Bert Lahr

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Biography

Fittingly known to be a "Leo" for his horoscope, Bert Lahr is always remembered as the Cowardly Lion in , Lahr's movie career never caught on because his gestures and reactions were too broad. Lahr died in 1967.

  • Primary profession
  • Actor·soundtrack·writer
  • Country
  • United States
  • Nationality
  • American
  • Gender
  • Male
  • Birth date
  • 13 August 1895
  • Place of birth
  • New York City
  • Death date
  • 1967-12-04
  • Death age
  • 72
  • Place of death
  • New York City
  • Cause of death
  • Natural causes
  • Children

Music

Movies

Books

Awards

Trivia

His son, John Lahr , is now a drama critic with the New Yorker.

Following his death, he was interred at Union Field Cemetery in Ridgewood, Queens County, New York.

Won Broadways 1964 Tony Award as Best Actor for "Foxy". He also had a Tony Award nomination the previous year as Best Actor for "The Beauty Part".

He began seeing his future second wife Mildred in the early 1930s while his first wife was institutionalized. Mildred left him in March 1936 and married another man because he would not divorce his first wife. Mildred left her first husband by the end of 1936 and went back to Lahr, who obtained a divorce from his first wife a year later.

Even though he divorced his first wife, he still loved her and divorced her only because her severe mental state made it impossible for her to function in a marriage. When she died, he did not speak a word for three days.

His first wife, Mercedes Delpino, was mentally ill and lived in an asylum beginning in 1930.

Judy Garland heard of Lahrs death as she was about to go on stage in Las Vegas. At her performance that night, she dedicated "Over the Rainbow" to the memory of Lahr, or, as she referred to him on that occasion, "my beloved Cowardly Lion.".

Had appeared in a total of 18 Broadway shows from 1927 through 1964.

Had three children: Herbert Lahr (born 1929), John Lahr (born July 12, 1941) and Jane Lahr (born September 2, 1943).

Actor Tommy Bond who was also Butch in the Little Rascals and Jimmy Olsen in the original Atom Man vs. Superman serials, was a regular on Lahrs radio show in the 1930s, and played his son.

According to his son John Lahr in "Notes on a Cowardly Lion" (the official biography), Lahr had terminal cancer but did not know it when he signed to do "The Night They Raided Minskys". He agreed to shoot an extensive night scene outdoors in New York City on a cold December night, leading to the pneumonia that was the immediate cause of his death. His completed scenes were left in the film, which was edited around them.

(11/3/1956) Was one of the hosts of the first telecast of the classic film The Wizard of Oz (the others were Judy Garland s daughter Liza Minnelli , who was ten at the time, and twelve-year-old Oz expert Justin G. Schiller ). This marked the only time on television that an actor who played a leading role in the film, as well as one of the offspring of an actress who starred in it, hosted the presentation.

Quotes

If you want to be a success in Hollywood, be sure and go to New York.

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