Fredd Wayne

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Fredd Wayne as Paul Malloy in The Twilight Zone, Season 3, Episode 2: The Arrival

Fredd Wayne (born October 17, 1924) is an American actor with a career spanning seven decades and successes on Broadway, radio, television, movies and recorded works. He is best known for numerous guest star appearances on television and for his portrayal of Benjamin Franklin - originally in his one-man show Benjamin Franklin: Citizen, on television, recordings and live appearances.

Early life

Fredd Wayne was born Frederick Wiener in Akron, Ohio to working class parents Celia (Mirman) and Charles Theodore Wiener, a salesman. Two days after graduating from John R. Buchtel High School he took a bus to Hollywood in hopes of working for cousin Lester Cowan who had produced My Little Chickadee and several Marx Brothers films. He recalls sitting in the lobby of Columbia Studios for three days before Cowan dismissed him with, “I got nuthin’ for you, kid.” After Wayne’s money and graduation watch were stolen, a neighbor who worked at Warner Brothers drove him to the studio where he was hired as a mail boy for $18 a week. This first Hollywood gig, and the rush of delivering film to movie sets, trading “hello”s with Bette Davis and watching John Garfield and Errol Flynn perform, ended when the U.S. Army called him in and asked his pre-draft occupation. Without hesitation he answered, “I was under contract to Warner Brothers Studio.”

WWII

Wayne was made a Special Service non-com (Entertainment Specialist) for the 253rd Infantry Regiment of the 63rd Infantry Division. For eighteen months, in addition to traditional military training, he ran movie projectors, wrote, produced and performed in soldier shows in Mississippi, attended courses at Fort McPherson, Georgia and Washington & Lee University in Virginia (future director Arthur Penn was a classmate); Wayne also acted as booking agent of a hugely successful GI orchestra led by Ralph Cerasuolo, a sophisticated jazz violinist formerly known in New York City as “Leonardo of the Stork Club”. Despite a 14-year age difference they became close friends.

Elements of the 63rd Infantry Division including Wayne and the band landed in Marseilles, France on December 8, 1944 and were rushed north to support Americans locked in the Battle of the Bulge. Wayne was assigned to GRO (Graves Registration Office) to retrieve fallen soldiers. On April 2, 1945 he was stunned to find Ralph Cerasuolo’s body, killed by a single sniper shot to the forehead.

G.I. Carmen

Shortly after VE-Day, Wayne was directed to put together an entertainment for the men. In response to his notices 45 combat veterans of his 253rd Infantry Regiment turned in rifles for grease paint to create G.I. Carmen – destined to become, with the exception of This Is The Army, the most successful G.I. show of World War II. With half the cast as women in ill-fitting costumes and scraggly wigs, the show was to run for only three nights in Tauberbishofsheim, Germany[1] but its raucous, bawdy humor, robust singing and dancing made it a roaring success that the army recognized at once.[2] In addition to writing, producing and co-directing duties Wayne had to play the title role when no other G.I. would touch it. The cast included several pre-war professionals including Hal Edwards who’d danced in 20th Century Fox musicals and Ray Richardson, a tenor with the Chicago Lyric Opera. Most of Ralph’s band, now led by Marty Faloon, were onstage as well, among them future guitar great Charlie Byrd. After raiding Heidelberg’s Stadt Theatre for colorful costumes, proper wigs and scenery, the army sent the troupe on an extended nine month tour throughout Germany,[3][4] Belgium, France, Italy and Austria including stops at leading theatres in Berlin, Brussels, Paris,[5] Rome and Vienna. The show closed in Nuremberg on January 24, 1946. GI Carmen’s cast was kept together throughout 142 performances before audiences totaling well over 250,000 G.I. and allied troops and countless civilians, including Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas in Paris and Marlene Dietrich in Berlin.

Professional career

Back in the states Fredd Wayne settled in New York with a job at J.C Penney offices by day and acting classes at the American Theatre Wing after hours. (Lee Marvin, James Whitmore and Martin Balsam were classmates; Eileen Heckart and Jean Stapleton were among the volunteer actresses). As an usher at Broadway’s Alvin Theatre Wayne watched Ingrid Bergman star in Joan of Lorraine, and fetched tea for José Ferrer during the latter’s celebrated run in Cyrano de Bergerac. (Ten years later for Universal’s Revue Productions, Wayne performed the character in a TV pilot called The Sword.[6][7] It never sold.) Following the Cyrano run Ferrer cast Wayne in his production of the Czech play The Insect Comedy whose performers included Ray Walston, Werner Klemperer and Don Murray.
Fredd Wayne and Mary Martin backstage in London enjoying her birthday gift of her home state's "currency".
Fredd Wayne’s big Broadway break came when he went to audition for Shakespeare’s As You Like It starring Katharine Hepburn but was mistakenly pulled in to read for the Johnny Mercer – Bobby Dolan musical Texas, L’il Darlin’. His G.I. Carmen musical skills helped land a leading role. Critical success on Broadway led to roles co-starring opposite Ralph Bellamy in Oh, Men! Oh, Women! and following Ray Walston as Luther Billis opposite Mary Martin in the original London production of South Pacific. Wayne’s success in London – including a concurrent extended engagement at The Berkeley Cabaret – was followed by a role opposite Gene Kelly in MGM’s Crest of the Wave, filmed in England and the Channel Islands. It also led to American productions of South Pacific playing Billis opposite Gisele MacKenzie in Dallas, Vikki Carr in Kansas City and Jane Powell in St. Paul, Minnesota. Returning to New York Wayne became embroiled in the Golden Age of Television, when dramas and comedies were not videotaped or filmed but miscues were part of the tension and grandeur of performing live before millions of people. Wayne appeared in such shows as Playhouse 90, Studio One, Pulitzer Prize Playhouse, The Defenders, Kraft Theatre, Danger, We, the People, Robert Montgomery Presents, The Victor Borge Show and The Nurses. He also made four guest appearances on Perry Mason, including the role of murder victim Jack Hardisty in the 1958 episode, "The Case of the Buried Clock."

Benjamin Franklin, Citizen

Fredd Wayne in "Benjamin Franklin, Citizen"
Out of these creative years Fredd Wayne developed the role for which he’s probably best known. The idea came to him while flying to New York from Los Angeles in 1964; he went straight to the New York Public Library from JFK to begin research and was directed to the Editor of The Papers of Benjamin Franklin at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. After six weeks of study and appearances as Franklin on 'Tonight' and 'Today' shows[8] he began breaking in his one man show Benjamin Franklin, Citizen in upstate New York and Ohio. By the time he reached Los Angeles the production was running smoothly and Wayne was hired to play Franklin in a two-part Bewitched on ABC-TV.[9]
Fredd Wayne with Elizabeth Montgomery in Bewitched
Wayne’s Benjamin Franklin, Citizen also had a long run in Hollywood’s Ivar Theatre[10][11][12] which led to a well received U.S. State Department tour of Europe[13][14] and subsequent college tours throughout America during the Bicentennial era and beyond. Fredd Wayne has also appeared frequently as Franklin at IBM, GE and other industrial conventions. His recording of The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin (Audio Partners) was selected as one of the top audiotapes of 1997.[15]

Writings

As a writer Fredd Wayne’s articles have appeared in The New York Times,[16] Playboy,[17] The Los Angeles Times,[18][19] Performing Arts,[20] Westways,[21] The Arizona Republic[22] and numerous other publications. Wayne has titled his upcoming fictionalized memoir “Blinky's Great Adventure”.

Selected Filmography

References

  1. Redcat, A 253rd Infantry Regiment Weekly, Vol. 1 No. 1, Germany, 15June1945
  2. http://www.63rdinfdiv.com/occupationphotopage3.html
  3. The Stars and Stripes, Germany Edition, July 17, 1945
  4. Time, The Weekly News Magazine, August 6, 1945
  5. The Stars and Stripes, Paris, November 4, 1945
  6. The New York Times, Feb. 8, 1957
  7. The Hollywood Reporter, June 3, 1957
  8. The New York Times, Sept. 9, 1964
  9. Variety, Hollywood Edition, Oct. 20, 1966
  10. The Hollywood Reporter, Oct. 27, 1966
  11. Variety, Hollywood Edition, Oct. 27, 1966
  12. Los Angeles Times, Oct. 27, 1966
  13. The Hollywood Reporter, Feb. 22, 1967
  14. The New York Times, Mar. 1, 1967
  15. Publishers Weekly, Jan. 5, 1998
  16. The New York Times, "A Ben Franklin Tour With 'Ben Franklin'", Sunday, June 1, 1975
  17. Playboy, "How to Avoid Making Out in Hollywood" (under the nom de plume, 'Kelton Holloway'), January 1958
  18. Los Angeles Times, Calendar section, "Vaudeville Isn't Dead - It's Going to College", Sunday, June 22, 1969
  19. Los Angeles Times, Calendar section, "'Godfather' Casting: An Italian Uprising", Sunday, February 28, 1971
  20. Performing Arts, Center Theatre Group, Mark Taper Forum, February 1976
  21. Westways, "Cambria at Play", May 1977
  22. The Arizona Republic, "Picketing hard on feet of Writers Guild members", May 13, 1973
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