawley had appeared in over 100 movies, but was starting to find film role offers becoming fewer. When he heard that Desi Arnaz and Lucille Ball were casting a new television situation comedy, he applied eagerly to play the role of the cantankerous, miserly landlord Fred Mertz.[citation needed]


One evening he telephoned Lucille Ball, asking her what his chances were. Ball was surprised to hear from him — a man she barely knew. Both Ball and Arnaz agreed it would be great to have Frawley, a motion picture veteran, appear as Fred Mertz. Less enthusiastic were CBS executives, who warned of Frawley's frequent drinking and instability. Arnaz warned Frawley about the network's concerns, telling him that if he was late to work, arrived drunk, or was unable to perform because of something other than legitimate illness more than once, he would be written out of the show. A slightly different version of this conversation holds that Arnaz contacted the other actor and told Frawley he would get three chances. The first screw-up would be tolerated, the second would result in a severe reprimand, and the third would result in his being fired. Contrary to the network's concerns, Frawley never arrived at work drunk, and mastered his lines after only one reading. Arnaz eventually became one of Frawley's few close friends.[citation needed]


I Love Lucy debuted October 15, 1951, on CBS, and was a huge success. The series was broadcast for six years as half-hour episodes, later changing to hour-long specials from 1957-60 titled The Lucille Ball-Desi Arnaz Show (later retitled The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour).[6]


Vivian Vance played Ethel Mertz, Frawley’s on-screen wife. Although the two actors worked well together, they greatly disliked each other. Most attribute their mutual hatred to Vance's vocal resentment of having to play wife to a man 22 years her senior. Frawley reportedly overheard Vance complaining; he took offense and never forgave her. "She's one of the finest girls to come out of Kansas", he once observed, "But I often wish she'd go back there."[7]


An avid New York Yankees baseball fan, Frawley had it written into his I Love Lucy contract that he did not have to work during the World Series if the Yankees were playing. The Yankees were in every World Series during that time except for 1954 and 1959. He did not appear in two episodes of the show as a result.[8]


For his work on the show, Frawley was Emmy-nominated five consecutive times (1953-1957) for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a comedy series. In 1957, at the end of I Love Lucy, Ball and Arnaz gave Frawley and Vance the opportunity to have their own Fred and Ethel spin-off series for Desilu Studios. Despite his animosity towards her, Frawley saw a lucrative opportunity and accepted. Vance declined, having no desire to work with Frawley again and also feeling that Ethel and Fred would be unsuccessful without the Ricardos.[9]



My Three Sons




While appearing on My Three Sons, Frawley was the subject of This Is Your Life in January 1961. He received a lifetime baseball pass from the Angels' Fred Haney. Fred MacMurray also was part of the show.


Frawley next joined the cast of the ABC (later CBS) situation comedy My Three Sons, playing live-in grandfather and housekeeper Michael Francis "Bub" O'Casey beginning in 1960. Featuring Fred MacMurray, the series was about a widower raising his three sons. Frawley was originally slated to be the series lead before MacMurray joined the cast, relegating Frawley to supporting player.




Clockwise from left: William Frawley, Tim Considine, Fred MacMurray, Don Grady, and Stanley Livingston on My Three Sons (1962)


Frawley reportedly never felt comfortable with the out-of-sequence filming method used for My Three Sons after doing I Love Lucy in sequence for years. Each season was arranged so that main actor Fred MacMurray could film all of his scenes during two separate intensive blocks of filming for a total of 65 working days on the set; Frawley and the other actors worked around the absent MacMurray for the remainder of the year's production schedule. By the mid-1960s, alcohol and old age finally took their toll, and Frawley began forgetting his lines. By the show's fifth season, Frawley was in such ill health that he couldn't pass the studio's annual health insurance exam and was let go from the program and replaced by William Demarest, who played the role of Bub's brother, Uncle Charley, who moved in to keep house and take care of the family in Bub's absence.[1]



Personal life


In 1914, Frawley married fellow vaudevillian Edna Louise Broedt. They developed an act, "Frawley and Louise", which they performed all across the country. Their act was described as "light comedy, with singing, dancing, and patter." The couple separated in 1921 (later divorcing in 1927). They had no children. His brother Paul Frawley (1889–1973) also was an actor on Broadway with relatively few appearances in motion pictures.[10]


Frawley had a reputation for being cantankerous and difficult, likely exacerbated by a drinking problem. In 1928, he was fired from the Broadway show That's My Baby for punching actor Clifton Webb in the nose.[1]



Final years and death


Frawley made two television appearances the year before his death. His appearance on the panel show I've Got a Secret on May 3, 1965, consisted of contestants guessing Frawley's "secret," which was that he was the first performer ever to sing "My Melancholy Baby," in 1912.[11] He had performed that song previously on television, as Fred Mertz, in the 1958 episode "Lucy Goes to Sun Valley" on the Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour.[12]


Frawley's final on-camera performance was on October 25, 1965, with a brief cameo appearance in Lucille Ball's second television sitcom The Lucy Show in the episode "Lucy and the Countess Have a Horse Guest". Frawley plays a horse trainer and Lucy comments: "You know, he reminds me of someone I used to know." (Vivian Vance, who by then had left The Lucy Show except for an occasional guest appearance, does not appear in that episode.)[13][14]




Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6322 Hollywood Blvd.


Frawley died of a heart attack on March 3, 1966, in Hollywood at the age of 79.[15] Arnaz, Fred MacMurray, and My Three Sons executive producer Don Fedderson were pallbearers at his funeral.[citation needed]


Lucille Ball said: "I've lost one of my dearest friends and show business has lost one of the greatest character actors of all time. Those of us who knew him and loved him will miss him."[16]



Legacy


William Frawley is buried in the San Fernando Mission Cemetery in Mission Hills, Los Angeles. For his achievements in the field of motion pictures, he was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, at 6322 Hollywood Blvd on February 8, 1960.[17][15] He is memorialized as well in the Lucille Ball-Desi Arnaz Center in Jamestown, New York, which also contains his "Hippity-Hoppity" (frog) costume from an episode of I Love Lucy. Both Frawley and Vivian Vance were inducted into the Television Academy Hall of Fame in March 2012.


The story of how Frawley was hired to play "Fred Mertz" in I Love Lucy is told in I Love Lucy: A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Sitcom, a comedy which will have its world premiere in Los Angeles on July 12-15, 2018. The play, from Gregg Oppenheimer (son of I Love Lucy creator-producer-head writer Jess Oppenheimer), will be recorded in front of a live audience for radio broadcast and online distribution. [18]



Filmography




  • Lord Loveland Discovers America (1916)


  • Persistent Percival (1916) (short subject)


  • Should Husbands Be Watched? (1925) (short subject)


  • Ventriloquist (1927) (short subject listed in BFI Database)


  • Turkey for Two (1929) (short subject)


  • Fancy That (1929) (short subject)


  • Moonlight and Pretzels (1933)


  • Hell and High Water (1933)


  • Miss Fane's Baby Is Stolen (1934)


  • Bolero (1934)


  • The Crime Doctor (1934)


  • The Witching Hour (1934)


  • Shoot the Works (1934)


  • The Lemon Drop Kid (1934)


  • Here Is My Heart (1934)


  • Car 99 (1935)


  • Roberta (1935)


  • Hold 'Em Yale (1935)


  • Alibi Ike (1935)


  • College Scandal (1935)


  • Welcome Home (1935)


  • It's a Great Life (1935)


  • Harmony Lane (1935)


  • Ship Cafe (1935)


  • Strike Me Pink (1936)


  • Desire (1936)


  • F-Man (1936)


  • The Princess Comes Across (1936)


  • Three Cheers for Love (1936)


  • The General Died at Dawn (1936)


  • Three Married Men (1936)


  • Rose Bowl (1936)


  • Something to Sing About (1937)


  • High, Wide, and Handsome (1937)


  • Double or Nothing (1937)


  • Blossoms on Broadway (1937)


  • Mad About Music (1938)


  • Professor Beware (1938)


  • Sons of the Legion (1938)


  • Touchdown, Army (1938)


  • Ambush (1939)


  • St. Louis Blues (1939)


  • Persons in Hiding (1939)


  • The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1939)


  • Rose of Washington Square (1939)


  • Ex-Champ (1939)


  • Grand Jury Secrets (1939)


  • Night Work (1939)


  • Stop, Look and Love (1939)


  • The Farmer's Daughter (1940)


  • Opened by Mistake (1940)


  • Those Were the Days! (1940)


  • Untamed (1940)


  • Golden Gloves (1940)


  • Rhythm on the River (1940)


  • The Quarterback (1940)


  • One Night in the Tropics (1940)


  • Dancing on a Dime (1940)


  • Sandy Gets Her Man (1940)


  • Six Lessons from Madame La Zonga (1941)


  • Footsteps in the Dark (1941)


  • Blondie in Society (1941)


  • The Bride Came C.O.D. (1941)


  • Cracked Nuts (1941)


  • Public Enemies (1941)


  • Treat 'Em Rough (1942)


  • Roxie Hart (1942)


  • It Happened in Flatbush (1942)


  • Give Out, Sisters (1942)


  • Wildcat (1942)


  • Moonlight in Havana (1942)


  • Gentleman Jim (1942)


  • We've Never Been Licked (1943)


  • Larceny with Music (1943)


  • Whistling in Brooklyn (1943)


  • The Fighting Seabees (1944)


  • Going My Way (1944)


  • Minstrel Man (1944)


  • Lake Placid Serenade (1944)


  • Flame of Barbary Coast (1945)


  • Hitchhike to Happiness (1945)


  • Lady on a Train (1945)


  • Ziegfeld Follies (1946)


  • The Virginian (1946)


  • Rendezvous with Annie (1946)


  • The Inner Circle (1946)


  • Crime Doctor's Man Hunt (1946)


  • Hit Parade of 1947 (1947)


  • Monsieur Verdoux (1947) as Jean La Salle


  • Miracle on 34th Street (1947) as Charlie Halloran


  • I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now (1947)


  • Mother Wore Tights (1947)


  • Down to Earth (1947)


  • Blondie's Anniversary (1947)


  • My Wild Irish Rose (1947)


  • Texas, Brooklyn and Heaven (1948)


  • Good Sam (1948)


  • The Babe Ruth Story (1948)


  • Joe Palooka in Winner Take All (1948)


  • The Girl from Manhattan (1948)


  • Chicken Every Sunday (1949)


  • The Lone Wolf and His Lady (1949)


  • Home in San Antone (1949)


  • Red Light (1949)


  • The Lady Takes a Sailor (1949)


  • East Side, West Side (1949)


  • Blondie's Hero (1950)


  • Kill the Umpire (1950)


  • Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye (1950)


  • Pretty Baby (1950)


  • Abbott and Costello Meet the Invisible Man (1951)


  • The Lemon Drop Kid (1951)


  • Rhubarb (1951)


  • Rancho Notorious (1952)


  • I Love Lucy (1953) (unreleased feature)


  • The Dirty Look (1954) (short subject)


  • Better Football (1954) (short subject)


  • Safe at Home! (1962)



Selected television (actor)



  • I Love Lucy (1951–1957)


  • The Lucille Ball-Desi Arnaz Show (1957–1960)


  • The Ford Show, Starring Tennessee Ernie Ford (December 5, 1957)


  • My Three Sons (1960–1965)


  • The Lucy Show (1965 cameo)


Broadway credits



  • Merry, Merry (1925–1926)


  • Bye, Bye, Bonnie (1927)


  • She's My Baby (1928)


  • Here's Howe (1928)


  • Sons O' Guns (1929–1930)


  • She Lived Next to the Firehouse (1931)


  • Tell Her the Truth (1932)


  • Twentieth Century (1932–1933)


  • The Ghost Writer (1933)


Discography



Albums



  • Bill Frawley Sings the Old Ones (1958) Dot DLP-3061


References




  1. ^ abcde Deezen, Eddie. "Being Fred Mertz: The Life of William Frawley". Mental Floss. Retrieved 2016-03-02. 


  2. ^ Chris JH. "William Frawley: A Biography". Lucy & Company. Retrieved 2007-06-14. 


  3. ^ "Al Jolson "The Jazz Singer"". ParlorSongs Association, Inc. (ParlorSongs.com). Archived from the original on 2007-06-30. Retrieved 2007-06-14. 


  4. ^ George Gimarc & Pat Reeder. "Bill Frawley aka Fred Mertz ("I Love Lucy")". SITCOM SERENADERS. gimarc.com – Excerpted from Hollywood Hi-Fi. Retrieved 2007-06-15. 


  5. ^ "William Frawley". Famous Burlington Citizens. Burlington by the Book. Retrieved 2007-06-14. 


  6. ^ abc William Frawley on IMDb


  7. ^ Jacob M. Appel (2002). "William Frawley". St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture. Retrieved 2007-06-14. 


  8. ^ "Biography for William Frawley". TCM Movie Database. Retrieved 2007-06-15. 


  9. ^ Libby Pelham (March 25, 2006). "I Really Love Lucy". Popular Culture Blog. families.com. Retrieved 2007-06-15. 


  10. ^ Paul Frawley profile, IBDb.com; accessed March 17, 2018.


  11. ^ "I've Got a Secret Episode Guide", "Week 673, 5/3/65". Carson & Company Wordsmiths, 2009. Retrieved June 2, 2017.


  12. ^ Madelyn Pugh, Bob Carroll, Jr., Bob Schiller, Bob Weiskopf (1958-04-14). "Lucy Goes to Sun Valley". Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour. Season 7. Episode 5. 30:02 minutes in. CBS.  |access-date= requires |url= (help)


  13. ^ The Lucy Show - "Lucy and The Countess Have a Horse Guest" at IMDb


  14. ^ William Frawley's Last TV appearance on YouTube


  15. ^ ab Main, Dick (March 4, 1966). "William Frawley". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2017-08-22. 


  16. ^ "William Frawley". LucySong.com. Retrieved 2007-06-14. 


  17. ^ "William Frawley | Hollywood Walk of Fame". www.walkoffame.com. Retrieved 2016-06-26. 


  18. ^ Hetrick, Adam (July 6, 2017). "The Behind-the-Scenes Story of Beloved Sitcom I Love Lucy Heads to the Stage". Playbill. Retrieved April 5, 2018. 



External links





  • William Frawley on IMDb


  • William Frawley at the TCM Movie Database


  • William Frawley at the Internet Broadway Database Edit this at Wikidata


  • William Frawley at TV.com


  • William Frawley at Find a Grave


  • Free scores by William Frawley at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)








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