Sidney Fields
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Sidney Fields | |
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Sidney Fields (left) with Lou Costello |
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Born | February 5, 1898 Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S. |
Died | September 28, 1975 (aged 77) Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. |
Sidney Fields (February 5, 1898—September 28, 1975) was a comedy actor and writer best known for his featured role on The Abbott and Costello Show in the early 1950s. He was sometimes credited as "Sid Fields" and "Sidney Field."
Fields was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and began his career by working in local theaters as a boy. As a teenager, he worked in carnivals and tent shows in the Midwest, and later became partner in a comedy team with vaudeville and burlesque performer Jack Greenman. The team was cast by Harold Minsky in his family's celebrated burlesque theater. The team split up when Fields headed for Hollywood to work on a feature film.
In the ensuing years, Fields performed on stage, radio, and occasionally in movies. He worked with Eddie Cantor as a writer and actor, and then with Ben Blue, Rudy Vallee, Fred Allen and Milton Berle.
Fields appeared in small roles in 1930s film comedies (the first being Cantor's Strike Me Pink in 1935) and sometimes received screen credits as a writer and assistant director. In 1945 he began working in Abbott and Costello's radio shows and movies. From 1951 he supported Abbott and Costello in NBC-TV's The Colgate Comedy Hour, and in 1952 he was cast in the team's filmed series, The Abbott and Costello Show. The show ran for two seasons and played in syndication for decades.
Fields played a prominent supporting role as "Mr. Fields," the hot-tempered, bald-headed landlord of the rooming house where Abbott and Costello lived. He was a frequent target of gags and schemes foisted by the two main characters. Like other cast regulars, Fields played other roles as well, usually wearing a wig or other disguise. (These characters were often described as relatives of Mr. Fields.) He also wrote some of the episodes. Fields was part of an ensemble cast that included Hillary Brooke as a neighbor and sometime love interest, Gordon Jones as Mike the Cop, a dimwitted foil for the boys, Joe Besser as Stinky, a 40-year-old man dressed in a Little Lord Fauntleroy suit, and Joe Kirk as Mr. Bacciagalupe, an Italian immigrant caricature.
After the show ended, Fields played occasional small roles in television programs, and worked as a staff writer and comedian in Jackie Gleason and His American Scene Magazine. He retired to Las Vegas, and died there in 1975.