Walter Tetley
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Walter Tetley | |
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Walter ca. 1940-50 (colorized) |
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Born | Walter Campbell Tetzlaff June 2, 1915 New York, New York |
Died | September 4, 1975 (aged 60) Los Angeles, California |
Occupation | voice actor |
Walter Tetley (b. Walter Campbell Tetzlaff, New York City, 2 June 1915; d. 4 September 1975), a United States voice actor, turned a hormonal condition into a career as probably the finest child impersonator in radio's classic era---especially with regular roles on The Great Gildersleeve and The Phil Harris-Alice Faye Show---as well as continuing as a voice-over artist in animated cartoons, commercials, and spoken-word record albums.
Tetley was a precocious performer even when he really was a child, beginning at age seven performing Harry Lauder imitations. His hormonal condition prevented his voice from breaking into maturity as well as preventing his further physical growth, and Tetley would sound forever as though he was stranded on the bridge between boyhood and pre-teen adolescence. Combined with his excellent delivery and spot-on comic timing, he parlayed his condition into a radio career that lasted nearly a quarter of a century, with some of radio's biggest stars included Tetley in their shows, including but not limited to Fred Allen, Jack Benny, W.C. Fields, and others.
Tetley moved to Hollywood in 1938 and acted in a number of MGM films, but radio was his truest metier, and he proved it with the two roles for which he's probably remembered best. First, he was cast to play spunky nephew Leroy on The Great Gildersleeve, beginning in 1941. (Leroy's "Ah you kiddin'?" became almost as much of a show catch-phrase as the title character's booming trill, "leeeerooooy!") Tetley stayed with that role for just about the entire life of that show, voicing Leroy in and out of jams from making nitroglycerin with his home chemistry set to helping Uncle Gildersleeve (Harold Peary) break out of the public library into which they got locked accidentally, after hours. The bad news: His short physical stature obstructed him from playing Leroy in four Gildersleeve feature films.
But Tetley might have been an even bigger hit beginning in 1948, when he took on a concurrent continuing role on an equally popular comedy, playing obnoxious grocery boy Julius Abruzzio on The Phil Harris-Alice Faye Show until the show's finish in 1954. (Surviving episodes that include pre-air audience warmups by Phil Harris usually included Harris alluding to Tetley as "the kid who steals the show every week"---even though Tetley was almost 40 years old when the Harris-Faye show ended production.) Julius combined an obsession with getting the better of his clumsy elders Phil and Remley to an unconcealed crush on Alice and was as much a fixture on the show as Harris's in-character malapropping vanity and Faye's tart but loving earthiness.
"I wondered what a radio show would be like if the audience could see the actors on stage," Tetley was quoted as saying once about his radio work. "But then they couldn’t be allowed to read scripts. It would be like a movie. That wouldn’t be any good. Radio would then be the same as movies." To the same interviewer, Tetley admitted that adulthood in the body of a child troubled him enough, finding it difficult for many years to make adult friends or even to assert himself to his own family. But he finally made peace with the dichotomy, accepted himself, and distinguished between his meal ticket and his self successfully.
Tetley's career wasn't quite finished when the Harris-Faye show's run ended. He would become familiar to a new generation as the voice of Sherman, the nerdy, freckled, bespectacled boy sidekick of time-traveling dog genius Mr. Peabody, in the "Peabody's Improbable History" segments of The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show in the 1960s.
Tetley also worked for Capitol Records in the 1950s, providing an array of juvenile voices for the label's spoken-word albums. His Gildersleeve co-star, Harold Peary, had made three albums for Capitol a decade earlier, telling children's stories Gildersleeve-style.
In 1971, after several more years' voiceover work, Tetley was injured seriously in a motorcycle accident and, reportedly, was confined to a wheelchair for much of the rest of his life. (Numerous sources have suggested Tetley may have lost his southern California home in the same period and lived out his days in a trailer.) He died at age 60 in 1975.
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[edit] References
- Keith Scott (2000)). The Moose That Roared - The story of Jay Ward, Bill Scott, a flying squirrel and a talking moose. St. Martins Press. ISBN 0-312-19922-8.