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Don Knotts, Rest in Peace

Robbie883 · 18 · 31820

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Offline Robbie883

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I heard the news on the radio earlier, and I was real disappointed, he was a great comedian.

RIP Don


Offline BeAStooge

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We lost one of the great ones yesterday.

Don worked with the Stooges on THE STEVE ALLEN SHOW in 1959, on the January 11, February 22 and April 5 shows. Also, Don and the Stooges were in the cast of IT'S A MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD WORLD (1963).

He will be missed.  "Atta boy Luther!"

Rest in peace, my friend.



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« Last Edit: February 25, 2006, 11:11:57 PM by BeAStooge »


Offline Shemoeley Fine

I never liked the Andy Griffith Show, I couldn't connect with the characters or backwoods setting. I never liked Don Knotts, he rarely made me chuckle, yet I realize for many people he was very funny. The only time I enjoyed Don Knotts was his cameo in It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World...

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Offline BeAStooge

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Some personal remembrances of Don Knotts...

Seven years ago, he was starring in a play at one of the Atlantic City casino hotels, and I bought tickets to a Saturday matinee.  A lifelong fan of his work, particularly THE STEVE ALLEN SHOW and THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW, I figured I had nothing to lose by sending him a letter, c/o the hotel, inviting him to dinner after the show.  I really didn't expect an answer, several weeks passed, and I had practically forgotten about it.

The night before my ticket date, I came home from work... and Don Knotts himself is on my answering machine!  He couldn't accomodate time for dinner, but he invited me to visit him in his dressing room after the performance.  Needless to say I made the appointment, and although he only had about 10 minutes to spare (his health was frail even then, and he napped for several hours between performances), he made time for me, pictures, autographs, and pleasant conversation.  (Yes, I saved that cassette tape.)

Several more occasions the past few years, I saw him at the Hollywood Collector Shows in Los Angeles. He and his fiance remembered me from the AC visit, and always found time for pleasantries.

One thing at those shows, it's Hollywood.  No one really takes much notice of the celebrities as they arrive, and this particular show generally hosts approximately 75 celebrities.  BUT every time Don showed up, attendees and other celebrities would stop to acknowledge his entrance... once I saw a standing ovation that brought Don to tears.  Don always had the longest line.

Don's eyesight failed about 25 years ago while he was doing THREE'S COMPANY. He had an operation that restored his peripheral vision, but his forward vision was virtually nil, and he always went to great lengths to make sure no one noticed.

In live appearances, particularly plays, stage movements were carefully choreographed and set designed so Don could coordinate his movements with peripheral vision. The stage floor was marked with fluorescent tape that the audience couldn't see, but flared up under the stage lights so Don never missed his mark.

He frequently made himself available for autographs at collector shows and ANDY GRIFFITH fan events, even though signing autographs was a chore that actually made him ill. Without forward vision, locating sections of 8x10s photos where he could legibly sign was a deliberate and slow chore. He would sign for hours, but frustration with his disability led to blood pressure headaches. Often he would leave shows early due to headaches, but the fact was, he would suffer as long as he could so as few fans as possible went home disappointed.

I'm an annual attendee at "Mayberry Days" in Mt. Airy NC. Of all the GRIFFITH actors and crew who have been guests at this event, not one has had less than personal and professional praise for Don Knotts! And these guests have included the Dillards, Maggie Peterson, Betty Lynn, Howard Morris, George Lindsey, Harvey Bullock, Jack Elinson, James Best, Elinor Donahue, Earle Hagen... and some guy named Andy Griffith.

Don Knotts was a regular guy with a great deal of talent. He was fortunate to have his talent meet with Andy Griffith and the production staff of Danny Thomas & Sheldon Leonard, and they created a cultural icon known as 'Barney Fife.' Mr. Knotts always appreciated his fans, and went more than the extra mile to acknowledge them.

I will miss Don Knotts. But, I have 'Barney Fife,' 'Nervous Man,' and his movie characters to always remember him by.

"Atta boy Luther!"


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Your personal memories of Mr. Knotts are just great, Brent, and thank you for sharing them.  8)

For some reason, in spite of all the many, many roles he played over his long and great career, this is the one that's stayed in my memory... Don Knotts as a fish. I don't know why, maybe because of the combination of live action and animation, which was done really well in this film.

Don was one of those "natural" comics like the Howard brothers, Larry Fine, Laurel & Hardy, and Buster Keaton. The minute they walk on camera, you just know you're in for some good laughs.


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Offline Giff me dat fill-em!

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Heck, he was even extra good when he played the lousy landlord on the last few seasons of "Three's Company" ...

he will be sorely missed by us all.
The tacks won't come out! Well, they went in ... maybe they're income tacks.


Offline BeAStooge

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Ironically, and sadly, Don Knott's costar in NO DEPOSIT NO RETURN (1976) also died on February 24...

RIP Darren McGavin.



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Offline Dunrobin

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Don Knotts was great as Barney Fife (who seems to have become the forerunner of today's government goons, unfortunately), but I loved a number of his movies, including:





and my personal favorite:



(Don Knotts as a Hugh Heffner type?  How could that help but be funny?)   ;D

We'll miss ya, Don - but as long as there are DVDs and videos we'll always remember you.


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We need a little Barney Fife here...

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Offline Waldo Twitchell

It's great to see all these posts to Mr. Knotts. I've always liked his TV character roles, but I should check out some of his movies as well. Some of the cable stations will probably run a bunch of them as a tribute.

And he sounded like a really cool guy to meet in person. I met Redd Foxx once when I was ten. He didn't seem all that much different from the 'Fred Sanford' character.
 





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I've just got to post this picture, even if there's something fishy about it (source, Reuters).


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Offline Dunrobin

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You seem to have a "thing" for that Limpet movie, Pils!   :tongue3:

Don was funny in everything he played, even if the movie or show itself on the lame side.  (I disliked Threes Company, for example, but Don was always amusing when I saw him on it.  Sometimes you can't control a roommate's poor taste in television.)   ;)

I love quite a few of his movies.  My favorites have to be The Ghost and Mr. Chicken, The Love God, and The Incredible Mr. Limpet.

  • In The Ghost and Mr. Chicken (a play on The Ghost and Mrs. Muir?), Don is a cowardly printer's assistant who dreams of being a big-time reporter.  He gets dared into staying over night in a reputed haunted mansion, on the anniversary of the murder/suicide that happened years ago.  Don is at his spastic, hysterical best in this one, and of course, he ends up solving the mystery and becomes the hero - in spite of himself.

  • The Love God has Don playing a squirrelly editor of a small bird watcher's magazine, which was founded by his grandfather, and is now going broke.  His publishing rights get taken over by a small-time smut peddlar, who plans on using the magaine as a cover for his "pornography" (pretty tame stuff these days).  Don gets sent off to the deepest jungles in South America to search for an extremely rare bird, to keep him out of the way (since Don is still the "Publisher" and the government has to try him for any pornography violations.)  When Don comes back and is put on trial, a bigtime gangstar gets involved, and Don is transformed into a Hugh Heffner type and presented to the world as the new "Love God," leading the sexual reolution.  This one is a must for Don Knotts fans!

  • The Incredible Mr. Limpet is a live action and animated mix, with Don as a squirrelly fish lover who falls off a pier and instead of drowning gets transformed into a fish (with glasses.)  Since this is during World War II, he is determined to help the U.S. Navy find and sink Nazi submarines, using a unique sonic blast that he can make that alerts the Navy ships to the sub's location.  Don isn't quite as spastic as he is in other roles, and his character is a lot more introspective than usual, but this is still a good, wholesome and entertaining film.  And somehow Don as a fish seems perfectly reasonable.  ;D


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I can't picture anyone else playing the part of Barney Fife. Much in the way I can't see anyone else in the role of Larry. After he left the show it was never the same.(Or as good ).......RIP  Don, and thanks for all the laughs.
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Offline Rendition

Hi
Found this interview with Don Knotts, taken July 22 1999 at his home in West Los Angeles. its part of the  "Archive of American Television" and is split into 7 parts and runs for over 2 hours.

http://video.google.com/videosearch?q=don+knotts
 
 


Offline Dunrobin

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Hi
Found this interview with Don Knotts, taken July 22 1999 at his home in West Los Angeles. its part of the  "Archive of American Television" and is split into 7 parts and runs for over 2 hours.

http://video.google.com/videosearch?q=don+knotts
 
 

Cool - thanks for the link!   8)


Offline jrvass

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TVLand is having a Don Knott's tribute this weekend. Andy Griffith Show  :police: and Three's Company episodes.

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Offline NoahYoung

You seem to have a "thing" for that Limpet movie, Pils!   :tongue3:

Don was funny in everything he played, even if the movie or show itself on the lame side.  (I disliked Threes Company, for example, but Don was always amusing when I saw him on it.  Sometimes you can't control a roommate's poor taste in television.)   ;)

I love quite a few of his movies.  My favorites have to be The Ghost and Mr. Chicken, The Love God, and The Incredible Mr. Limpet.

  • In The Ghost and Mr. Chicken (a play on The Ghost and Mrs. Muir?), Don is a cowardly printer's assistant who dreams of being a big-time reporter.  He gets dared into staying over night in a reputed haunted mansion, on the anniversary of the murder/suicide that happened years ago.  Don is at his spastic, hysterical best in this one, and of course, he ends up solving the mystery and becomes the hero - in spite of himself.

  • The Love God has Don playing a squirrelly editor of a small bird watcher's magazine, which was founded by his grandfather, and is now going broke.  His publishing rights get taken over by a small-time smut peddlar, who plans on using the magaine as a cover for his "pornography" (pretty tame stuff these days).  Don gets sent off to the deepest jungles in South America to search for an extremely rare bird, to keep him out of the way (since Don is still the "Publisher" and the government has to try him for any pornography violations.)  When Don comes back and is put on trial, a bigtime gangstar gets involved, and Don is transformed into a Hugh Heffner type and presented to the world as the new "Love God," leading the sexual reolution.  This one is a must for Don Knotts fans!

  • The Incredible Mr. Limpet is a live action and animated mix, with Don as a squirrelly fish lover who falls off a pier and instead of drowning gets transformed into a fish (with glasses.)  Since this is during World War II, he is determined to help the U.S. Navy find and sink Nazi submarines, using a unique sonic blast that he can make that alerts the Navy ships to the sub's location.  Don isn't quite as spastic as he is in other roles, and his character is a lot more introspective than usual, but this is still a good, wholesome and entertaining film.  And somehow Don as a fish seems perfectly reasonable.  ;D

BTW, this thread doesn't come up when using the search function with "don knotts", but a google search finds it. This is the kind of thing I was talking about in the pet peeves thread.

I don't think there are any threads reviewing Don Knotts films except this one. I have the DVD 4-movie collection (on one double-sided disc!) that has all of his Universal features except HOW TO FRAME A FIG.

I mentioned MR. LIMPET in my review of THE SWORD IN THE STONE, so I was looking around for opinions on other Knotts films.

The last time I watched the films on that DVD was probably close to 20 years ago. I remember being shocked and surprised by THE LOVE GOD? and really enjoyed it. I had vague memories of seeing it on TV years ago, where it was probably cut to bits. It's not what you'd expect from Don Knotts --- but it's highly recommended.

MR. LIMPET is as good as any film for kids, and although it's been awhile since I've seen it, I was disappointed after viewing it as an adult. YMMV. (BTW, it was made at Warner Brothers, not at Universal.)

I know I'm commenting on films I haven't seen in awhile, but I tend to remember if films were good or not even if I don't remember many details. None of Knotts films were ever ones I've seen many times, unlike Stooges or Laurel and Hardy shorts.

THE GHOST AND MR. CHICKEN seems to be very highly regarded by many, and it's a good film with the feel of a 1960s ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW episode, and it was supposedly based upon a "Haunted House" episode of that show.

THE RELUCTANT ASTRONAUT I remember loving as a kid the one time I saw it, but after watching it on that DVD I felt it was only memorable toward the end when Knotts got up into space. I'd have to watch it again to properly re-evaluate it.

THE SHAKIEST GUN IN THE WEST I recall being very funny, and didn't seem to be as aimed at kids at the previous 2 films I just mentioned. I have never seen Bob Hope's THE PALEFACE, which this film is supposed to be a remake of.

I caught HOW TO FRAME A FIG on Netflix within the last 10 years, and I felt it was the weakest of his Universal features.

After that last film, it was awhile before he appeared in another, until he had supporting roles in several Disney comedies. I might have seen one or two of those, but don't remember much about them. Same as a few later films in which he co-starred with Tim Conway in the 80s. (Conway was also with him in some of the Disney films.)

THREE'S COMPANY was a totally mindless 70s sitcom (that extended into the 80s), which I enjoyed as a pre-teen to early teen, but stopped watching it long before it ended. I did make it to the Don Knott's years. It apparently is still popular, since I encounter it while channel-surfing on cable. I never watch more than a few minutes -- and usually for the eye-candy. (Which was my main reason for watching it in my pre-teen to teen years!) That being said, it can be a guilty pleasure for comedy, too, but it will never be a show I revisit to watch every episode. Again, I'll see it when there's nothing else on during channel surfing. (The years have taught me my tastes have changed over the years, since I don't know how I overlooked Joyce DeWitt when I was younger! YOWZA!) At the end of the day, it was a one-joke show that managed to last 8 seasons. You can summarize every episode as "Jack and his roomates try to pull the wool over their landord's eyes", much like for GILLIGAN'S ISLAND, every episode was "The one where they try to get rescued, but Gilligan screws it up."

Knotts' role as Mr. Furley was basically one-joke, since he was always convinced he was a ladies man. (Apparently in real-life, he actually was a ladies man, if you can believe Wikipedia!) In that sense the role was "similar" to Barney Fife in THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW, since he was convinced that he was a top-tier deputy-sheriff! But there the similarity ends!

I do have to give credit to THREE'S COMPANY for never trying to take itself too seriously, and never trying to be much more than it was -- a mindless comedy for the Hoi Polloi. I doubt it was ever even considered for an Emmy, and I doubt that anyone connected with the show ever tried to earn one!

I remember in it's last season, we were watching an episode in the lounge of my college dorm, and one of the guys watching with us was a studious guy who seemed like he would never have wasted a minute with this show. I'm not sure who decided to set the channel to watch it, and the unwritten rule was you couldn't change the channel as long as at least one person wanted to keep it as-is. Anyway, that "studious" guy let out a huge howl of laughter at one point in the show. Until this day, I still remember the exact scene, and recently caught that scene on cable while channel surfing, about 40 years later!

You can't argue with success though -- not many sitcoms, or TV shows in other genres, last 8 seasons!

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