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Another One . . . Gone

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Another One . . . Gone

Postby Steve on Fri Oct 23, 2009 8:52 am

Link to Article: http://www.cnn.com/2009/SHOWBIZ/TV/10/2 ... index.html

Article:

TV Funny Man Soupy Sales Dies at 83

(CNN) -- Soupy Sales, a comedian from the golden era of television, died Thursday. He was 83.

Soupy Sales entertained generations of Americans with his off-the-cuff, wacky antics. He was 83.

The funny man seen many times on popular game shows died at a New York hospice, said Paul Dver, Sales' longtime friend and manager.

"We have lost a comedy American icon," Dver said. "I feel the personal loss, and I also feel the magic that he had around him being gone. That's a much more severe loss than a loss of a friend."

Sales was known for his long-running children's show "Lunch With Soupy Sales," which started in 1953 and began his trademark slapstick pie-throwing antics. The comedy show featured skits that culminated in Sales getting walloped with pies in the face.

"Soupy was the last of the great TV comics when you talk about Ernie Kovacs, Red Skelton, right down to Howdy Doody," Dver said. "But it was bigger than that, because he used a children's format aimed at the kids and then he would forget he was doing a kids' show and do a wild, unrehearsed, wacky improv for a half-hour every day for 15 years."

He could also inflame the authorities. One New Year's Day, upset at being asked to work, he asked his youthful audience to send him those "green pieces of paper" from their parents' wallets. Though he didn't receive much -- he told The New York Times he received only a few dollars -- he was suspended for a week for the prank.

Later in his career, he was a regular on TV game shows, such as "Hollywood Squares," "To Tell the Truth" and "What's My Line?"

Sales recently fell backstage at a local Emmy awards show in New York and developed serious ailments after that, Dver said.

End of Article
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Re: Another One . . . Gone

Postby adam on Fri Oct 23, 2009 9:35 am

I loved Soupy Sales. In fact, I liked almost all comedians when I was young. The idea that adults could make kids laugh was novel to me. Most of the adults in my early life were drunk, sick, sad or deadly serious. TV comics made life fun. Soupy Sales, some of the early cartoons, and even the Muppets were kind of like televising Mad Magazine, with something for adults as well as kids. Not like Mr. Rogers Neighborhood at all, not that there was anything wrong with that.
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