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CBS RADIO MYSTERY THEATER SCIFISCRIPT COVER PAGE AUTOGRAPH BY FRED GWYNNE + FOUR

$ 6.83

Availability: 37 in stock
  • GUARANTEED AUTHENTIC: SIGNED SCRIPT COVER PAGE
  • Signed: Yes
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Modification Description: AUTOGRAPHED
  • Industry: Movies
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • RADIO MEMORABILIA: ENTERTAINMENT MEMORABILIA
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Condition: BOTH 8 1/2" X 11" SCRIPT COVER PAGE AND SIGNATURES ARE IN FINE CONDITION.
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • Modified Item: Yes
  • Signed by: FRED GWYNNE & 4 FILM AND TELEVISION ACTORS
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Restocking Fee: No

    Description

    The CBS Radio Mystery Theater script cover page for production of "The Serpent of Saris" autographed by film and television actors.
    "The Serpent of Saris"- The god of athletics, Saris, exacts punishment on a pugilist. A retired police officer steps in to save him when another boxer's life is in danger.
    1.
    Fred Gwynne(d93)was an American actor, artist and author. Gwynne was best known for his roles in the 1960s sitcoms Car 54, Where Are You? and as Herman Munster in The Munsters, as well as his later roles in The Cotton Club, Pet Sematary and My Cousin Vinny. Gwynne was an enormously talented character actor most famous for starring in the television situation comedies Car 54, Where Are You? (1961-1963) (as Officer Francis Muldoon) and The Munsters(1964-1966) (as the Frankenstein clone Herman Munster) as well as his later roles in "The Cotton Club", "Pet Sematary", and "The Cottone Club".
    He was very tall and had a resonant, baritone voice that he put to good use in Broadway musicals. Gwynne joined the Brattle Theatre Repertory Company after his 1951 graduation, then moved to New York City. To support himself, Gwynne worked as a copywriter for J. Walter Thompson, resigning in 1952 upon being cast in his first Broadway role, a gangster in a comedy called Mrs. McThing starring Helen Hayes.
    Another early role was a New York City Drama Company production at City Center of Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost in 1953, in the role of Dull, a constable.
    In 1954, he made his first cinematic appearance playing – in an uncredited role – the laconic character "Slim" in the Oscar-winning film On the Waterfront opposite Marlon Brando and Lee J. Cobb. Shortly afterwards Phil Silvers sought him out for his television show because he had been impressed by Gwynne's comedic work in Mrs. McThing. As a result, in 1955, Gwynne made a memorable appearance on The Phil Silvers Show, in the episode "The Eating Contest" as the character Corporal Ed Honnergar, whose depressive eating binges are exploited by Sgt. Bilko (Phil Silvers), who seeks prize money by entering Honnergar in an eating contest.
    Gwynne's second appearance on The Phil Silvers Show (in the episode "Its For The Birds" in 1956 in which Bilko persuades bird expert Honnergar to go on The ,000 Question) and appearances on many other shows led writer-producer Nat Hiken to cast him in the sitcom Car 54, Where Are You? as New York City Patrolman Francis Muldoon, opposite Joe E. Ross. During the two-season run of the program he met longtime friend and later co-star, Al Lewis.
    Gwynne was 6 ft 5 in
    tall, an attribute that contributed to his being cast as Herman Munster, a goofy parody of Frankenstein's monster, in the sitcom The Munsters. For his role he had to wear 40 or 50 lbs of padding, makeup, and 4-inch asphalt-spreader boots. His face was painted a bright violet because it captured the most light on the black-and-white film.
    After his iconic role in The Munsters, he found himself typecast, unable to gain new cinema character roles for over two years.[citation needed] In 1969, he was cast as Jonathan Brewster in a television production of Arsenic and Old Lace. (The Brewster character had originally been played by Boris Karloff in the Broadway theater production of the play; Karloff had also famously played the movies' Frankenstein character that Gwynne's Herman Munster character was based on.) Gwynne then found success as a stage actor in regional state productions across the United States while maintaining a low Hollywood profile, before being rediscovered.
    A talented vocalist, Gwynne sang in a Hallmark Hall of Fame made-for-television production, The Littlest Angel (1969), and went on to perform in a variety of roles on stage and screen. In 1974, drawing upon his own Southern roots, he appeared in the role of Big Daddy Pollitt in the Broadway revival of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof with Elizabeth Ashley, Keir Dullea and Kate Reid. In 1975 he played the Stage Manager in Our Town at the American Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford, Connecticut.
    He returned to Broadway in 1976 as Colonel J. C. Kinkaid in two parts of A Texas Trilogy. In 1984, Gwynne was auditioning for the part of Henry on the show Punky Brewster. Gwynne withdrew from the audition in frustration when a director identified him as Herman Munster rather than by his real name.
    The role of Henry subsequently went to George Gaynes. In 1987, Fred Gwynne starred in a short-lived TV series Jake's M.O. where he played an investigative reporter.
    Fred Gwynne's performance as Jud Crandall in Pet Sematary was based on author Stephen King himself, who is only an inch shorter than the actor, and uses a similarly thick Maine dialect. The character's likeness and accent, as played by Gwynne, have been used in a number of episodes of the animated show South Park, beginning in 2001 and as recently as 2019.
    Gwynne also had roles in the movies Simon, On the Waterfront, So Fine, Disorganized Crime, The Cotton Club, Captains Courageous, The Secret of My Success, Water, Ironweed, Fatal Attraction, and The Boy Who Could Fly. Despite his misgiving about having been typecast, he also agreed to reprise the role of Herman Munster for the 1981 TV reunion movie The Munsters' Revenge. Gwynne played Judge Chamberlain Haller in his last film, the 1992 comedy My Cousin Vinny. As a Yale University-educated judge in the film, he used a Southern accent in his verbal sparring with Joe Pesci's character, Vincent "Vinny" Gambini
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    2.
    Russell Horton is an American film and television actor.
    He is actor known for powerful performances. Horton's early acting career consisted of roles in various films, such as the drama "Parades" (1972) with Russ Thacker, the comedy "Annie Hall" (1977) with Woody Allen and the comedic drama "Girlfriends" (1978) with Melanie Mayron.
    3.
    Ray Owens(94)was an American film, televsion actor and writer.  He is known for The Flying House (1982), The Doctors (1963) and The Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure (1967). He appeared in numerous tv westerns.
    4.
    Evie Juster
    5.
    Sam Dann
    Comes with money back guarantee if not satisfied. Low starting bid. Will ship international.