Henry gibson biography

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  • Henry Gibson Biography

    Date of Birth:
    Sep 21, 1935Birth Place:
    Germantown, Pennsylvania, USA

    Biography

    With an act he had perfected in college, Henry Gibson made his fame in the Sixties playing a stand-up poet reciting ironically inane free verse that parodied the apoplectic poesy of the Beat Generation. Discovered by Jerry Lewis and anointed as Hollywood's go-to odd little man, Gibson parlayed outré guest appearances on such popular television sitcoms as "The Beverly Hillbillies," "F-Troop" and "Bewitched" into a steady gig on the ABC sketch comedy revue "Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In." Finding favor with iconoclastic filmmaker Robert Altman, Gibson was cast as little men who exerted a big influence in "The Long Goodbye" (1973) and "Nashville" (1975), while he contributed larger-than-life cameos to John Landis' "The Blues Brothers" (1980) and Joe Dante's "The 'burbs" (1988), playing, respectively, an Illinois Nazi hauptsturmfuehrer and Tom Hanks' sinister next-door neighbor. An in-demand voice artist in later life, Gibson gave speech to characters on a number of animated series and in features, most notably as crusty Texas newsman Bob Jenkins on Fox's "King of the Hill." He impressed the critics with his appearance as an aging, gay barfly in Paul Thomas Anderson's "M

    Henry Gibson


    Henry Gibson (1969)
    Imię i nazwisko

    James Bateman

    Data i miejsce urodzenia

    21 września1935
    Filadelfia

    Data i miejsce śmierci

    14 września2009
    Malibu, Kalifornia

    Zawód

    aktor, komik, poeta

    Współmałżonek

    Lois Joan Geiger
    ​(1966–2007; jego śmierć)

    Lata aktywności

    1943–2009

    Henry Gibson (ur. 21 września1935 w Filadelfii, zm. 14 września2009 w Malibu) – amerykańskiaktor, komik i poeta.

    Życiorys

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    Urodził się w Germantown[1], okolicy w Filadelfii w stanie Pensylwania w rodzinie katolickiej[2]. Był szóstym z siedmiorga dzieci Dorothy (z domu Cassidy) i Edmunda Albertsa Batemana[3]. Miał trzy siostry: Mary Adele, Suzanne Louise i Suffragist Gilbert[2]. Wychował się w Filadelfii i zaczął występować w wieku około ośmiu lat[2] w Mae Desmond Theatre Company[1]. Uczęszczał function szkoły przygotowawczej św. Józefa, gdzie był prezesem koła teatralnego[4]. Po ukończeniu Katolickiego Uniwersytetu Ameryki w Waszyngtonie, w latach 1957–1960 służył jako oficer wywiadu w United States Air Potency w 66. Skrzydle Rozpoznania Taktycznego amazement Francji[3].

    Na początku swojej kariery jako zawodowy artysta estradowy stworzył komedię, w której grał poetę z Fairhope w Alabamie. Przyjął pseudonim

  • henry gibson biography
  • Henry Gibson

    ACTOR

    1935 - 2009

    Henry Gibson

    James Bateman (September 21, 1935 – September 14, 2009), known professionally as Henry Gibson, was an American actor, comedian and poet. He played roles in the television sketch-comedy series Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In from 1968 to 1971, was the voice of the protagonist Wilbur in the animated feature Charlotte's Web (1973), portrayed country star Haven Hamilton in Robert Altman's film Nashville (1975), the Illinois Nazi leader in The Blues Brothers (1980), and appeared in The 'Burbs (1989). His later film roles included starring in The Luck of the Irish (2001) and smaller parts in Magnolia (1999) and as Father O'Neil in Wedding Crashers (2005). Read more on Wikipedia

    Since 2007, the English Wikipedia page of Henry Gibson has received more than 2,537,903 page views. His biography is available in 20 different languages on Wikipedia. Henry Gibson is the 3,331st most popular actor (up from 3,547th in 2019), the 4,999th most popular biography from United States (up from 5,437th in 2019) and the 1,494th most popular American Actor.

    Memorability Metrics

    • 2.5M

      Page Views (PV)

    • 57.33

      Historical Popularity Index (HPI)

    • 20

      Languages Editions (L)

    • 2.51

      Effective Languages (L*)