Max Showalter

Actor

Popular As Max Gordon Showalter

Birthday June 2, 1917

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Caldwell, Kansas, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2000-7-30, Middletown, Connecticut, U.S. (83 years old)

Nationality United States

Height 6' 0½" (1.84 m)

#35322 Most Popular

1889

Showalter was born in Caldwell, Kansas, the son of Elma Roxanna (Dodson) Showalter (1889–1953), a music teacher, and Ira Edward Showalter (1887–1953), who worked in the oil industry and was also a banker and farmer.

As a toddler, he developed a desire for acting while accompanying his mother to local theatres where she played piano for silent movies.

He served in the U.S. Army during World War II as an entertainer with the Special Services division.

1917

Max Gordon Showalter (June 2, 1917 – July 30, 2000), sometimes credited as Casey Adams, was an American film, television, and stage actor, as well as a composer, pianist, and singer.

He appeared on more than 1,000 television programs.

1930

By the late 1930s, Showalter had multiple stage roles under his belt, including acting in productions of the Pasadena Playhouse.

He soon made his Broadway debut in Knights of Song.

Showalter also appeared in the traveling musical This Is the Army for two years and in other notable Broadway productions like Make Mine Manhattan and The Grass Harp.

His most memorable stage role was as Horace Vandergelder in the Broadway hit show, Hello Dolly!.

Showalter performed the role more than 3,000 times opposite Carol Channing, Betty Grable, and Ethel Merman.

1940

In the late 1940s, Showalter was signed to 20th Century Fox as a featured contract player.

His name was changed by Fox's founder, Darryl F. Zanuck, to the more "bankable" Casey Adams.

1948

He first appeared on live television in the short-lived musical variety series The Swift Show (1948–49), also known as The Lanny Ross Show.

1949

He made his feature film debut in Always Leave Them Laughing (1949).

1950

During the 1950s, Showalter appeared in television shows like The Loretta Young Show and Navy Log, in addition to films like Vicki (1953), Down Three Dark Streets (1954), Naked Alibi (1954), Indestructible Man (1956) and Gunsmoke (1957) as "Barney Wales", the new husband of the title character "Mavis McCloud" (S3E7).

The following year, billed as Casey Adams, he appeared as Ward Cleaver in "It's a Small World", the original pilot for the 1950s sitcom Leave It to Beaver.

The pilot was broadcast as an episode of the Studio 57 anthology series.

He was replaced by Hugh Beaumont for the television series.

Casey Adams also appeared in The Andy Griffith Show as antiques dealer Ralph Mason in the episode titled "The Horse Trader."

Showalter composed the music for Little Boy Blue, which opened at the El Capitan Theater in Hollywood, California, on September 11, 1950.

1952

Showalter's second feature film was the biopic With a Song in My Heart (1952), where he had a small role as a vaudeville performer.

In the film, Showalter, along with David Wayne, sang the song "Hoe that Corn", which he also wrote.

1953

One of Showalter's memorable roles was as the husband of Jean Peters' character in the 1953 film Niagara.

He appeared in Niagara (1953) alongside Marilyn Monroe and Joseph Cotten.

1956

He made a cameo as a Life magazine photographer in another Monroe movie, Bus Stop, in 1956.

In 1956, Showalter (as Casey Adams) recorded an album of his own music, Casey Adams Plays and Sings Max Showalter Songs (Foremost Records FML-1004).

1958

He made six appearances on Perry Mason, including the role of Carl Reynolds in the 1958 episode, "The Case of the Curious Bride," murder victim Burt Stokes in "The Case of the Wandering Widow" in 1960, and Talbot Sparr in the 1964 episode, "The Case of the Ugly Duckling."

1960

In the 1960s, Showalter reclaimed his original name and continued to land roles in such big-budget films as Elmer Gantry (1960), The Music Man (1962), and How to Murder Your Wife (1965).

He worked through the 1960s and 1970s.

1961

He made appearances in other television series like The Twilight Zone (as piano player Pat Riley in S3 E8 1961 "It's a Good Life"), The Lucy Show, Gunsmoke, The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, The New Phil Silvers Show, Bewitched, Dr. Kildare, Surfside 6, The Doris Day Show, Kojak, Police Story, The Bob Newhart Show, as well as in cult films, Lord Love a Duck, The Anderson Tapes and Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.

1963

He also wrote the musical Go for Your Gun, which premiered in Manchester, England, in 1963.

Show business columnist Hedda Hopper reported in a 1963 newspaper column that Showalter had sold 139 paintings and would have his first one-man show.

1979

In the 1979 film 10, he famously played a pastor whose hobby was writing (bad) songs.

1980

He was also a regular cast member in the short-lived 1980 TV series, The Stockard Channing Show.

1984

Showalter made his last onscreen appearance in the John Hughes film Sixteen Candles (1984).

In 1984, Showalter retired from acting and moved to an 18th-century farmhouse in Chester, Connecticut, near the area where he acted in the film, It Happened to Jane (1959).

Showalter became involved in local musical theatre, including the Ivoryton Playhouse, and went on to produce, direct, write, and narrate the Christmas musical Touch of a Child.

He spent much of his free time painting oil miniatures.

Showalter was a good friend of actress Katharine Hepburn, who lived in nearby Old Saybrook, Connecticut.

1988

He was one of the artists featured on The Secret Garden, a 1988 CBS Special Products album containing performances of music from the musical of that title that "has played the repertory circuit in England."