Pinto Colvig

4/5

Biography

Pinto Colvig was the quintessential clown whose own identity was always hidden but whose innate warm-hearted character always came through his many talents. His humor tickled the funny bone and touched the heart. Incredibly gifted in music, art and mime, he spoke to different generations in different roles: as a child clown playing a squeaky clarinet, as a full-fledged circus clown under the big top, as a newspaper cartoonist, as a film animator, as a mimic and sound effects wizard, and as the voice of dozens of well-known characters on film, records, radio and television. Vance DeBar Colvig was born in Jacksonville, Oregon, on September 11, 1892. His school friends nicknamed him after a spotted horse named "Pinto" because of his freckled face - and just like his freckles, the name stuck for his entire life. Pinto's childhood home was filled with music and laughter, and he was a clown from birth. As the youngest of seven children, he would do anything to get attention. He learned to make people laugh by making faces and playing pranks. He also spent hours mimicking the sounds around him: a rusty gate, farm animals, sneezes, wind, cars, trains, etc. He and his brother Don put on song-and-dance minstrel shows at local functions. Along the way he picked up his instrument of choice, the clarinet, and soon played well enough to join the town band. It was the clarinet that got Pinto into show business when he was 12. Visiting Portland's "Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition" with his father William, he was magnetized by "The Crazy House" on the Midway where a huckster attracted the crowd with a bass drum and shouts of "Hubba Hubba!" Pinto told the man he could play "squeaky" clarinet and ran back to the hotel to get his instrument. He was hired on the spot and given some oversized old clothes and a derby and, for the first time, white makeup and a clown face. The man told Pinto, "Now you look like a real bozo" and Otto Griebling, and visited "clown alley" whenever a circus came to the Los Angeles area. In 1963 Pinto received a letter from Oregon Senator Maurine Neuberger thanking him for supporting her bill requiring warning labels on cigarette packages. It was a controversial idea at a time when nonsmoking areas were just a dream and America was blue with secondhand smoke. With lungs ravaged by a lifetime of heavy smoking, Pinto did his part to help others become aware of the problem. On October 3, 1967, Vance Debar "Pinto" Colvig died of lung cancer at the age of 75 in Woodland Hills, California. Vance Jr. donated his and his father's memorabilia to the Southern Oregon Historical Society in Pinto's hometown of Jacksonville in 1978. Vance Jr. passed away in 1991. In 1993, the Walt Disney Company honored Pinto Colvig as a "Disney Legend." On May 28, 2004, he was inducted into the International Clown Hall of Fame in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

  • Primary profession
  • Actor·writer·animation_department
  • Country
  • United States
  • Nationality
  • American
  • Gender
  • Male
  • Birth date
  • 11 September 1892
  • Place of birth
  • Jacksonville· Oregon
  • Death date
  • 1967-10-03
  • Death age
  • 75
  • Place of death
  • Woodland Hills· Los Angeles
  • Cause of death
  • Natural causes
  • Children
  • Vance Colvig
  • Education
  • Oregon State University
  • Parents
  • William Mason Colvig

Music

Movies

TV

Books

Awards

Trivia

American comic actor, long with Disney where he was the voice of Goofy and Pluto. Began his performing career as a clown in vaudeville and later worked as a writer and cartoonist for the San Francisco Bulletin. In Hollywood from the 1920s, he started with Mack Sennett at Keystone as a gag writer, scenarist and cartoonist/animator in 1923.

Father of Vance Colvig Jr..

Survived by his widow, Peggy, and five sons.

Voice of Gabby originally seen in Max Fleischer s Gullivers Travels - sings his two theme songs "Alls Well" and "Its a Hap-Hap-Happy Day".

The original voice of "Bozo The Clown" for the first series of kids record-readers created by Alan W. Livingston for Capitol Records in 1946. In 1949, he was also first to portray "Bozo" on television via KTTV (CBS) Channel 11 in Los Angeles.

Comments