The Fuller Brush Man

film by Simon [1948]

Learn about this topic in these articles:

Skelton

  • In Red Skelton

    …credits included Bathing Beauty (1944), The Fuller Brush Man (1948), and Excuse My Dust (1951).

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Tashlin

  • In Frank Tashlin: Films of the mid-1940s to mid-1950s

    Hope classic The Paleface (1948), The Fuller Brush Man (1948), and the Marx Brothers’ Love Happy (1949). He also wrote the comedies Miss Grant Takes Richmond (1949), featuring Lucille Ball; Kill the Umpire (1950); The Good Humor Man (1950); and The Fuller Brush Girl (1950) for director Lloyd

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Quick Facts
Byname of:
Richard Bernard Skelton
Born:
July 18, 1913, Vincennes, Indiana, U.S.
Died:
September 17, 1997, Rancho Mirage, California (aged 84)

Red Skelton (born July 18, 1913, Vincennes, Indiana, U.S.—died September 17, 1997, Rancho Mirage, California) was an American pantomimist and radio and television comedian, host, and star performer of the popular TV variety program The Red Skelton Show (1951–71; called The Red Skelton Hour from 1962 to 1970). In that series, Skelton re-created a number of characters—among them Clem Kaddiddlehopper, Sheriff Deadeye, Junior, the Mean Widdle Kid, and Cauliflower McPugg—he had developed during his years in vaudeville and radio. Skelton’s style deftly combined broad humour with emotional complexity.

Skelton’s father, a circus clown, died two months before Skelton was born, and he had to help support himself from an early age. He was a newsboy by age 7, and at 10 he took to the road with a medicine show touring the Midwest, effectively ending his classroom schooling. He went on to perform in minstrel shows, burlesque shows, circuses, and radio. His radio appearance on The Rudy Vallee Show in 1937 led to other bookings, and he was voted the outstanding new radio star of 1941. He also took roles in some 30 movies, including a film starring Ginger Rogers, Having a Wonderful Time (1938). His other movie credits included Bathing Beauty (1944), The Fuller Brush Man (1948), and Excuse My Dust (1951).

He moved from movies and radio to television when NBC inaugurated The Red Skelton Show in 1951. The show was canceled in 1953, but it was quickly picked up by CBS, where it remained until 1970; the final season was broadcast again by NBC. Skelton was inducted into the Television Academy Hall of Fame in 1988.

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