Keenan Wynn

Actor

Popular As Francis Xavier Aloysius James Jeremiah Keenan Wynn

Birthday July 27, 1916

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace New York City, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1986-10-14, Brentwood, California, U.S. (70 years old)

Nationality United States

Height 5' 10" (1.78 m)

#10660 Most Popular

1914

Wynn was married to former stage actress Eve Lynn Abbott (1914–2004) until their divorce in 1947, whereupon Abbott married actor Van Johnson, one of the couple's closest friends.

Abbott contended her marriage to Wynn was a happy one, but that her divorce and remarriage were engineered by MGM studio boss Louis B. Mayer, who refused to renew Wynn's contract unless Abbott divorced him and married Johnson, who was the subject of rumors that he was homosexual.

One son, actor and writer Ned Wynn (born Edmond Keenan Wynn), wrote the autobiographical memoir We Will Always Live In Beverly Hills.

1916

Francis Xavier Aloysius James Jeremiah Keenan Wynn (July 27, 1916 – October 14, 1986) was an American character actor.

His expressive face was his stock-in-trade; and though he rarely carried the lead role, he had prominent billing in most of his film and television roles.

Wynn was born on July 27, 1916, in New York City, the son of vaudeville comedian Ed Wynn and his wife, the former Hilda Keenan.

He took his stage name from his maternal grandfather, Frank Keenan, one of the first Broadway actors to star in Hollywood.

His father was Jewish and his mother was of Irish Catholic background.

1934

Wynn appeared in hundreds of films and television series between 1934 and 1986.

1935

He appeared in several plays on Broadway, including Remember the Day (1935), Black Widow (1936), Hitch Your Wagon (1937), The Star Wagon (1938), One for the Money (1939), Two for the Show (1940), and The More the Merrier (1941).

1937

Ed Wynn encouraged his son to become an actor, and to join The Lambs Club, which he did in 1937.

Wynn began his career as a stage actor.

1940

He was a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player during the 1940s and 1950s.

1941

Wynn starred in the radio show The Amazing Mr. Smith on Mutual Broadcasting System April 7 – June 30, 1941.

He played the title role, "a carefree young man who runs into trouble galore and becomes an involuntary detective".

1945

He had a brief role as a belligerent, unsympathetic drunk in the wartime romance The Clock (1945).

1948

Arguably his most dynamic performance was a small role in The Hucksters (1948) with Clark Gable.

His early postwar credits include The Three Musketeers (1948), playing D'Artagnan's servant; Annie Get Your Gun (1950); Royal Wedding (1951); Kiss Me, Kate (1953); The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit (1956); The Absent-Minded Professor (1961); The Americanization of Emily (1964) and Dr. Strangelove (1964).

1956

The Wynns, father and son, both appeared in the original 1956 Playhouse 90 television production of Rod Serling's Requiem for a Heavyweight.

The son was returning the favor: according to radio historian Elizabeth McLeod, Keenan had helped his father overcome professional collapse, a harrowing divorce, and a nervous breakdown to return to work a decade earlier, and now helped convince Serling and producer Martin Manulis that the elder Wynn should play the wistful trainer.

1959

On January 18, 1959, Wynn starred in S. J. Perelman's Hollywood satire, "Malice in Wonderland", broadcast on NBC's prestigious Sunday afternoon anthology series Omnibus.

1960

Both he and his father also appeared in a subsequent TV drama called The Man in the Funny Suit (1960), which detailed the problems they had experienced while working on that series.

In it, the Wynns, Serling, and many of the cast and crew played themselves.

Keenan also featured in another Rod Serling production, a Twilight Zone episode entitled, "A World of His Own" (1960) as playwright Gregory West, who uniquely caused series creator Rod Serling to disappear.

1964

He had a leading role in the third Beach Party movie, Bikini Beach (1964) as a scheming newspaper publisher who wants to banish the local young people.

1965

Later he played Hezakiah in the comedy film The Great Race (1965).

1967

Wynn took a dramatic turn as Yost in the crime drama Point Blank (1967) with Lee Marvin.

1968

He appeared in Francis Ford Coppola's musical Finian's Rainbow (1968), Sergio Leone's epic western Once Upon a Time in the West (also 1968), and Robert Altman's Nashville (1975).

1970

He was the voice of the Winter Warlock in Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town (1970) and appeared in several Disney films, including Snowball Express (1972), Herbie Rides Again (1974) and The Shaggy D.A. (1976) (as a villain who learns Wilbur Daniels's secret and uses it against him).

He appeared as villainous businessman Alonzo Hawk in three Disney films – The Absent-Minded Professor, Son of Flubber, and Herbie Rides Again.

1971

During this time, his guest television roles included Alias Smith and Jones (1971–1972), Emergency! (1975), Movin' On (1975) and The Bionic Woman (1978).

1974

His other son, Tracy Keenan Wynn, is a screenwriter whose credits include The Longest Yard and The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman (both 1974).

His daughter Hilda was married to Paul Williams.

1978

David Wayne, a friend of Wynn's, had played Digger Barnes in 1978 but was unable to continue with the role because of his co-starring role on the CBS series, House Calls, starring Wayne Rogers.

Wynn was initially cast in Superman (1978) to play Perry White (the boss of Clark Kent and Lois Lane at the Daily Planet) in April 1977.

By June (production had moved to Pinewood Studios in England), Wynn collapsed from exhaustion and was rushed to a hospital.

He was replaced by Jackie Cooper.

1979

Wynn appeared in ten episodes of TV's Dallas during the 1979–1980 season, playing the role of former Ewing family partner-turned-enemy Digger Barnes.

1983

In 1983, he guest-starred in one of the last episodes of Taxi and Quincy, M.E. In 1984, he starred in the television film Call to Glory, which later became a weekly television series.

2012

He played Charles Picker Dobbs in "The Love Boat" S6 E11 "A Christmas Presence" which aired 12/18/1982.