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Charles Nelson Reilly (76) died from complications from Pneumonia

Filed Under: Medical - Other

Charles Nelson Reilly (76)

Date: May 25, 2007
Cause of Death: Pneumonia
Location: Beverly Hills, CA
URL:  go to their myspace
TV and Broadway musical star Charles Nelson Reilly - a Tony Award winner for his performance as Bud Frump in the original production of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying - died May 25 in Beverly Hills, CA. He was 76.

Mr. Reilly died from complications of pneumonia, according to The New York Times. Patrick Hughes, Reilly's partner and only immediate survivor, told the New York paper that the actor had been ill for over a year.

Mr. Reilly, who in his middle years became best known for his appearances and quick quips on such TV shows as "Match Game" and "Hollywood Squares," chronicled his adventures on stage and off in his one-man show Save It for the Stage: The Life of Reilly. That title, the Times explains, came from the words his mother would often use to stop him from speaking: "Save it for the stage," mother would say to son.

Though known to the world as - along with Brett Somers and Richard Dawson - one of the resident cut-ups on the saucy and popular "Match Game," to theatregoers Mr. Reilly was an important supporting player in the Broadway musical theatre of the 1960s. He was educated at HB Studios by the legendary Uta Hagen alongside such acting legends as Steve McQueen, Jerry Stiller, Jason Robards and Jack Lemmon. He made his Broadway debut as Mr. Henkel in Bye, Bye, Birdie (where he met future "Match Game" host Gene Rayburn), was nominated for a Tony Award as the original Cornelius Hackl in Hello, Dolly! and received the Tony for his performance as the original Bud Frump How To Succeed In Business.... In this last, as a sniveling, conniving embodiment of corporate nepotism, he sang about his devotion to the daily "Coffee Break" and plotted the downfall of hero J. Pierpont Finch.

His Broadway appearances also included Skyscraper, a failed musical starring Julie Harris, who would become a friend and frequent collaborator, God's Favorite and Charlotte.

Mr. Reilly - who often sported ascots and oversized glasses - also appeared on "The Tonight Show" (with Johnny Carson) nearly 100 times. In an interview for The Advocate in 2001 Mr. Reilly discussed the effect game shows had on his career: "You can't do anything else once you do game shows. You have no career."

It was, perhaps, because of this that he turned to directing, and the second half of his career took place behind the scenes. His first Broadway directing assignment was The Belle of Amherst, starring Julie Harris, who won a Tony for her performance. Harris and Reilly worked on over ten plays together, including The Gin Game. For that production, Mr. Reilly received a Tony nomination for Best Director of a Play; Ms. Harris was also Tony-nominated.

Belle of Amherst playwright Bill Luce told Playbill.com, "Charlie walked into my life like an old friend. When he and Julie Harris asked me to write The Belle of Amherst, it was for me the beginning of a lifetime miracle (Julie calls it a ride on a magic carpet). But I was unsure. 'I've never written for theatre,' I told them. 'Maybe I should take a course at UCLA.' 'Don't be silly,' Charles said, 'We know more than they do. We'll teach you.'

"A consummate teacher for writers, actors, singers and directors, Charles generated brilliant, highly original ideas as none other I'll ever meet. Rehearsals were enormous fun, and I looked forward to his suggestions for revisions. I trusted his intuition. Through the years Charles set me to work on many projects which he himself conceived and directed. I'm grateful for this and proud to have known such a wildly talented man."

Other Broadway directing credits included Paul Robeson with James Earl Jones, Break a Leg and The Nerd.

While his campy work on "Match Game" is still fondly remembered, Reilly was also a multiple Emmy nominee for his often comic work. His turn as Jose Chung on "The X-Files" garnered much attention and guest-spots on "Millennium" and "The Drew Carey Show" resulted in Emmy nominations. Emmy first nominated the actor for his performance in "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir" in 1968.

One of his last projects was directing a production of Harvey - starring Charles Durning and Joyce and Dick Van Patten - that played the Laguna Playhouse in summer 2003. The once-Broadway-bound production never made its way to New York.
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15 responses to this article...
Karalicious on May 30, 2007 at 7:40 AM
OMG I can't believe that I missed that Charles nelson reilly died the day before my birthday!! (5/25/07)
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-me-reilly29may29,1,295863.story?coll=la-headlines-pe-california

Charles Nelson Reilly, 76; Tony-winner, TV personality
By Valerie J. Nelson, Times Staff Writer
May 29, 2007

Charles Nelson Reilly, whose persona as a wacky game show panelist and talk show guest overshadowed his serious work as a director and Tony-winning actor, has died. He was 76.

Reilly, a longtime resident of Beverly Hills, died Friday of complications from pneumonia at UCLA Medical Center, said Paul Linke, who directed Reilly's one-man show "Save It for the Stage: The Life of Reilly."

"The average person thinks of him as being on 'The Match Game.' That was a mixed blessing for him," Linke told The Times on Monday. "One of the reasons I was so motivated to get his show out there was because I wanted people to recognize that this was a heavyweight talent."

When a Times reporter visited his home in 2000, Reilly displayed an opera review that referred to him as "Charles Nelson Reilly of 'Hollywood Squares' fame."

"It's like a scarlet letter," Reilly yowled in his high-pitched, nasal voice.

Wearing his trademark ascot and oversized glasses, Reilly made a near-record 97 appearances on "The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson," often making ribald ripostes.

After a "Tonight Show" guest who was talking about Shakespeare dismissed Reilly's attempt to join the conversation, he silenced her by delivering Hamlet's "the play's the thing" monologue straight, with depth and passion, the New York Observer reported in 2001.

He broke through on Broadway in 1961, winning a Tony for playing the insidious nephew Bud Frump in the original production of "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying." Reilly also received Tony nominations for his role in "Hello, Dolly!" in 1964 and for directing a revival of "The Gin Game" with Julie Harris in 1997.

Reilly often directed plays that starred Harris, including "The Belle of Amherst," a 1977 one-woman play about Emily Dickinson that remained one of his proudest achievements.

"He's a wonderful actor but never gets enough chance to do it," Harris told The Times in 2000. "He's taught me a lot about theater. It's his insight into the personal idiosyncrasies of human beings. He's attuned to small details — the pieces of the puzzle that make up the whole picture."

Reilly's close friend Burt Reynolds said in a 1991 Times article that he thought Reilly's reputation as the perpetual jester had worked against him in Hollywood.

"We have a thing in this town that if you are enormously witty and gregarious, you can't be very deep. There's something wrong with a society that says, 'You're the wit, but you're not the teacher.' People just haven't seen him in this arena," Reynolds said.

A well-regarded acting instructor, Reilly moved to Florida in 1979 to teach at the Burt Reynolds Institute. Reilly also coached Liza Minnelli, Bette Midler, Lily Tomlin and Christine Lahti and ran an acting school in North Hollywood.

In his one-man show, which would be his final work, Reilly told the story of his life, which began Jan. 13, 1931, in New York City. The play's name came from the phrase his mother often said when her son spoke: "Save it for the stage." In 2006, the show was made into the movie "The Life of Reilly."

He was the only child of the former Signe Elvera Nelson and Charles Joseph Reilly, who designed outdoor advertising for Paramount Pictures.

After his father had a nervous breakdown, partly brought on because his wife made him turn down a job offer from Walt Disney, he was institutionalized, Linke said.

Reilly and his mother moved to Hartford, Conn., to live with 10 relatives, all of whom spoke Swedish, in an apartment that had only cold water.

"Eugene O'Neill could never begin to get near all this," Reilly said in the 2000 Times article. At 9, he got the lead in the school play, and a teacher told his mother that Reilly was the only true actor she had ever known, the Observer reported. When he was 13, he and a friend survived a circus fire in Hartford that killed more than 165 people. It was the last time he would sit in a theater as an audience member, Reilly repeatedly said.

By 18, he had moved to New York and was soon studying with Uta Hagen and her husband, Herbert Berghof, at their acting school. Classmates included Jack Lemmon, Charles Grodin, Geraldine Page and Hal Holbrook.

Reilly never tried to hide his homosexuality, and frequently cracked double-entendres on television about being gay.

He got a job as a night mail boy at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel and tried to get hired by NBC, but a producer told him "that they don't allow dolphins on television," Linke said.

"Charles' response was, 'It didn't bother me. I knew in my heart his words weren't true,' " Linke said. Later, Reilly would count how many game show appearances he would make in a week — once it was 27 — and consider it his revenge.

When he first came to California to co-star on television in "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir" in 1968, he stepped off the plane and said of the 70-degree weather: " 'How long has this been going on?' He said he'd been cold his whole life until then," Linke said.

Reilly made more money in one or two TV appearances with Dean Martin than he would in a year of performing on Broadway, so he stayed, Linke said.

Reilly went on to make many guest appearances in sitcoms and was a regular on "Laugh-In." In the late 1960s, Reilly bought his Beverly Hills home and also owned a 34-foot cabin cruiser that he kept in Marina del Rey.

"The world is a slightly less funny place now," Linke said. "He made people laugh along the way, and that's a legacy that lives on long after the game shows."

Reilly is survived by Patrick Hughes, his companion of more than 25 years.



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RIP crazy glasses man.
cookiemonter on May 30, 2007 at 7:45 AM
:cry:
Karalicious on May 30, 2007 at 7:45 AM
I should have known he'd have myspace pages. I submitted him.
hunibuni on May 30, 2007 at 7:46 AM
One of my most favorite queens ever. He will be sorely missed.

RIP

Charles.........
Karalicious on May 30, 2007 at 7:46 AM
Betty White HAS to be next. I really think she's the antichrist. She's like 132 years old.
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