Rich Little

Richard Caruthers Little (born November 26, 1938) is a Canadian-American impressionist and voice actor. He has been nicknamed "The Man of a Thousand Voices".

Rich Little
Little performing as Jack Benny in 2015
Birth nameRichard Caruthers Little
Born (1938-11-26) November 26, 1938
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
MediumStand-up comedy, television
Years active1963–present
GenresImpersonations, celebrities
Spouse
  • Jeanne Worden
    (
    m. 19711989)
  • Jeannette Markey
    (
    m. 19941997)
  • Marie Marotta
    (
    m. 2003; died 2010)
  • Catherine Brown
    (
    m. 20122012)
Children2
Websitewww.therichlittle.com

Early life

Little was born in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, the middle of three sons. His father, Lawrence Peniston Little, was a surgeon who served as a lieutenant commander in the Royal Canadian Naval Volunteer Reserve during World War II and then worked for the Department of Veterans’ Affairs until his death in 1959.[1] His mother, Elizabeth Maud (née Wilson), was a housewife.[2] A third-generation Canadian, he is descended from English stock on his father's side and Irish on his mother's. On his mother's side, he is descended from John Willson, who was Speaker of the 5th Parliament of Upper Canada in the 1820s. Little's paternal great-grandfather, William Carruthers Little, was a Liberal-Conservative Member of Parliament in the Canadian House of Commons from 1867 to 1881.[1]

He attended Lisgar Collegiate Institute. In his early teens, he formed a partnership with Geoff Scott, another budding impressionist, concentrating on reproducing the voices of Canadian politicians such as Prime Minister John Diefenbaker and Ottawa mayor Charlotte Whitton.

Career

Early career in Ottawa

Starting when he was eleven, Little acted in two documentary movies for Crawley Films of Ottawa.[1]

Little was an usher at the Elgin Movie Theatre in Ottawa, where he would perfect his voices while standing at the back of the theatre. He started his amateur acting career at the Ottawa Little Theatre, winning his first acting award at the Eastern Ontario Drama Festival in Deep River, Ontario. At 17, he and friend and fellow impressionist Geoff Scott won a talent contest on 'on CBOT in Ottawa, the first time he was paid for his impressionist skills, which led to an appearance on Pick the Stars, a national talent contest broadcast by CBC Television in 1956.[3] They then appeared on The Jackie Rae Show during the 1956-57 season.[4]

Little and Scott's comedy team that performed at various local events and venues. Still in his teens, they developed a 10-minute act which they performed at Shriners’ conventions and Knights of Columbus meetings.[5] Scott later entered journalism, and ultimately politics.[1]

Little became a relief announcer on Ottawa radio station CFRA, before behind hired as a disk jockey on CJET in Smiths Falls, Ontario. His afternoon-evening shift ran from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. weekdays and the show gave him the opportunity to use his impressions on the air.[3][1] By the 1960s, Little was taking his act to Toronto where he preformed at coffee houses and other venues.[5]

In 1963, Little issued two LPs in Canada through Capital Records of Canada; the first, My Fellow Canadians which he performed with Les Lye and which concentrated on Canadian political satire and featured Little and two other actors impersonating figures well-known to a Canadian audience such as Diefenbaker, Lester Pearson and Tommy Douglas. The second album, Scrooge and the Stars, featured Little acting out Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol entirely on his own, playing all the roles as 22 different Hollywood stars, ranging from Jack Benny to Jack Webb. The album was released in early November but it had to be withdrawn a few weeks later due to the assassination of John F. Kennedy as Little had imitated JFK in the role of the Spirit of Christmas Present and had Kennedy say the line “Scrooge, my life upon the globe is brief; it ends tonight. In fact, it ends as fast as you can say your name.”[1]

Breaking into the US

Little's first performance in the US was in December 1963 at Guy Lombardo’s inn and country dub in Tierra Verde, Florida.[1]

Little's American career was helped by Peppiatt and Aylesworth, a Canadian writing team who had moved to Hollywood and worked on various specials and variety series, including the Judy Garland Show. Familiar with Little's work in Canada, Peppiat had worked on The Jackie Rae Show on which Little made a television appearance at 17, and the team had written for Little's Canadian nightclib act. They played a recording of Little for Garland and they and the show's musical director, Mel Tormé encouraged her to audition him. Tormé had met Little when they both performed in a CBC Television variety show in Toronto and bonded over their love of old movies.[5]

The audition won him the job, and in January 1964 Little made his American television debut on CBS's The Judy Garland Show, where he impressed Garland by imitating various male celebrities, including James Mason who had been Garland's co-star in A Star Is Born.[6][1] Television appearances on variety shows hosted by Ed Sullivan, Jackie Gleason, Rudy Vallee, Mike Douglas, George Burns, and Al Hirt followed over the next two years.[1]

Peppiatt and Aylesworth also helped bring Little on to other American shows they wrote for such as The Jimmy Dean Show, The Kopykats and The Julie Andrews Hour and continued to write matetial for his act when after he moved to the US permanently at the end of 1965.[1]

In Canada, Little starred in his own show The Rich Little Show, on CBC Radio in 1966.[1] He also made his first appearances on The Dean Martin Show and The Jimmy Dean Show during the 1965-1966 season.[1]

In 1965, Little provided the voice for the Pink Panther in two experimental cartoons, Sink Pink and Pink Ice.

In 1966 and 1967, Little appeared in ABC-TV's Judy Carne sitcom Love on a Rooftop as the Willises' eccentric neighbour, Stan Parker. He appeared on That Girl in 1967 as a writer who impressed Marlo Thomas' character with his impersonations. He also made two memorable appearances as accident-prone Brother Paul Leonardi on The Flying Nun in 1968; it marked one of his few appearances as a character actor rather than an impressionist. In 1969 he appeared in an episode of Petticoat Junction as newly engaged fiance to Billie Jo in "Billie Jo and the Big Big Star".

Little in a publicity photo for Hawaii Five-O, 1976

Nixon

One of his best-known impressions is of U.S. President Richard Nixon (reprising in 1991 the role of Nixon as ideal sperm donor in Gina's fantasies on the soap opera Santa Barbara). During the 1970s, Little made many television appearances portraying Nixon and once performed his impersonation in front of Nixon himself, who Little says did not realize he was imitating him at all and "wondered why I was talking to him in such a funny voice."[7] In 2020, he developed a one-man show around the late president, titled "Trial on the Potomac- The Impeachment of Richard Nixon". based on the book The Real Watergate Scandal, Collusion, Conspiracy, and the Plot That Brought Nixon Down by Geoff Shepard, which alleged a conspiracy to remove Nixon from office.[8]

1970s

Little was also a semi-regular on the Emmy-winning ABC-TV variety series The Julie Andrews Hour in 1972–73. In response to his imitation of Jack Benny, the comedian sent Little an 18-carat gold money clip containing this message: "With Bob Hope doing my walk and you doing my voice, I can be a star and do nothing." He was named "Comedy Star of the Year" by the American Guild of Variety Artists in 1974.

Little's best-known continuing TV series was The Kopycats, hour-long segments of The ABC Comedy Hour, broadcast in 1972. Taped in England, these comedy-variety shows consisted entirely of celebrity impersonations, with the actors in full costume and makeup for every sketch. The cast included Little, Frank Gorshin, Marilyn Michaels, George Kirby, British comedian Joe Baker, Fred Travalena, Charlie Callas and Peter Goodwright.

Little was a regular guest on The Dean Martin Celebrity Roasts in the 1970s, appearing in 24 of the specials,[9] where he roasted celebrities such as Don Rickles,[10] Jack Benny,[11] Johnny Carson,[12] Frank Sinatra,[13] Jimmy Stewart[14] and Kirk Douglas.[15]

The Rich Little Show (1976) on NBC and The New You Asked for It (1981) were attempts to present Little in his own person, away from his gallery of characterizations. Little also appeared on a second season episode of The Muppet Show.[16]

Little has starred in various HBO specials including the 1978 one-man show, Rich Little's Christmas Carol, which was produced by and originally aired on CBC Television, in which Little portrayed famous comedians in established roles (W. C. Fields as Ebenezer Scrooge, Paul Lynde as Bob Cratchit, et al). He followed this up with another HBO special in 1983, Rich Little's Robin Hood, in which he portrayed Groucho Marx as Robin Hood, Humphrey Bogart as Prince John, John Wayne as Little John, Carol Channing as Maid Marion, Laurel & Hardy as Sheriffs of Nottingham, George Burns as Alan-a-Dale, and various other characters.

In 1981 Little appeared in a comedy LP called The First Family Rides Again, which was the fourth and final of the First Family comedy LPs originally created by Bob Booker and Earle Doud. Little starred along with Melanie Chartoff, Michael Richards, Shelly Black, Jenilee Harrison, Earle Doud, and Vaughn Meader, making light of U.S. President Ronald Reagan's first few months in the White House.

In all, Little has released nine albums and three HBO specials.[17]

1980s

Outside of any comedic context, Little's talent for impersonation has been used in movies when an actor's dialogue was impaired by poor health. When David Niven proved too ill for his voice to be used in his appearances in Trail of the Pink Panther (1982) and Curse of the Pink Panther (1983), Little provided the overdub as an imitation of Niven's voice. He performed similar duties to dub an imitation of James Cagney's stroke-impaired voice in the 1984 TV movie Terrible Joe Moran and in the 1991 TV special Christmas at the Movies by providing an uncredited dub for actor/dancer Gene Kelly who had lost his voice.[18]

He also lent his voice to the narration of three specials which were the forerunners for the animated series The Raccoons: The Christmas Raccoons, The Raccoons on Ice and The Raccoons and the Lost Star.[19]

In 1987, during the We the People 200: The Constitutional Gala television special, Little personified various historical figures including Franklin D. Roosevelt, Edward R. Murrow, John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr. Little's performance was described as eclectic, impersonating Henry Fonda as Abraham Lincoln and doing Winston Churchill giving a rousing speech.[20][21]

The Tonight Show

Little was a frequent guest on variety and talk shows in the 1960s and 1970s and had an unofficial monthly slot on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson for several years, and also guest hosted the program about a dozen times.[5] He developed an impression of Johnny Carson, capturing The Tonight Show host's voice and many onstage mannerisms and later played Carson in the HBO TV-movie The Late Shift. Little's spot-on impersonation allegedly got under the thin skin of Carson and he was permanently banned from appearing on the Tonight Show without notice or reason after his August 1982 appearance. Little claims in his biography that he was banned because Carson was offended by his impression and this claim was supported by Henry Bushkin, Carson's long-time lawyer, who stated that nobody got under Carson's skin more than Little.[22] However, Little had been doing the impression since the early 1970s, a decade prior to his bookings on the show coming to an end, including performing the impression to the Tonight Show's host face when Carson was the guest of honor at The Dean Martin Celebrity Roast of Johnny Carson in 1973.[23] In response to Little's claims, Fred DeCordova, Carson's producer, said they just weren't interested in hiring him any more due to his lack of new impressions.[24]

Vegas and later career

Little has been appearing in Las Vegas since the mid-1960s when he had dates at the Golden Nugget[1] and would go on to play at other Vegas venues such as The Sands, where he debuted in 1969 with a two-year contract. In 1973, he performed at Caesars Palace for four weeks in 1973 as the opening act for The Osmonds. He then appeared at the Desert Inn with Juliet Prowse for a month in 1974. His appearances continued throughout the 1970s and 1980s; he headlined at the Desert Inn for eight years in the late 1970s and 1980s, at the MGM Grand with Nell Carter in 1985; at Bally’s, with Charo in 1986; the Sands in 1991 and 1992 as well as at the Golden Nugget in 1991.[9]

With opportunities for him to work in television and film in decline, and his television work almost completely drying up by the mid-1980s, the focus of Little's career shifted from Hollywood to Las Vegas.[5] The decline in his career was blamed in part on his not updated his repertory of impressions with younger voices, a fact he blames on recent generations of actors using a naturalistic delivery that makes their voices less distinctive. “It’s much easier to do Humphrey Bogart than Tom Cruise,” he said. “How do you imitate Brad Pitt? George Clooney? Wouldn’t mean anything.”[5]

Little relocated to Vegas in 1990, and sold his house in Los Angeles and bought a home in Vegas in 1992,[25] when he signed an exclusive long-term contract with the Sahara, staging a revamped version of "The Kopykats" with other impersonators. He later moved to Paris Las Vegas, where he starred in The Presidents, a play on nine Presidents of the United States from Kennedy to George W. Bush starting in 2002.[9] In 2004, he moved to The Suncoast.[9]

In the early 2010s, he preformed a one-man show, Jimmy Stewart & Friends, based on the life of Jimmy Stewart, at the LVH hotel, and on tour.[5] After the death of his friend Jimmy Stewart in the late 1990s, Rich recorded the crosswalk messages for intersections in Stewart's home town of Indiana, Pennsylvania using his imitation of the star's voice.

Since 2015, Little has a regular performer at the Laugh Factory in the Tropicana hotel in Las Vegas.[26] His one-hour show, Rich Little Live!, is a career retrospective including video highlights from his TV career and is performed five nights a week.[27] Throughout the show, he displays many of the charcoal sketches he has drawn of the celebrities he has impersonated.[26][28]

Little was the host for the 2007 White House Correspondents' Association dinner. Although President George W. Bush was reported to have enjoyed Little's performance, it was panned by some reviewers for "his ancient jokes and impressions of dead people (Johnny Carson, Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan)."[29][30][31]

Little voices as a guest star in Futurama such as Futurama: Bender's Game, playing his own celebrity head: "This is Rich Little, impersonating Howard Cosell." Many times he plays a sports commentator.

In 1998, Little was inducted into Canada's Walk of Fame. Little was inducted into the Casino Legends Hall of Fame in 1999 and given a star on the Las Vegas Walk of Stars in 2005.[9]

In 2017, Little released his memoir, Little By Little: People I Have Known And Been.[27]

Other interests

Little has been active in several charities including the Juvenile Diabetes Fund and the Children's Miracle Network. He has been named to Miami Children's Hospital International Pediatrics Hall of Fame and been honoured by the naming of the Rich Little Special Care Nursery at Ottawa Civic Hospital. He has been a major supporter in helping veterans through the Gary Sinise Foundation.

Personal life

Little was engaged to Canadian actress Jean Christopher in 1965 but they did not end up marrying.[1]

Little was married to Jeanne Worden, whom he met when she was working as a secretary on The Joey Bishop Show, from 1971 until their divorce in 1989. She had one daughter, Bria.[32] Little has a daughter from another relationship, Lyndsay Cottrell, born in 1988. url=http://articles.latimes.com/1990-02-23/news/vw-1425_1_child-support | newspaper=Los Angeles Times | access-date=July 8, 2016}}</ref>

Little was engaged to magician Melinda Saxe, but she broke off the three-year relationship in 1991, saying she had discovered that he had secretly videotaped them having sex in 1988. Saxe sued Little for defamation, invasion of privacy, and inflicting emotional distress, claiming he had secretly videotaped their sexual encounters in 1988 and had joked about their relationship on stage.[33] Little claimed the videotaping was consensual.[34][35] The lawsuit was eventually settled out of court.[32]

He married comedian and impressionist Jeannette Markey in 1994;[36] they divorced in 1997. He was married to Marie Marotta from 2003 until her death in 2010 of a deliberate overdose of sleeping pills after years of suffering from migraines and chronic pain.[37] He married his fourth wife, Catherine Brown, a former reality show contestant,[38] in a private ceremony in 2012; they divorced in October later that year.[39]

In 1998, a Golden Palm Star on the Palm Springs, California, Walk of Stars was dedicated to him.[40]

In 2010, Little became a naturalized American citizen.[41][25]

gollark: Broadly speaking, yes.
gollark: ++remind "september 24" it is already too late
gollark: Nobody needed those environment variables anyway, because it didn't crash.
gollark: Apparently you used to be able to use some internal Python API to get the location of argv/argc but they broke it.
gollark: I read somewhere that the environment list thing was near argv in memory, so it finds a common environment variable's location using `getenv`, scans backward until it finds `python3`, then randomly overwrites things.

References

  1. Gilmour, Clyde (November 15, 1965). "RICH LITTLE alias just about everybody". Maclean's Magazine. Retrieved July 27, 2020.
  2. "Rich Little Biography (1938-)". Filmreference.com. Retrieved 2014-07-15.
  3. "Rich Little". Canadian Communication Foundation. Retrieved 29 October 2018.
  4. https://thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/jackie-rae-emc
  5. "A Spot-On Impression of a Stubborn Survivor". New York Times. January 17, 2013. Retrieved July 28, 2020.
  6. Rich Little on Judy Garland Show, 1964, 8 min.
  7. "Rich Little recalls working alongside Judy Garland, Lucille Ball: 'Both were instrumental in my career'". Fox News. January 2, 2019. Retrieved July 28, 2020.
  8. "Rich Little Offers Vegas NIXON Preview Before Runs in New York & D.C." Broadway World. February 26, 2020. Retrieved July 28, 2020.
  9. "Impersonator's goal is to make audience think of someone else". Las Vegas Review-Journal. August 9, 2009. Retrieved July 28, 2020.
  10. gregsmithsr (22 January 2010). "6 Rich Little Roasts Rickles.m4v" via YouTube.
  11. Briana Tarango (6 July 2014). "Rich Little Roast Jack Benny" via YouTube.
  12. "YouTube". www.youtube.com.
  13. "YouTube". www.youtube.com.
  14. "YouTube". www.youtube.com.
  15. Derrel Maness (19 December 2013). "Rich Little roasts Kirk Douglasipad" via YouTube.
  16. Garlen, Jennifer C.; Graham, Anissa M. (2009). Kermit Culture: Critical Perspectives on Jim Henson's Muppets. McFarland & Company. p. 218. ISBN 078644259X.
  17. https://www.greeleytribune.com/2020/02/28/master-impersonator-rich-little-to-perform-at-uccc/
  18. Matsuda, Donna (26 June 2012). "Laugh a Lot or a "Little": An interview with Rich Little, the man of a thousand voices". San Diego Drama King. Retrieved 17 October 2012.
  19. The Christmas Raccoons on YouTube, The Raccoons On Ice on YouTube and The Raccoons and the Lost Star on YouTube
  20. Levin, Daniel. Representing Popular Sovereignty: The Constitution in American Political Culture, State Univ. of New York Press (1999) p. 94
  21. "Rich Little impersonates historical figures, 1987, 6 min.
  22. "Surprising Facts From The Johnny Carson Show". www.heraldweekly.com.
  23. https://bestclassicbands.com/rich-little-johnny-carson-3-6-19/
  24. Beck, Marilyn. "Rich Little Left Out of `Tonight`".
  25. Ryon, Ruth (July 31, 1994). "Big Names Buy Little House". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 27, 2020.
  26. "Rich Little brings his cavalcade of celebrity impersonations back to the Las Vegas stage". Los Angeles Times. June 25, 2015. Retrieved July 28, 2020.
  27. "Rich Little: 'Little by Little'". Washington Times. January 23, 2017. Retrieved July 28, 2020.
  28. https://www.overtoncountynews.com/arts_and_entertainment/rich-little-still-impresses/article_6a093a4c-a27d-11e9-a76a-732f0ed5617b.html
  29. Akers, Mary Ann (23 April 2007). "Rich Little Bravely Answers Washington's Call". Blog.washingtonpost.com.
  30. Adams, Richard (23 April 2007). "Every day is a whining Rove". Blogs.guardian.co.uk.
  31. Harper, Tim (23 April 2007). "Jokes leave Washington a Little cold". The Toronto Star.
  32. "Laugh Lines". Ottawa Citizen. August 19, 2007. Retrieved July 27, 2020.
  33. "WOMAN SAYS RICH LITTLE VIDEOTAPED LOVEMAKING". Orlando Sentinel. January 5, 1992. Retrieved July 27, 2020.
  34. Macy, Robert (January 22, 1992). "Rich Little Says Seamy Saga Likely to Go On". Associated Press. Associated Press. Retrieved July 27, 2020.
  35. "Little to replace ex-fiancee at hotel". Tulsa World. Associated Press. January 17, 1992. Retrieved July 27, 2020.
  36. "Marrying Rich". People. November 14, 1994. Retrieved July 27, 2020.
  37. Lofaro, Tony (16 July 2010). "Rich Little's wife dies of apparent overdose". The Ottawa Citizen.
  38. "Rich Little plans fourth marriage". Las Vegas Review-Journal. September 8, 2011. Retrieved July 27, 2020.
  39. Lofaro, Tony (18 June 2012). "Rich Little remarries, finds new bride on the web". The Ottawa Citizen.
  40. "Palm Springs Walk of Stars by date dedicated" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-10-13. Retrieved 2014-07-15.
  41. "Impressionist Rich Little becomes U.S. citizen". CBC News. Associated Press. January 8, 2010. Retrieved November 16, 2015.
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