I'm Depressed

Sep 26, 2005 13:32

I can't believe it. Don Adams is dead... gone. Forever.

The most ironic thing was, that when I found out, I was actually watching Horray for Hollywood, a Get Smart episode.

With all this good news about Get Smart coming out on DVD and a possible movie... well, I guess I just wish he could have lived to see it.

Man, oh man am I sad.

DON ADAMS
OBITUARY

September 25, 2005

Don Adams, who gained worldwide fame and three Emmy Awards starring as
Agent
86, Maxwell Smart, in the classic television comedy GET SMART, died at
8:02
p.m PDT, Sunday, September 25, 2005, at Cedars-Sinai Hospital in Beverly
Hills. He was 82. Although he had been in failing health for more than two
years due to bone lymphoma, his death resulted from a sudden lung
infection
for which he was hospitalized the previous day.

Born Donald James Yarmy on April 13, 1923 [correct, despite frequently
reported erroneous dates] in New York City to Irish-Hungarian parents,
Adams
hoped for an engineering career. He joined the U.S. Marines in the early
days of World War II and served as a drill instructor. He saw combat
in the
ays of World War II and served as a drill instructor. He saw combat in the
invasion of Guadalcanal and was the only survivor of his platoon. He
contracted blackwater fever and nearly died, remaining hospitalized
for more
than a year.

Following the war, he embarked on a career as an impressionist and
stand-up
comedian, appearing in small clubs in Florida and Washington D.C. He
married
singer Adelaide Adams and took her professional last name as his own stage
name. In 1954, his stand-up act, written with his boyhood friend Bill
Dana,
landed him a contestant spot on ARTHUR GODFREY?S TALENT SCOUTS, which he
won. This led to scores of appearances on comedy and variety series
such as
THE STEVE ALLEN SHOW and Ed Sullivan?s THE TOAST OF THE TOWN, and
ultimately
to a regular job on THE PERRY COMO SHOW. He also played in stock and
in 1962
starred with Anthony Perkins in the Broadway play HAROLD.

Divorced and remarried (to dancer Dorothy Bracken), Adams in 1963 reunited
with Bill Dana on THE BILL DANA SHOW, playing inept hotel detective Byron
with Bill Dana on THE BILL DANA SHOW, playing inept hotel detective Byron
Glick, a forerunner to his most famous characterization. NBC placed Adams
under contract and gave him the starring role in Mel Brooks?s and Buck
Henry?s spy spoof GET SMART. As the bumbling yet intrepid secret agent
Maxwell Smart, Adams was an instant success. With his alluring
straight-woman partner Agent 99 (Barbara Feldon), Adams became a comic
icon
of the 1960s, popularizing dozens of catch-phrases that still resound
today:
"Would you believe?", "Missed it by THAT much!", "...and LOVING it!" and
"Sorry about that, Chief."

Adams reveled in the show and its popularity, and particularly enjoyed
writing and directing several episodes. GET SMART ran for five seasons and
brought Adams wealth, awards, and worldwide fame. At the same time, he
continued to achieve recognition as one of the funniest and most popular
stand-up comedians of his generation.

Adams returned in a new series in 1971, THE PARTNERS, which, though
slightly
more serious than GET SMART, still had him playing a bumbling
more serious than GET SMART, still had him playing a bumbling
law-enforcement officer. This time he starred with Rupert Crosse, the two
playing a pair of none-too-bright detectives. The show lasted one season.
Except for the intriguing but unsuccessful DON ADAMS?S SCREEN TEST (a
contest show in which Adams directed famous stars and amateurs in scenes
from classic movies), he did not return to series television for fourteen
years.

Instead he guest-starred on sitcoms, variety shows, and occasional TV
movies. He played Las Vegas showrooms and nightclubs, though he grew
increasingly reluctant to perform before live audiences. With the
distinctive voice of his on-screen persona, he had long been active in
voice-over work. Even during the GET SMART period he had been popular
among
children as the voice of the animated TENNESSE TUXEDO, and later was even
more popular in his title role as INSPECTOR GADGET.

Divorced again, he married a third time in 1977 (to Judy Luciano). During
this period, Adams starred in and directed a number of commercials,
winning
this period, Adams starred in and directed a number of commercials,
winning
a CLIO Award for directing. In 1980, he reluctantly returned to the
Maxwell
Smart character in a feature film, THE NUDE BOMB, which he hated. He also
brought the character briefly back to television in the 1989 TV movie GET
SMART, AGAIN!

In 1985, he returned to series television in a Canadian sitcom, CHECK IT
OUT, in which he played the manager of a supermarket. The show was popular
enough to run for three seasons on American TV, but it mainly provided a
paycheck for Adams and a co-starring role for a pre-NYPD BLUE Gordon
Clapp.

In later years, he hoped for a chance at serious roles, of which he
had done
many in his early years in summer stock. But the opportunity never
arrived.
A role was actually written for him by his son-in-law for the revived
ALFRED
HITCHCOCK PRESENTS in 1986, but the producers feared he could not subsume
his comedic persona, and the role went to Martin Landau.

Instead, he returned to the role that had made him world famous, in a
third
revival of Maxwell Smart. The 1995 series version of GET SMART featured
Adams as Smart, now promoted to Chief of the secret agency CONTROL.
Barbara
Feldon also returned as his wife and colleague, but instead of the couple
who had made television history, the show focused on the bumbling spy
efforts of their son Zach Smart. Only seven episodes aired before the new
show was cancelled.

Adams spent the remainder of his career doing commercials and voice work,
mostly in new INSPECTOR GADGET productions. In 1999, he made a cameo voice
appearance in the live-action INSPECTOR GADGET feature film starring
Matthew
Broderick as Gadget.

Like his brother, the late comedian Dick Yarmy, Adams was an inveterate
horse-player. His leisure time was largely spent either at racetracks
or in
card games at the Playboy Mansion, and with pals such as Hugh Hefner,
James
Caan, and Don Rickles. Divorced for the third time, he lived alone in a
luxury apartment in Century City. He was a devoted history buff, and
was an
mateur expert on the lives of Abraham Lincoln and Adolf Hitler. He was a
talented poet and painter and had at one time considered a career as an
artist.

His health declined in recent years with the onset of lymphoma, but took a
precipitous turn for the worse following the death last year of his
daughter, actress-casting director Cecily Adams. In recent weeks he had
declined to continue medications or treatment for his ailments. Following
his emergency hospitalization on September 24, he was unable to breathe on
his own. As per his instructions, life-support systems were turned off
Sunday night. Two of his former wives and three of his children, as
well as
other family members, were with him when he died.

Adams is survived by six of his seven children: Daughters Carolyn
Steele (of
Pahoa, Hawaii), Christine Adams (of Elkridge, Maryland), Cathy Metchik (of
Henderson, Nevada), [Paramount TV executive] Stacey Adams, and Beige
Adams,
and son Sean Adams (all of Los Angeles); by five of his seven
grandchildren
(another is expected in November); and by three great-grandchildren.

There will be a private memorial service. Burial will be with Marine Corps
honors at an undetermined location.

Memorial donations may be made to the Motion Picture & Television
Fund, MPTF
Foundation,
22212 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 300, Woodland Hills CA 91364.
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