Known for the wild array of characters he could create in a flash – his naughty old lady Maude Frickert was a Tonight Show headliner who routinely broke up hosts Jack Paar and then Johnny Carson – Winters, playing doltish truck driver Lennie Pike, stole the all-star 1963 movie It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World out from every name comedian who was breathing at the time..
A Dayton, Ohio, native, Winters dropped out of high school to join the Marines, with whom he served in the Pacific during World War II. After the war he deejayed on radio station back in his hometown, where he could never quite deliver the weather in a straight fashion.
“About the third day, I decided that I’d interview myself,” he recalled years later for a PBS special, Pioneers of Television, saying he wished “to gamble a little bit with this so-called career. So I said, ‘Ladies and gentlemen, we have a wonderful gentleman here … Sir Edmund Denler. [He’s] flown a secret flight aircraft all the way from London to Labrador, Labrador here to Dayton, and just wonderful to have you here, sir …’ “
The radio station owner was not amused. The radio audience was.
A shot on CBS’s Arthur Godfrey’s Talent Scouts led to other spots on network TV and then on Broadway, in the revue Almanac. His true launching pad, in 1956, was the weekly TV variety The Jonathan Winters Show. And though it was hard to contain him on the small screen – records and clubs were his forte – Winters returned the medium back in 1981, to play Robin William’s father in the last season of ABC’s Mork and Mindy.
Truly a comedian’s comedian, Winters received the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor in 1999. On a personal level, his wife of 60 years, Eileen, died, age 84, in early 2009, according to a friend’s published remembrance.
Later in life, Winters credited much of his early success to the savvy TV hosts who grabbed him and put him on the air in the early ’60s. According to Winters, they would say: “One thing about Winters, you never knew what he’s going to say or do.”
He added: “I don’t think they sweated my being dirty … or embarrassing … they knew I would be funny.”
And was he ever.