Misplaced Pages

Joe E. Ross: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 05:11, 24 January 2014 editAlf.laylah.wa.laylah (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers28,976 edits Personal: Neuhaus sez← Previous edit Revision as of 05:31, 24 January 2014 edit undoJoefromrandb (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users38,279 edits Personal: rm nonsenseNext edit →
Line 39: Line 39:


==Personal== ==Personal==
Ross's personal life was as noisy and troubled as his screen characters. Ross was married eight times, all to former prostitutes. His Car 54 co-star ] once asked him "why do you keep marrying hookers?" According to Lewis, Ross said that "it's less expensive than to keep visiting them."<ref name=ooooh>{{cite news|title=OOOOH! OOOOH!...DVD Takes a Spin With Car 54|publisher=New York Examiner|date=April 7, 2011|author=Mel Neuhaus}}</ref> Co-workers also complained that Ross was continually vulgar, even cursing around children. ], who played Ross's caveman wife in the sitcom "]," hated working with Ross and referred to him as "that awful man."<ref name=ooooh/> According to Mel Neuhaus, Ross was "nown throughout the industry as one of the most disgusting human beings who ever held a ] card."<ref name=ooooh/> However, others called him "a man of sweet character."<ref>"," by Listener Kliph Nesteroff, WFMU, January 30, 2011.</ref> Ross was married eight times, all to former prostitutes. His Car 54 co-star ] once asked him "why do you keep marrying hookers?" According to Lewis, Ross said that "it's less expensive than to keep visiting them."<ref name=ooooh>{{cite news|title=OOOOH! OOOOH!...DVD Takes a Spin With Car 54|publisher=New York Examiner|date=April 7, 2011|author=Mel Neuhaus}}</ref> Co-workers also complained that Ross was continually vulgar, even cursing around children. ], who played Ross's caveman wife in the sitcom "]," hated working with Ross and referred to him as "that awful man."<ref name=ooooh/> According to Mel Neuhaus, Ross was "nown throughout the industry as one of the most disgusting human beings who ever held a ] card."<ref name=ooooh/> However, others called him "a man of sweet character."<ref>"," by Listener Kliph Nesteroff, WFMU, January 30, 2011.</ref>


==Death== ==Death==

Revision as of 05:31, 24 January 2014

Joe E. Ross
File:JER.jpg
BornJoseph Roszawikz
(1914-03-15)March 15, 1914
New York City, New York, U.S.
DiedAugust 13, 1982(1982-08-13) (aged 68)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
OccupationActor
Years active1955–1982

Joe E. Ross (born Joseph Roszawikz, March 15, 1914 – August 13, 1982) was an American actor known for his trademark "Ooh! Ooh!" exclamation, which he used in many of his roles. He starred in such TV sitcoms as The Phil Silvers Show and Car 54, Where Are You?.

Career

Ross was born to Jewish immigrant parents in New York, New York. He dropped out of Seward Park High School at 16 to become a singing waiter at the Van Cortlandt Inn in the Bronx. When the cafe added a girl dancer and singer, Ross was promoted to announcer. He added some jokes and became a comedian.

In 1938, he appeared at the Queens Terrace, near Jackson Heights, New York. Jackie Gleason had already been playing there for 16 weeks, and the manager was about to ask Gleason to stay a while longer. Ross heard of the opening, auditioned for it, got the contract, and also stayed 16 weeks. Ross then turned burlesque comic on the Schuster circuit out of Chicago.

His career was interrupted by World War II. He served in the Army Air Corps at Camp Blanding, Florida, before being stationed in England.

Discharged at the war's end, Ross became an announcer-comic at Billy Gray's Band Box in Hollywood. He kept his ties to burlesque, and appeared in Irving Klaw's feature-length theatrical film Teaserama (1955), a re-creation of a burlesque show.

In 1955, Ross worked at a nightclub in Miami Beach called Club Ciro. He was spotted by Nat Hiken and Phil Silvers, who were planning You'll Never Get Rich (later known as The Phil Silvers Show and sometimes Sgt. Bilko) and loved Ross's comedy skills. Ross was hired on the spot and cast as the mess sergeant, Rupert Ritzik.

Ross made Ritzik memorable. Ritzik was henpecked, dumb, and greedy, always an easy mark for Bilko's schemes. Whenever Ritzik had a sudden inspiration, he would hesitate and stammer "Ooh! Ooh!" before articulating his idea. The catch phrase came from the actor's own frustration when he couldn't remember his lines. Silvers would deliberately stray from the scripted dialogue and give Ross the wrong cues, prompting a genuinely confused reaction and an agonized "Ooh! Ooh!" from Ross.

After The Phil Silvers Show ended in 1959, Nat Hiken went on to produce Car 54, Where Are You? and cast Joe E. Ross as Patrolman Gunther Toody of New York's 53rd Precinct. Fred Gwynne, another Bilko alumnus, played Toody's partner, Francis Muldoon. Toody could usually be counted on at some point to say,"Ooh! Ooh! Francis!" or "Do you mind! Do - you - mind!" Ross became so identified with his policeman role that he recorded an album of songs entitled "Love Songs from a Cop." Roulette Records released the LP in 1964. Ross did the voice for Toody for the episode "Car 54" of Hanna-Barbera's Wait Till Your Father Gets Home, in which Toody and Muldoon moonlight running a day care center and one of the children turns up missing.

Ross also starred as Gronk in Sherwood Schwartz's ill-fated 1966 sitcom It's About Time, which featured two 1960s American astronauts who were thrown back in time to the prehistoric era.

Ross also was a prominent cartoon voice into the 1970s, playing the stereotypical bumbling sergeant in many cartoons such as Hong Kong Phooey (as Sgt. Flint) and Help! It's The Hair Bear Bunch (as Botch) He also voiced Roll On CB Bears segment Shake, Rattle and Roll. His "Ooh! Ooh!" phrase was emulated by Frank Welker in the animated series Fangface.

Personal

Ross was married eight times, all to former prostitutes. His Car 54 co-star Al Lewis once asked him "why do you keep marrying hookers?" According to Lewis, Ross said that "it's less expensive than to keep visiting them." Co-workers also complained that Ross was continually vulgar, even cursing around children. Imogene Coca, who played Ross's caveman wife in the sitcom "It's About Time," hated working with Ross and referred to him as "that awful man." According to Mel Neuhaus, Ross was "nown throughout the industry as one of the most disgusting human beings who ever held a SAG card." However, others called him "a man of sweet character."

Death

Ross died of a heart attack on August 13, 1982. He was stricken while performing in the clubhouse of his apartment building in Van Nuys, California, a suburb of Los Angeles. He was buried in Forest Lawn-Hollywood Hills Cemetery. In his autobiography, Jay Leno writes on delivering the eulogy for Ross.

References

  1. ^ Mel Neuhaus (April 7, 2011). "OOOOH! OOOOH!...DVD Takes a Spin With Car 54". New York Examiner.
  2. "King of Slobs: The Life of Joe E. Ross," by Listener Kliph Nesteroff, WFMU, January 30, 2011.
  3. *NY Times Obituary
  4. Joe E. Ross at Find a Grave

External links

Template:Persondata

Categories: