Hans Conried (Hans Georg Conried)
One of Hans Conreid’s early radio appearances came in 1937, when he appeared in a supporting role in a broadcast of The Taming of the Shrew on KECA in Los Angeles, California. Four years later, a newspaper reported about his role on Hedda Hopper’s Hollywood: “But at the mike he’s equally convincing as old men, drunks, dialeticians, or Shakesperean tragedians. Miss Hopper favors him for her dramatizations when the script will allow him, as she puts it, ‘to have his head.'” Conried appeared regularly on radio during the 1940s and 1950s. He was in the regular cast of Orson Welles’s Ceiling Unlimited, for which he wrote the December 14, 1942, episode, “War Workers”. On CBS’s The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show he played a psychiatrist whom George regularly consulted for help in dealing with the ditzy Gracie. Hans Conried made his Broadway debut in Can-Can[9] and was credited in six films (among them The Twonky and The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T), all in 1953. Other Broadway productions include 70, Girls, 70 and Irene. He can be clearly heard on the Original Cast Albums (and CDs) of Cole Porter’s “Can-Can” and Kander & Ebb’s “70, Girls, 70” where, among other songs, Conried performs a sensational fast-paced patter song called “The Caper.” Hans Conried’s inimitable growl and impeccable diction were well suited to the roles he played, whether portraying the dim Professor Kropotkin in the radio show My Friend Irma or portraying comic villains and mock-sinister or cranky types, such as Walt Disney’s Mr. Darling, and Captain Hook in Peter Pan (1953), and The Grinch/Narrator from Dr. Seuss’ Halloween is Grinch Night. According to the DVD commentary of Futurama, he was the inspiration for the voice created for that series’ “Robot Devil”.
Hans Conried was a cast member of other Dr. Seuss specials, and The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show, voicing the character of Snidely Whiplash in the Dudley Do-Right shorts, and hosted Fractured Flickers, another creation of Jay Ward and Bill Scott, as well as Wally Walrus on The Woody Woodpecker Show, Uncle Waldo P. Wigglesworth on Hoppity Hooper, and Dr. Dred on Drak Pack. He also performed as the “slave in the mirror” character, hosting several memorable episodes of Walt Disney’s Wonderful World of Color. Besides hosting Fractured Flickers, Hans Conried was a regular panelist on CBS’s pantomime program, Stump the Stars and a semi-regular guest on the Ernie Kovacs-hosted game show Take a Good Look. He was a regular guest on Jack Paar’s Tonight Show on NBC from 1959 to 1962. Conried joined the cast of The Tony Randall Show during the 1977-78 season. Guest appearances included I Love Lucy (as the English tutor Percy Livermore and used furniture merchant Dan Jenkins), a riverboat gambler nicknamed “Thimbelrig” by Davy Crockett who dies with him at the Alamo Davy Crockett, The Californians, Meet McGraw, Hey, Jeannie!, The Ray Milland Show, The DuPont Show with June Allyson, The Real McCoys, The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, Mister Ed, The Islanders, Ben Casey, Dr. Kildare, Lost in Space, Daniel Boone, The Beverly Hillbillies, The Lucy Show, Gilligan’s Island, The Monkees, Have Gun – Will Travel, Love, American Style, Here’s Lucy, Kolchak, Alice, Laverne & Shirley, The Love Boat, Hogan’s Heroes, Match Game, Maverick, The Donna Reed Show, What’s It For, Fantasy Island, and Quark.
From 1955-64, Hans Conried made twenty-one guest appearances as Danny Thomas’ Lebanese “Uncle Tonoose” in Make Room for Daddy on ABC and then CBS. He was featured in the 1958 episode “What Makes Opera Grand?” on the anthology series Omnibus. The episode, an analysis by Leonard Bernstein showing the powerful effect of music in opera, featured Conried as Marcello in a spoken dramatization of Act III of Puccini’s La Bohème. The program demonstrated the effect of the music in La Bohème by having actors speak portions of the libretto in English, followed by opera singers singing the same lines in the original Italian. Hans Conried was active until his sudden death of a heart attack on January 5, 1982. He was married to Margaret Grant from January 29, 1942 until his death three weeks short of their 40th wedding anniversary. The couple had four children.
Born
- April, 15, 1917
- USA
- Baltimore, Maryland
Died
- January, 05, 1982
- USA
- Burbank, California
Cause of Death
- heart attack
Other
- Body donated to medical science