Tom Smothers
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Thomas Bolin "Tom" Smothers, III (born February 2, 1937) is an American comedian, composer and musician from New York, New York.
Tommy Smothers is best known as half of the musical comedy team The Smothers Brothers with his brother, Dick Smothers. Tom was portrayed as the "dumb one".
The brothers graduated from Verdugo Hills High School in Tujunga, Los Angeles, California. They attended San José State University.
The brothers have appeared on numerous television shows since the mid 1960s, and even hosted two shows, The Smothers Brothers Show from 1965–1966, and The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour in 1967.
Tom Smothers negotiated creative control over the CBS show. The documentary Smothered describes how the brothers (particularly Tom) fought CBS censors to sneak in references to religion, recreational drugs, sex, and the Vietnam War. Smothers is widely quoted as saying: "The only valid censorship of ideas is the right of people not to listen." He and others have implied that the brothers' oppositional politics lead to their show's demise. Tom also admits that politics sometimes took precedence over humour.
Smothers is also the owner of Remick Ridge Vineyards in Sonoma County, California.
In motion pictures, Tom Smothers has played corporate-executive-turned-tap-dancing-magician "Donald Beeman" in one of Brian De Palma's first films, Get To Know Your Rabbit (1972). He later portrayed "Spike" in Serial (1980).
[edit] Sources
- Tom Smothers at the Internet Movie Database
- Smothered: The Censorship Struggles of the Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour at the Internet Movie Database
- The Smothers Brothers at TV Party
- Tommy Smothers quotes at ThinkExist
- Tom Smothers 'Speaking Freely' transcript
- Tom Smothers interview in 'Being There'
- Tom Smothers interviewed by 'Jerry Jazz Musician'