Wally Cox
Born December 06, 1924 (Age: 101)
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Detroit, Michigan, USA
Biography
Wally Cox was a beloved character actor who made his mark in television and ranks as one of the medium's most memorable performers. His ability to show his range likely was limited by his short stature, slight frame, and high-pitched voice, which along with his talent for being very funny, made him ideal for comedy parts such as his memorable turn as Professor P. Caspar Biddle in "The Bird-Watchers" episode of The Beverly Hillbillies (1962) in 1966. His television persona was that of a shy, timid man in horn-rimed glasses who spoke in a tentative, though distinctly enunciated, voice. It was a persona that his long-time friend Marlon Brando said was completely at odds with the real man. Cox always will be remembered as the eponymous "Mr. Peepers" and the voice of "Underdog," but he was an actor of wider talents seldom used by the industry, as can be seen in his turns as the sonar operator in The Bedford Incident (1965) and as the potential suicide Wally Haverstraw in The Bill Cosby Show (1969) episode "Goodbye, Cruel World" in 1970. Dying unexpectedly on February 15, 1973, from what some newspapers described as an accidental overdose of sedatives but which Marlon Brando in his autobiography said was a heart attack, Wally Cox's cremated remains were kept hidden in a closet by his old friend for three decades. According to Brando's son Miko, both his father's and Cox's ashes were scattered at the same time in Death Valley, California, in a ceremony following Brando's death, thus reuniting the lifetime friends.
Wally Cox was a beloved character actor who made his mark in television and ranks as one of the medium's most memorable performers. His ability to show his range likely was limited by his short stature, slight frame, and high-pitched voice, which along with his talent for being very funny, made him ideal for comedy parts such as his memorable turn as Professor P. Caspar Biddle in "The Bird-Watchers" episode of The Beverly Hillbillies (1962) in 1966. His television persona was that of a shy, timid man in horn-rimed glasses who spoke in a tentative, though distinctly enunciated, voice. It was a persona that his long-time friend Marlon Brando said was completely at odds with the real man.
Cox always will be remembered as the eponymous "Mr. Peepers" and the voice of "Underdog," but he was an actor of wider talents seldom used by the industry, as can be seen in his turns as the sonar operator in The Bedford Incident (1965) and as the potential suicide Wally Haverstraw in The Bill Cosby Show (1969) episode "Goodbye, Cruel World" in 1970. Dying unexpectedly on February 15, 1973, from what some newspapers described as an accidental overdose of sedatives but which Marlon Brando in his autobiography said was a heart attack, Wally Cox's cremated remains were kept hidden in a closet by his old friend for three decades. According to Brando's son Miko, both his father's and Cox's ashes were scattered at the same time in Death Valley, California, in a ceremony following Brando's death, thus reuniting the lifetime friends.
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Filmography
Hollywood Heaven: Tragic Lives, Tragic Deaths
1990
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as (archive footage)
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Age: 65
Reel Horror
1985
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as Clyde (archive footage)
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Age: 60
The Night Strangler
1973
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as Mr. Berry
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Age: 48
Once Upon a Mattress
1972
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as The Jester
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Age: 48
Magic Carpet
1972
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as Harold Kane
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Age: 47
The Wacky Zoo of Morgan City
1970
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as Becker
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Age: 45
No Image
Murder at N.B.C.
1966
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as
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Age: 41
The Bedford Incident
1965
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as Seaman Merlin Queffle
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Age: 40
Morituri
1965
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as Dr. Ambach
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Age: 40
The Yellow Rolls-Royce
1964
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as Ferguson
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Age: 40
Fate Is the Hunter
1964
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as Ralph Bundy
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Age: 39
Spencer's Mountain
1963
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as Preacher Goodman
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Age: 38
State Fair
1962
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as Hipplewaite
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Age: 37
Something's Got to Give
1962
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as Shoe Salesman
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Age: 37
Babes in Toyland
1955
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as Grumio, the Toymaker
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Age: 31
Heidi
1955
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as Peter
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Age: 30
Babes in Toyland
1954
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as Grumio, the Toymaker
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Age: 30