Read Paul Lynde - A Biography Online
Authors: Cathy Rudolph
“You have captured me the way I want to be remembered.”
Courtesy of photographer, Daphne Weld Nichols
Though it was an emotionally exhausting week, Paul still smiled for his fans. Toronto, Canada, August 1981.
The last time I saw Paul was in August of 1980, with my friend, Debbie Braun. We went to see him perform in
Plaza Suite,
in Toronto, Canada. Paul took us out to a Chinese restaurant after the show. It was Debbie’s first time meeting him, and she was so nervous and kept thanking him profusely for his hospitality. Paul kept trying to reassure her saying, “Calm down, it’s all right.”
The waiter brought over a tray with a dead fish that was over a foot long, and he placed it on our table. It had two huge eyes that were bulging out at us. Debbie and I freaked, so Paul took his fork and stuck it right in the eyeballs, “Now you’ll stop staring,” he joked.
After dinner, we returned to his hotel, and Paul became very quiet as he sat sipping a diet soda, while Debbie and I played with his dog, Alfred. He wasn’t drinking, but I was, and when I went over to pour myself another drink, Paul gave me a disapproving look.
Later, when I was heading out, I handed Paul a brochure from the play and asked him to sign it. He said, “Cathy, you don’t need my autograph, you have it. We are beyond that.” I insisted. He seemed annoyed, but signed it anyway. I did not know how to tell him that I needed his words to hold onto until I would see him again. When it was time to go, I mistakenly said, “Good-bye,” and Paul quickly said, “Please don’t say that, just say I’ll see you soon.” That would be the last time I saw him. Paul died in January.
When I was seventeen, my prayers were answered when I found Paul’s phone number. I think now it was because God knew we needed each other.
At our first meeting, Paul asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up, and I said “an author.” Later, I wrote thanking him for letting me into his life and that I hoped one day I could do something for him. Well Paul, I hope you like it.
Paul can still be seen on reruns of
Bewitched
as well as in many movies. His voice is imitated by Michael Airington, as the talking mirror on Disney’s
The Suite Life on Deck.
Michael also performed as Paul for years in Hollywood in his show
Oh My Goodness It’s Paul Lynde,
and he is planning to bring the show back soon.
Seth Macfarlane told an audience that Paul was the inspiration for the voice of Rodger the Alien on
American Dad.
His jokes from
The Hollywood Squares
are still passed around on the Internet. Not too long ago, Ellen DeGeneres, in honor of Paul, held his picture when she sat in the center square on the newer
Hollywood Squares.
Maybe soon, some wise network will bring
The Paul Lynde Show
back on television.
For more Paul, please visit the author’s website:
“The Last Time I saw Paul.” Cathy (Fitzgibbon) Rudolph, Paul, and Debbie Braun in Toronto, Canada (August 31, 1980).
Courtesy of Maureen Stockberger
broadway plays
New Faces 1952
Bye Bye Birdie 1960
New Faces 1956
(written and directed only)
summer stock
Visit To A Small Planet
Panama Hattie
The Impossible Years
Don’t Drink the Water
Plaza Suite
My Daughter’s Rated X
Mother is Engaged
Stop, Thief, Stop!
television
Bewitched
Bob Hope Chrysler Theater
Hollywood Palace
Dean Martin and The Golddiggers
The Dean Martin Celebrity Roast
The Red Buttons Show
The Jackie Gleason Show
Ed Sullivan Show
Burke’s Law
The Jack Paar Show
Colgate Comedy Hour
The Jack Benny Show
Hollywood Palace
Smothers Brothers
Gypsy Rose Lee Show
The Farmer’s Daughter
The Dean Martin Show
Dean Martin Presents the Gold Diggers
The Jonathan Winters Show
The Steve Allen Show
Beverly Hillbillies
Jerry Lewis
The Tonight Show
Bob Hope Chrysler Theatre
Kraft Music Hall
F-Troop
The Flying Nun
The Glen Campbell Show
The Paul Lynde Show
The Dinah Shore Show
I’ve Got A Secret
That Girl
Donny and Marie
The Mac Davis Show
The Martha Raye Show
The Andy Williams Show
The Arthur Godfrey Show
The Patty Duke Show
Henry Fonda and Family
Grindl
Celebrity Game
Hallmark Hall of Fame
The Munsters
The Mike Douglas Show
The Pierre Berton Show
The Merv Griffin Show
The Hollywood Squares
The Dating Game
Truth or Consequences
I Dream of Jeanie
Art Linkletter
That’s Life
The Mothers-In-Law
Where’s Huddles?
Laugh-In
Gidget Grows Up
Gidget Gets Married
The New Temperatures Rising Show
The $10,000 Dollar Pyramid
Ruggles of Red Gap
Love, American Style
The Paul Lynde Special
Paul Lynde at the Movies
The Paul Lynde Comedy Hour
The Paul Lynde Halloween Special
Paul Lynde Goes M-a-a-ad
The Paul Lynde Show
The Phil Silvers Show
feature films
New Faces 1952
Bye Bye Birdie
Under the Yum Yum Tree
Return To The Land of Oz
Son of Flubber
Beach Blanket Bingo
For Those Who Think Young
Send Me No Flowers
The Glass Bottom Boat
How Sweet It Is
Charlotte’s Web
Hugo the Hippo
Rabbit Test
The Villain
paul lynde’s diet waffles
1 egg white
3/8 cup cake flour
1 tsp. baking powder
3/8 cup skim milk
1/8 tsp. salt
Beat egg white until stiff. In a blender, combine milk, flour and salt. Add baking powder and beat until smooth. Pour batter in a bowl and gently fold egg white into it. Cook until crisp in a pre-heated waffle iron. (Cook a little longer than regular waffles.)
This makes 3 waffles of 50 calories each.
paul lynde’s diet chicken
1 chicken, cut up and skinned
Tomato juice
Celery
Green peppers
All beef cocktail franks, drained
Frozen shrimp (shelled)
Place chicken in a heavy pan and cover with ½ tomato juice and ½ water. Simmer ½ hour.
Chop the green peppers (2 or 3) and the celery (practically the whole bunch).
Add to the chicken at the end of the ½ hour, and simmer another ½ hour. During last three minutes of cooking, add the shrimp.
diet meat loaf à la lynde
2 lbs. super lean ground beef
2 egg yolks
1 cup canned okra
Salt and pepper to taste
Oregano and/or celery seed as desired
(for every pound of ground beef add egg yolk)
Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees
Mix ingredients together and place in a loaf pan. Glaze lightly with ketchup. Bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour.
In small saucepan, cook red chili peppers in a small amount of water until soft. Scrape pulp, discard skin and add pulp to the meat mixture. Cover and simmer for 6 hours, stirring occasionally.
paul lynde’s beef stew
3 lbs. stew meat
1 No. 2 can diced carrots
1 No. 2 can small onions
1 No. 2 can tomatoes
1 No. 2 can tiny peas
1 No. 2 can potatoes
1 No. 2 can small green beans (reg. cut)
½ can beef consommé
4 tbs. minute tapioca
1 tbs. brown sugar
½ cup prepared bread crumbs
1 bay leaf
½ cup white wine
1 ½ tbs. salt, pepper (to taste)
Pre heat oven to 250 degrees.
Blend all ingredients together. Bake in covered casserole 6-7 hours.
My supportive, loving sisters: Tricia Pugliesi, Maureen Stockberger, and Eileen Ruggerio. My first editors: Jocelyn Conte and Haley Rudolph. My computer experts: Joan Seaman and Ryan Rudolph. My first readers and support system: Jerry Fitzgibbon, Margo Wieland, Pam Morrow, Barbara Brinkerhoff, Tom Philbin, Al Zuckerman, Mickey Novack, Arlene Kanea, Bob Foister and E. Earle Rudolph. My other friends and family who are supporters: Ana Dolne and daughters Sandra, Cynthia, Patty and Lisabelle, Janet and Lauren Fine, Arlene Duggan, Jean Cutsail, Robin Aaron, Olive Bourne, Amy and Tom Fowler, Susan Drost, Donna Mabanta, Nancy Smith, Lea Tyrell, Claudia Kwasnik-Picarello, Mary Devine, The Callighan Clan, Jim and Anne Rudolph, Kelly Small, Rachel Dannenberg and Michael Cohen, Glenn, Barbara, Jaimie and Gavin Rudolph, Patty Reed, Debbie Braun, The Cecora Clan, The Bochicchio Clan, The Burkes and Hemphills, Lisa Tarantino, Joanne Verderosa, Frank and Cheryl Raffele. The Levittown Public Library, The Comsewogue Library Staff, Sino, Gabrielle and Michelle Pugliesi, Brittany, Melissa, and Amanda Stockberger, Dolores Santiago, Eileen Korpi, and Dorothy Heifi.
Also to Father Bill Hanson who was a constant reminder to use the talents God gave us. And to Oprah, who made an impact when she said to do what you want before you’re fifty years old. To Belle, my faithful dog, who sat beside me while I wrote the book.
Special thanks to Connie Rice and Nancy Noce, Jim Gibson of Knox County Historical Society, Reginald Adams, Daphne Welds Nichols and Diane Dalpe, Michael Airington, and Susie Lindeberg. Northwestern University and archivist Kevin B. Leonard, George Englund, Jr., Jan Forbes, Cloris Leachman, Kaye Ballard, Chita Rivera, and to Les Roberts for his history with Paul and giving me the jokes he wrote for Paul from
Squares.
Also to Peter Marshall for his kind help and time he gave me for the book. And to all Paul’s friends whose memories of Paul helped us to really get to know him.
And to all the staff at Bear Manor, including Michelle and my editor, Wendy, Sandy, Brian Pearce for all his professionalism and hard work, and especially to Ben Ohmart for giving me the chance to tell Paul’s story and making another dream come true.