Len Maxwell

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Len Maxwell is an American voice actor and announcer.

[edit] Career

Prior to his career in voice-overs, Len was a stand up comedian.

He appeared on The Tonight Show several times, on a CBS special called, The Nut House, an NBC special called The Future Lies Ahead and appeared in night clubs and theaters in Las Vegas, New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, etc. with such luminaries as Frank Sinatra, Peggy Lee, Lena Horne, Ella Fitzgerald to name but a few.

At an engagement at New York’s Copacabana, a producer for an advertising agency approached Len and asked him if he would be willing to do some of the voices in his act on a series of commercials. Len agreed. Two weeks later, when he received a check for the few hours of what was an easy and enjoyable experience, Len was shocked at the large amount of the check. He called the advertising agency, saying there had to be some mistake. They said they would look into it. Two days later a representative of the agency called back and apologized for the error and said they would send Len the rest. It was at that moment that Len decided to make voice-overs his career.

During Len’s career in voice-overs he has recorded over 25,000 commercials - plus dozens of animated cartoons, and voice-overs in motion pictures.

Len won the advertising industry’s coveted CLIO award for best voice-over actor/announcer. A cartoon entitled The Crunch Bird in which Len did all five voices, won the Academy Award for best animated short. He also directed the sound track for the film. He also provided several voices for the 1970 Christmas animated special , The Night the Animals Talked.

He supplied the voices of Karate and The Chief in the children's cartoon series Batfink.

Len wrote some comedy with Woody Allen. He appeared with Woody on screen in Woody’s film, What's Up Tiger Lily, and did the voices of most of the main characters in that film. Voice-overs in Woody’s Take the Money and Run and Sleeper followed. He and Woody remain friends to this day.


In 1964, Maxwell released the Christmas/Monster-themed LP, "A Merry Monster Christmas". This album entertained families for decades with its head-on collision of classic movie monsters with traditional Christmas observances. The album became difficult to find until Maxwell updated and re-released it on CD in 2005.

[edit] External links

http://www.amerrymonsterchristmas.com Official Website