Lew Anderson
Lew Anderson | |
---|---|
Born |
Lewis Burr Anderson May 7, 1922 Kirkman, Iowa, U.S. |
Died |
May 14, 2006 84) Hawthorne, New York, U.S. | (aged
Occupation | American actor and musician |
Lewis Burr Anderson (May 7, 1922 in Kirkman, Iowa – May 14, 2006 in Westchester, New York) was an American actor and musician. He is widely known by TV fans as the third and final actor to portray Clarabell the Clown on Howdy Doody between 1954 and 1960. He famously spoke Clarabell's only line on the show's final episode in 1960, with a tear visible in his eye, "Goodbye, kids."[1] Anderson is also widely known by jazz music fans as a prolific jazz arranger, big band leader, and alto saxophonist.
Early years
Growing up
- Anderson was born in Kirkman, Iowa, the son of a railroad telegrapher. He began playing his sister's clarinet when she tired of it, and by high school had formed his own dance band. After a year in junior college in Fort Dodge, Iowa, he received a music scholarship to Drake University in Des Moines.[2] He attended for two years, but then quit school to begin his professional musical life by accepting a job with the Lee Barron Orchestra, a territory band based out of Omaha.
Armed forces
- During World War II, Anderson served in the United States Navy where he started his first band. While in the Navy, he served aboard the USS Howard W. Gilmore (AS-16), a ship that supplied submarines.
Post World War II
- After serving in the Navy in World War II, he joined the Carlos Molinas Latin Orchestra, where he also wrote the American dance arrangements. In the late 1940s, he joined The Honey Dreamers, a singing group that appeared on radio and early television shows like The Ed Sullivan Show. While working with the group, he met "Buffalo" Bob Smith who offered him the role on the Howdy Doody show. Anderson again played Clarabell on the short-lived "New Howdy Doody Show" in 1976-1977 and in the 1987 40th anniversary special and made personal appearances as Clarabell with Buffalo Bob for many years thereafter.
Lew Anderson All-American Big Band
Red Blazer, Too
- After working six-years as Clarabell, Anderson returned to music. In 1989, he formed a 16-piece jazz orchestra — The Lew Anderson All-American Big Band — which began playing Fridays from 5:45 to 7:45 PM at the Red Blazer, Too, 349 West 46th Street, Manhattan, New York. The venue is currently occupied by Swing 46 Jazz & Supper Club. Anderson secured the gig through Al "Jazzbeaux" Collins, who, in 1989, proposed the idea to Denis Carey, co-owner of Red Blazer, Too. The band began an eight-year stint at Red Blazer Too. Musicians in 1990 included saxophonist Aaron Sachs and trombonist John Fedchock. The band members were mostly musicians with steady jobs in recording studios and the pit orchestras of Broadway musicals. The early evening time-slot allowed his musicians to get to their theater jobs for the 8 o'clock curtain.[3] Red Blazer, Too, closed on June 1, 1997, after its landlord doubled the rent.[4]
- In 1997, before Red Blazer had closed, composer, producer, and owner of Sovereign Records, Inc., Ruby Fisher (Reuben Fischer; 1923–2009) invited Don Kennedy of radio's "Big Band Jump" show to come up from Atlanta to host "Live at the Blazer!" The one-hour program aired June 14, 1997 on Jump's 130 stations, was re-broadcast in August on New York's WQEW and now constitutes Live at the Blazer! The Lew Anderson Big Band, Sovereign CDSOV-506, joining the band's previous Sovereign albums, Feelin' Good, Yeah and Fired Up.
- In August 1997, The Lew Anderson Big Band began an open-ended engagement at Birdland, then on the Upper Wide Side of Manhattan. The introduction to Birdland was made by American Music Projects' Janet Solesky (born 1949).[5] The band, until Anderson's death, remained in residence during the same time — early set, Fridays — at Birdland Jazz Club.
Selected discography
Lew Anderson Big Band
- Lew Anderson Big Band Live
- Recorded live (radio broadcast), March 8, 1974, at the Half Note Club, West 54th Street, New York City
- Lew Anderson (leader), Bob Millikan (nl), Dean Pratt, Chuck Winfield (es) (trumpets), Eddie Bert, Sonny Costanza (trombone), Lew Anderson, Frank Strozier (alto saxes), Neil Slater (piano), Joe Cocuzzo (drums), others unknown
- Radio broadcast on WLTW, under its former call letters, WRVR: "Jazz Adventures," two sets of the Lew Anderson Orchestra; Jack TaFoya (born 1932) was the announcer
- Recorded at J.A.C. Studio, New York, May 6–8, 1983
- Personnel includes drummer Dave Weckl
- Recorded in New York, 1989
- Personnel includes baritone saxophonist Aaron Sachs and trombonist John Fedchock
- Recorded at Crossroads Recording Studio, New York, 1992
- Personnel includes trumpeter Greg Gisbert and trombonist John Fedchock
- Voices in Standards, featuring The Four Freshmen, Hindsight Records (1994) OCLC 31470464
- Recorded in Los Angeles ?, October & November 1993
- Recorded in various locations & dates, c. 1995
- Personnel includes pianist Derek Smith, bassist Milt Hinton, and drummer Bobby Rosengarden
- Recorded at the Red Blazer, New York, 1998
Death
Anderson died in Hawthorne, New York, from complications of prostate cancer.[2]
On March 23, 2006, The Birdland Big Band — which at that time was composed entirely of his former band members (directed Tommy Igoe) — performed and recorded a tribute to his life.
Former members of Anderson's big bands
- Vinnie Riccitelli, also sax
- Bob McCoy, trumpet
- John Lanni, saxophone
- Wyn Walshe, trombone
- Ken Rizzo, bass
References
- ↑ Howdy Doody, Final Episode on YouTube, NBC Television Network, September 4, 1960, (time on video 5.40)
- 1 2 Martin, Douglas (May 17, 2006). "Lew Anderson, 84, Clarabell the Clown and a Bandleader". New York Times. Retrieved August 21, 2007.
Lew Anderson, whose considerable success as a musician, arranger and bandleader paled before the celebrity he achieved as Clarabell the Clown, Howdy Doody's sidekick on one of television's first children's shows, died on Sunday in Hawthorne, New York. He was 84, but always felt he was around 25, his son Christopher said. His father died of complications of prostate cancer, he added.
- ↑ John S. Wilson, Review/Jazz; A Niche for Moonlighting, New York Times, April 12, 1990
- ↑ Gene Santoro, Swing & jazz club gets bopped , New York Daily News, June 4, 1997
- ↑ Lew Anderson, Audio Archive, Internet Underground Music Archive Collection
External links
- Lew Anderson at the Internet Movie Database
- Lew Anderson at Find a Grave
- Obituary on CNN.com
- Obituary on KNX
- Obituary on the Star Gazette