Wayland Flowers

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Wayland Flowers and Madame
Wayland Flowers and Madame

Wayland Flowers (November 26, 1939October 11, 1988) in Gulfport, Mississippi), was an American puppeteer.

Flowers was best known for his puppet Madame, who was a huge hit with audiences in the 1970s and 1980s.

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[edit] Madame

Madame was created by Flowers in the mid-1960s. Flowers' first big break was an appearance on the "Andy Williams Show." The character of Madame is an "outrageous old broad" who entertains with double entendres and witty comebacks. Bedecked in fabulous eveningwear and summer diamonds ("Some are diamonds; some are not"), Madame's look is based on movie stars such as Gloria Swanson.

Madame's many TV appearances have included Laugh In; a long run on the game show Hollywood Squares (replacing Paul Lynde in The Center Square); as host of Solid Gold; various TV guest spots; and as the star of her own, syndicated 1982 sitcom, Madame's Place.

[edit] Other puppets

Wayland's other puppets included Crazy Mary (an escapee from Bellevue mental hospital), Jiffy (a Harlem harlot with a heart of brass), Machelheny (a retired Vaudeville comedian). His puppet Smedley worked with Marlo Thomas on Free to Be . . . You and Me.

[edit] Death

Wayland Flowers died of an AIDS-related illness. He is interred in Cedar Hill Cemetery in Dawson, Georgia.

[edit] Madame's whereabouts

The estate of Wayland Flowers, including Madame, was left to Wayland's then-manager, Marlena Shell.

After many years out of the spotlight, Shell met New York-based puppeteer Joe Kovacs in 2002, and felt Kovacs was an ideal candidate to continue the "madame" performances. Kovacs is presenting his first "Madame" show, "Madame: A Comeback From Abroad", in 2006. [1]. The show takes a cue from (and spoofs) one-woman shows such as "Elaine Stritch At Liberty"", and explains where Madame has been for the last decade or so.

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