'Grandpa Munster' Al Lewis Dies at 95

cavemanmoron

Lifer
Mar 13, 2001
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http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/wireStory?id=1580214&ad=true

By LARRY McSHANE

NEW YORK Feb 4, 2006 (AP)? Actor Al Lewis, the cigar-chomping patriarch of "The Munsters" whose work as a basketball scout, restaurateur and political candidate never eclipsed his role as Grandpa from the television sitcom, died after several years of failing health. He was 95.


http://www.cnn.com/2006/SHOWBIZ/TV/02/04/lewis.obit.ap/index.html


Lewis, with his wife at his bedside, passed away Friday night, said Bernard White, program director at WBAI-FM, where the actor hosted a weekly radio program. White made the announcement on the air during the Saturday slot where Lewis usually appeared.

"To say that we will miss his generous, cantankerous, engaging spirit is a profound understatement," White said.

Lewis, sporting a somewhat cheesy Dracula outfit, became a pop culture icon playing the irascible father-in-law to Fred Gwynne's ever-bumbling Herman Munster on the 1964-66 television show. He was also one of the stars of another classic TV comedy, playing Officer Leo Schnauzer on "Car 54, Where Are You?"

But Lewis' life off the small screen ranged far beyond his acting antics. A former ballplayer at Thomas Jefferson High School, he achieved notoriety as a basketball talent scout familiar to coaching greats like Jerry Tarkanian and Red Auerbach.

He operated a successful Greenwich Village restaurant, Grandpa's, where he was a regular presence -- chatting with customers, posing for pictures, signing autographs.

Just two years short of his 90th birthday, a ponytailed Lewis ran as the Green Party candidate against incumbent Gov. George Pataki. Lewis campaigned against draconian drug laws and the death penalty, while going to court in a losing battle to have his name appear on the ballot as "Grandpa Al Lewis."

He didn't defeat Pataki, but managed to collect more 52,000 votes.

Lewis was born Alexander Meister in upstate New York before his family moved to Brooklyn, where the 6-foot-1 teen began a lifelong love affair with basketball. He later became a vaudeville and circus performer, but his career didn't take off until television did the same.

Lewis, as Officer Schnauzer, played opposite Gwynne's Officer Francis Muldoon in "Car 54, Where Are You?" -- a comedy about a Bronx police precinct that aired from 1961-63. One year later, the duo appeared together in "The Munsters," taking up residence at the fictional 1313 Mockingbird Lane.

The series, about a family of clueless creatures plunked down in middle America, was a success and ran through 1966. It forever locked Lewis in as the memorably twisted character; decades later, strangers would greet him on the street with shouts of "Grandpa!"

Unlike some television stars, Lewis never complained about getting typecast and made appearances in character for decades.

"Why would I mind?" he asked in a 1997 interview. "It pays my mortgage."

Lewis rarely slowed down, opening his restaurant and hosting his WBAI radio program. At one point during the '90s, he was a frequent guest on the Howard Stern radio show, once sending the shock jock diving for the delay button by leading an undeniably obscene chant against the Federal Communications Commission.

He also popped up in a number of movies, including the acclaimed "They Shoot Horses, Don't They?" and "Married to the Mob." Lewis reprised his role of Schnauzer in the movie remake of "Car 54," and appeared as a guest star on television shows such as "Taxi," "Green Acres" and "Lost in Space."

But in 2003, Lewis was hospitalized for an angioplasty. Complications during surgery led to an emergency bypass and the amputation of his right leg below the knee and all the toes on his left foot. Lewis spent the next month in a coma.

A year later, he was back offering his recollections of a seminal punk band on the DVD "Ramones Raw."

He is survived by his wife, Karen Ingenthron-Lewis, three sons and four grandchildren.

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Ricochet

Diamond Member
Oct 31, 1999
6,390
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:(
rose.gif

Thanks for all these years of laugh.
 

KarenMarie

Elite Member
Sep 20, 2003
14,372
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aww...

i met him in NYC when he opened his restuarant. he stood outside and talked to ppl as they walked by, letting them know it was his place.

we ate there and he sat with us for a while. he was the most friggen BIZARRE person i have ever met in my life.

that was ...hmmm.... 1989 or thereabouts.

:(
 

techs

Lifer
Sep 26, 2000
28,559
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I met Grandpa 30 years ago. He got in the cab I was driving in NY City and I took him home from his restaurant in Greenwhich Village. Man, he was old even then!
Night Grandpa.
 

tec699

Banned
Dec 19, 2002
6,440
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Why is this das news? He lived a nice life and he lived to an old age. We don't live forever.

Were all going to die.
 

Stifko

Diamond Member
Dec 8, 1999
4,799
2
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R.I.P. Al Lewis, a true New Yorker. I used to listen to him on WBAI radio all the time.
 

Wag

Diamond Member
Jul 21, 2000
8,288
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He was on Letterman quite a few times when he was on NBC, back in his Larry "Bud" Melman days. He was a hoot.
 

isasir

Diamond Member
Aug 8, 2000
8,609
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He was one of those guys you never thought was gonna die, right up there with the likes of Dick Clark, Bob Hope, George Burns, etc.