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Encyclopedia > Bill Daily

Bill Daily is an American comedian and comic actor, and a veteran of many television sitcoms, born in Des Moines, Iowa, August 30, 1928. A sitcom or situation comedy is a genre of comedy performance originally devised for radio but today typically found on television. ... Des Moines skyline Des Moines (pronounced in English, in French) is the capital city of the U.S. state of Iowa. ... August 30 is the 242nd day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (243rd in leap years), with 123 days remaining. ... 1928 was a leap year starting on Sunday (link will take you to calendar). ...


Daily was raised by his mother and various other family members after his father died early in Bill's life. In 1939, Daily and his family moved to Chicago, where he spent the rest of his youth. Upon high school graduation, Daily left home to try to carve out a life as a musician, playing bass with countless jazz bands in countless clubs across the Midwest. Chicago (officially named the City of Chicago) is the third largest city in the United States (after New York City and Los Angeles), with an official population of 2,896,016, as of the 2000 census. ... The Midwest is a common name for a region of the United States of America. ...


After graduating from the Goodman Theatre School, Daily worked for the NBC television station in Chicago, WMAQ, as an announcer and floor manager. He eventually became a staff director. Daily recently recalled for PBS how one day, preparing for a Chicago-area Emmy Award telecast, he asked a young local comedian to come up with a routine about press agents. The bit, "Abe Lincoln vs. Madison Avenue," became an early hit for the performer -- Bob Newhart. The National Broadcasting Company or NBC is an American television broadcasting company based in New York Citys Rockefeller Center. ... WMAQ (NBC 5) is the NBC owned & operated television station in Chicago, Illinois. ... PBS re-directs here; for alternate uses see PBS (disambiguation) PBS logo The Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) is a non-profit public broadcasting television service with 349 member TV stations in the United States. ... Bob Newhart is an American actor, comedian and writer famous for his timing and bemused demeanor. ...


It was in his traveling-musician days that Daily found his true calling: comedy. He began to do stand-up in the same clubs he had once filled with music, and soon had moved up in the comedy ranks to the point where he was playing some of the bigger clubs in the country. Comedy is the use of humor in the performing arts. ...


Television executives liked Daily's clean-cut looks and superb comic timing, so by the mid-1960's he earned guest spots on sitcoms like My Mother the Car and Bewitched. Veteran sitcom writer Sidney Sheldon noticed Daily in one of his myriad small roles, and decided that he would be perfect for a character in his new sitcom, I Dream of Jeannie. Looking back, it was the moment that made Daily's career. Scan of original 1965 box art of AMTs My Mother the Car model kit My Mother the Car was an American television situation comedy which aired for a single season on NBC between September 14, 1965 and September 6, 1966. ... Bewitched was an American situation comedy starring actress Elizabeth Montgomery, broadcast on ABC from 1964 to 1972. ... Sidney Sheldon Sidney Sheldon (born February 11, 1917 in Chicago, Illinois), is an American screenwriter and novelist. ... I Dream of Jeannie, created by Sidney Sheldon. ...


The part on Jeannie was that of an Air Force test pilot and astronaut named Roger Healey, who would be sidekick and best friend to Larry Hagman's main character, Tony Nelson. It was a dream part for Daily, who made playing Healey look effortless; it was said that Daily never won any awards for his portrayals because he made it look too easy - people thought he was simply playing himself. While Daily enjoyed his work on Jeannie, Hagman decidedly did not. Daily was witness to countless Hagman tantrums on the set, but he and Barbara Eden stood behind Hagman, citing a substance problem and the progressively poorer scripts on Jeannie as the roots of Hagman's fits. An air force is a military organization that primarily operates in air-based war. ... Larry Hagman, born Larry Martin Hageman on September 21, 1931, is an American actor who is most famous for playing J.R. Ewing in the television soap opera Dallas. ... Barbara Eden, ca. ...


Two years after Jeannie was canceled, in 1972, Daily was back at work in perhaps his signature role, as commercial-airline navigator Howard Borden in The Bob Newhart Show. Borden, who lived across the hall from Newhart's Bob Hartley character, was essentially an extension of the Roger Healey character, but with decidedly more depth. A divorcee, Borden struggled with being there for his son while keeping his flying schedule. The show was an enormous hit, far beyond Jeannie ever was, and Daily was now immortalized in the annals of television history. After six years, the series ended its run, and in 1978 Daily was looking for work again. He would occasionally be a panelist on the 1970s reincarnation of the CBS game show Match Game. The Bob Newhart Show is the name of two different television series. ... Bob Newhart is an American actor, comedian and writer famous for his timing and bemused demeanor. ... The Match Game was an American television game show where contestants tried to match a panel of six celebrities in answering fill-in-the-blank questions. ...


For the two years that followed The Bob Newhart Show, Daily returned to stand-up, but in 1980, after years of making a living as a second banana, Daily was offered his own show. Called Small and Frye, the show featured Daily as a neurotic doctor; it lasted only three months before being canceled. In 1988, Daily tried his hand again at starring roles, this time as another doctor on the sitcom Starting From Scratch. It fared only mildly better than Frye, and was canceled after one season. Ironically, Daily's most notable post-Newhart role was another supporting one, that of Larry the Psychiatrist on the cult favorite Alf. ALF or Alf can have several meanings: ALF is an acronym standing for Animal Liberation Front, an animal rights group Alf is an acronym for the Africa Leadership Forum. ...


In his personal life, Daily very much resembled the Roger Healey character. An unabashed swinging bachelor in the 1960's, Daily admits that he continued that lifestyle even after marrying his wife Pat in the late sixties; in 1975, Pat and Bill divorced. Daily has 2 adopted children (a son and a daughter), and married again in the 1970's to Vivian, with whom he lives today in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Though retired, he still does some comedy and the occasional TV guest appearance, in addition to directing at a local children's theatre. Downtown Albuquerque Albuquerque is the largest city in the state of New Mexico, United States. ...


External links

  • Match Game Wallpaper Factory, Fabulous!-Splendid! ***************

  Results from FactBites:
 
Bill Daily - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (848 words)
Bill Daily is an American comedian and comic actor, and a veteran of many television sitcoms, born in Des Moines, Iowa, August 30, 1927.
Daily recently recalled for PBS how one day, preparing for a Chicago-area Emmy Award telecast, he asked a young local comedian to come up with a routine about press agents.
Daily would also occasionally serve as a panelist on the 1970s CBS reincarnation of The Match Game; after Richard Dawson's departure, Daily was a regular in the lower tier middle seat for the last three-plus years of the show's CBS and syndicated run.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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