Rip Taylor

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Rip Taylor

Rip Taylor with Emmy award
Birth name Charles Elmer Taylor, Jr.
Born January 13, 1934 (age 73)
Flag of United States Washington D.C., USA
Official site RipTaylor.com

Rip Taylor (born Charles Elmer Taylor, Jr. on January 13, 1934 in Washington D.C.), is an American actor and comedian known as "The Crying Comic". Known for his high voice, zany hair (which is a toupée), bushy handlebar moustache over a perpetual toothy grin and his heavyset physique, he always enters a venue tossing handfuls of confetti from a paper bag onto his audience and laughing hysterically. Taylor's comedic style includes horrible puns, often in conjunction with props (for example, holding up a plastic fish full of holes and exclaiming "Holy Mackerel!") and miming along to novelty records (including the works of Spike Jones). One of Taylor's classic lines, after getting little to no reaction following one of his jokes, is to stop for a moment and yell, "I don't dance, folks! This is it!"

Prior to becoming famous, Taylor was a page in the U.S. Senate. He was also conscripted into the Army and served in the Korean War.

Though Taylor has taken dramatic roles, he is best identified—even typecast—as a joker, a quick wit and a prop comic. Of his trademark gimmick—conceived quite by accident in 1969 at Merv Griffin's show after tearing up a script on stage and throwing the pieces in a fit of pique—he jested in an interview that "three nuns are tearing it for me 24 hours a day".

Taylor was a frequent celebrity guest panelist on game shows such as Hollywood Squares, To Tell The Truth, and The Gong Show, and even hosted a short-lived send-up of beauty pageants called The $1.98 Beauty Show created by Gong Show producer/host Chuck Barris, in 1978. Taylor appeared as a celebrity on the slot-machine version of Match Game. On one episode of Super Password, gameplay went awry after another celebrity guest, Patty Duke, inadvertently gave away the password. Taylor, in a fit of frustration, shouted "That's not fair!" as he pulled off his toupee, resulting in hysterical laughter from all in the studio.

Taylor has been doing movies, television, and voice-over for some forty years, though is probably best remembered for his appearance as a celebrity guest at the funeral/roast of a very dull man in the cult comedy classic Amazon Women on the Moon. In 2005, Taylor appeared as himself on an episode of ABC TV's The George Lopez Show as well as in the motion picture Wayne's World 2 (1993). Taylor guest-starred as chef "Rappin' Rip" in four episodes of an earlier ABC sitcom featuring Lopez, Life With Bonnie. Taylor has been a frequent co-star with Debbie Reynolds in her live shows in Las Vegas, Reno, and Lake Tahoe. Taylor also appeared as himself on the NBC sitcom Will & Grace (1998). Taylor also voiced Fester Addams in the second Addams Family cartoon; as well as playing a wacky, but memorable villain named Wizard Glick in the final episode of The Monkees TV series in 1968.

Taylor is also an accomplice of the Jackass crew and their friends. In 1995, he performed the intro for the Bloodhound Gang's Use Your Fingers album, and in 2002, he appeared in the final scene of Jackass: The Movie, wielding a pistol that, when fired, released a sign that read "The End." (Taylor's section of the film was originally considerably longer, and ended with him complaining about the heat, and fanning himself with his toupee. This footage was included on the DVD of the film.) He did the same thing at the ending of Jackass: Number Two.

He recently guest starred in The Suite Life of Zack and Cody episode "Loosely Ballroom" as Leo. He is also in some episodes of The Emperor's New School, as the voice of the Royal Record Keeper. He was also recently in the Jetix animated series Super Robot Monkey Team Hyper Force Go!

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