-News for Wed 27 March and 28 March 2002
'Mr.
Television,' Milton Berle Dies Mike
O'Sullivan Los
Angeles 28
Mar 2002 02:29 UTC

Milton Berle,
the entertainer known as "Mr. Television," has died in Los Angeles at the age
of 93. The one-time vaudeville comic helped to shaped the new medium of
television in the 1940s and '50s.
In 1948, when
he took over the show called Texaco Star Theater, Milton Berle was
watched by four out of five television owners in the United States. He spurred
the popularity of the medium and dominated Tuesday night programming through
the mid-1950s.
Milton Berle
combined fast-paced jokes with visual humor and would do anything for a laugh,
including wearing women's dresses. He dressed a cave man, explaining he was
offering jokes from the Stone Age, and appeared on screen wearing only a
barrel, saying he had just paid his taxes.
The man who
helped shape television was already a star on stage. Born in New York in 1908
as Mendel Berlinger, the aspiring entertainer won a talent contest at the age
of five, impersonating silent film star Charlie Chaplin. He became a child
actor, appearing in films with Chaplin and Mary Pickford.
Berle made his
Broadway debut in 1920, and as a teenager toured on the vaudeville circuit. He
later became a headliner in New York's famous Ziegfeld Follies.
Milton Berle
once called his humor flippant and aggressive, but audiences who loved him
called him "Uncle Miltie." "We're trying to make show business bloom right
inside your living room," he said.
One friend
remembers him as full of energy. Entertainer Johnny Grant is known as the
honorary mayor of Hollywood. He knew Milton Berle for more than 50 years. "You
know, he wore a whistle when he directed his shows, and if you didn't do
something right, you heard the sound of the whistle," said Mr. Grant. "But
that's what made him great. What do they say about genius? It borders on
insanity."
Milton Berle
starred in more than a dozen television series and two dozen movies over his
long career.
Last year, he was
diagnosed with colon cancer. He died at home in Los Angeles Wednesday
afternoon, with his wife and family members by his side.
Email this article to a friend.
Printer Friendly Version
|