Dick Clair | |
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Born | Richard Jones November 12, 1931 San Francisco, California, United States |
Died | December 12, 1988 Los Angeles, California, United States |
(aged 57)
Years active | 1972–1987 |
Dick Clair (November 12, 1931 – December 12, 1988) was an American television producer, actor and television and film writer, best known for the television sitcoms It's a Living, The Facts of Life, and Mama's Family.
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Clair was born Richard Jones in San Francisco, California. He served in the military for two years (1955–1957). He never married and never had children.[1]
In the early 1970s, Clair performed husband-and-wife comedy routines for The Ed Sullivan Show with his partner Jenna McMahon.[1] Clair was a screenwriter for episodes of The Mary Tyler Moore Show and The Bob Newhart Show[2] in addition to his Emmy Award winning writing for the comedy-variety TV program The Carol Burnett Show.[3] With Jenna McMahon he wrote and produced the television sitcoms It's a Living, The Facts of Life, and Mama's Family.
Clair was active as an early member of the Cryonics Society of California in the 1960s. In 1982 he contributed $20,000 to the cryonics organization Trans Time so that a husband and wife could remain cryopreserved in liquid nitrogen. He was diagnosed with AIDS in 1986. When he was hospitalized in 1988 he faced opposition from the hospital and the State of California concerning his desire for cryonics treatment.[1] The ensuing court battle (Roe v. Mitchell, with Clair as "John Roe") ended victoriously, establishing the legal right of persons to be cryonically preserved in the state of California.[4][5][6]
Clair died on December 12, 1988, of multiple AIDS-related infections at the age of fifty-seven.[7] He was cryopreserved at the Alcor Life Extension Foundation.[8]