John Stephenson (actor)

John Stephenson
Born John Winfield Stephenson
August 9, 1923
Kenosha, Wisconsin, U.S.
Other names John Stevenson
Occupation Actor
Years active 19532010

John Winfield Stephenson (born August 9, 1923) is an American actor, most active voice-over roles.[1] He has also been credited as John Stevenson. Stephenson has never given any interviews and was rarely seen in public, although he did make an appearance at BotCon 2001. Since the death of Harvey Korman in 2008, he is one of the last surviving voice actors from the 1960s animated sitcom, The Flintstones, in which he played Mr. Slate.

Career

Early guest starring roles

He started his acting career in numerous television shows in the 1950s and into the 1970s, usually in guest star roles on such shows as:

Stephenson had a small part as a man from the State Department in the film Hellfighters, starring John Wayne.

Voice acting

Stephenson provided the voice for commercials of the era, including spots for Peter Pan Peanut Butter featuring character actor Jesse White.

For several decades, he worked for Hanna-Barbera Productions, performing for many of its 1960s and 1970s animated television series. His first roles for the company was for The Flintstones's eleventh episode "The Golf Champion". He played The Golf Commentator, a Lodge Member and Left-Foot Charlie. Stephenson's most notable role for Hanna-Barbera was as Mr. Slate, Fred Flintstone's hard-edged boss at Slate Rock and Gravel Company, which he voiced from the original series up through to the present, although he provided the voices of the majority of the show's guest characters, including Joe Rockhead on several occasions, making him one of the main cast members of the show. He is now the only living cast member of the show.

Other notable roles include Fancy-Fancy on Top Cat, multiple characters on Scooby-Doo, Colonel Fusby on Breezly and Sneezly, Jonny Quest, The Atom Ant/Secret Squirrel Show, Tog, Rollo, Pondo and Ork in Moby Dick and Mighty Mightor, guest roles on Wait Till Your Father Gets Home and Luke and Blubber Bear in the Wacky Races, among many others.

Stephenson's voice was frequently used and often most remembered for his work on Jonny Quest. There he provided the voice of Dr. Benton Quest for the first 5 episodes, until Barbera decided that his voice too closely sounded like the voice of Mike Road who voiced the character Race Bannon.

Here is the list of known Jonny Quest characterizations provided by John Stephenson:

He also did voices on Arabian Knights, Help!... It's the Hair Bear Bunch!, Sealab 2020 and Inch High, Private Eye.

Stephenson was most often called upon to voice curmudgeon and irascible characters. His range was limited but served him well in the roles he brought to prominence. In total, Stephenson had about five or six 'voices' he would apply to characters. There is his most-used voice, which he gave to Mr. Slate on The Flintstones series. Another character given that same vocal delivery was Chief Wiggins on the series Dynomutt, Dog Wonder, Sheriff Bagley on Clue Club, and countless others.

Another voice Stephenson liked to use was the high nasal Joe Flynn inspired voice. This voice was usually given to characters that were either rude, or smart-alecks, or flat out mean. They were also short-tempered; examples include Mr. Peevly from Help! It's the Hair Bear Bunch! and Schnooker from Inspector Mumbly, a segment from The Tom and Jerry/Grape Ape/Mumbly Show.

He was cast most often in the Scooby-Doo cartoons as the villains or the red herring scientist. In "High Rise Hair Raiser", one episode of Scooby-Doo, he played Mr. Daugherty, Mr. Speck, and the villain of that episode, The Specter. Still, another voice Stephenson was noted for, was his take on Boris Karloff. A lot of the Karloff-sounding villains in early episodes of Scooby-Doo were provided by Stephenson. He voiced Hairy Scary on Casper and the Angels along with Casper's Halloween Special and Casper's First Christmas. He also played Farmer John Arable in the 1973 Hanna-Barbera animated feature Charlotte's Web.

John Stephenson borrowed the vocal traits of Joe Flynn for several characters as mentioned earlier, Boris Karloff for several more, and did a Jimmy Durante for the 1970s and 1980s version of Doggie Daddy on Yogi's Treasure Hunt.

Also, if needed, Stephenson has been known to do a take-off on Paul Lynde as heard on the 1977 series Scooby's All-Star Laff-a-Lympics as the character Mildew Wolf. Originally, Lynde voiced the character as part of a segment shown on a series called Cattanooga Cats but was not interested in reprising the role on Laff-a-Lympics. Stephenson also gave voice to the Dread Baron, a re-designed Dick Dastardly character. A further Stephenson voice was used for the magician The Great Fondoo, inspired perhaps by Bela Lugosi.

For The Adventures of Gulliver, he voiced the villain Captain Leech and the Lilliputian monarch, King Pomp; in the first episode of the series he also voiced Gulliver's father. Stephenson reached back for the Paul Lynde voice when he was cast as Wilfred Wolf in the early 1980s series, Kwicky Koala.

During the 1980s, he contributed to various cartoons of the period such as G.I. Joe, The Smurfs, Galaxy High and Bionic Six.

He voiced Huffer, Windcharger, Thundercracker, and Alpha Trion from the 1980s hit The Transformers, and took over the role of Kup for the show's third season (the character was voiced by Lionel Stander in The Transformers: The Movie). In 1987, he reprised Fancy-Fancy in Top Cat and the Beverly Hills Cats in which he also replaced Allen Jenkins as the voice of Officer Dibble for that movie.

He provided the voice of Professor X in Pryde of the X-Men (he had previously provided the voice for X-Men nemesis Magneto during the character's appearance in the 1970s Fantastic Four cartoon).

Stephenson reprised his role of Luke from Wacky Races in the Wacky Races video game in 2000.

His recent voice work includes doing voices for What's New, Scooby Doo?, Johnny Bravo, as Ganthet on Duck Dodgers, and he also portrayed Grandpa Squirrel on Squirrel Boy.

In 2004, Stephenson narrated the featurette "Space Age Gadgets" for The Jetsons First Season DVD box set. He also narrated the featurette "Wacky Inventions" for The Flintstones Complete Series DVD box set. Recently in 2010, the voice actor played Sheriff on Scooby-Doo! Abracadabra-Doo, marking the first time, he voiced a character on a direct-to-DVD Scooby-Doo movie.

Dragnet

Stephenson was also the narrator in the classic television series Dragnet (1967–1970), recapping the fate of the perpetrators at the end of every episode. (The opening narration at this time was performed by George Fenneman)

Accountemps

Stephenson, using his "Mr. Slate voice", provided the voice of Mr. Fernwell in a series of Accountemps radio ads.

References

  1. Lawson, Tim; Persons, Alisa (2004-12-01). The Magic Behind the Voices: A Who's Who of Cartoon Voice Actors. Univ. Press of Mississippi. pp. 326–. ISBN 9781578066964. Retrieved 9 May 2012.

External links