Red Buttons

Feisty, diminutive, red-haired comedian who regularly played very serious dramatic roles in features. A veteran of New York burlesque and the Catskills comedy circuit, Buttons appeared as a pilot in training in the moral-boosting stage drama "Winged Victory", and recreated the role soon thereafter in the 1944 film version. He played on Broadway after WWII and enjoyed tremendous popularity during the first season of TV's "The Red Buttons Show" (1952-55). Part variety show, part sitcom, the program gave full vent to Buttons' manic, fast-talking, knockabout style. One of Buttons' oft-repeated gestures, placing his hands together in a desperate, somewhat prayerful manner, was on regular display in the show, and children everywhere mimicked the "Ho Ho! He He! Ha Ha! Strange things are happening!" theme song. His gallery of characters, meanwhile, including the Sad Sack; the Kupke Kid, a child; Rocky, a boxer; and the bumbling Keeglefarven, played up the at-once argumentative and long-suffering aspects of his persona.

When the show's popularity abruptly faded, Buttons' career stalled, but like Frank Sinatra, another compact, multi-talented performer who was called a has-been, Buttons also revived his career with a very dramatic performance which copped him a supporting actor Oscar. As a soldier whose interracial romance with a Japanese woman leads to bigotry-induced tragedy in "Sayonara" (1957), Buttons began a very successful career as a character actor in features. While not eschewing comedy (the rowdy adventure "Hatari!" 1962, the underrated "Movie Movie" 1978, "18 Again" 1988), some of Buttons' best work has been in drama. His smart, supportive agent was the best thing about the trashy if watchable Hollywood biopic, "Harlow" (1965) and he was very moving as a desperate dance marathoner in the striking "They Shoot Horses, Don't They?" (1969). Buttons also did well as one of the endangered passengers in the surprisingly good disaster epic, "The Poseidon Adventure" (1972).

Some of Buttons' most visible work in more recent years, though, has been on TV. The deliberately abrasive edge Buttons brings to his manic characters was prominent in the cranky messenger who plagued the cast of "Knot's Landing" for the 1987 season. He was also often show-stoppingly hilarious stomping onto the dais of Dean Martin's celebrity roasts (1972-77; and occasional 80s specials) to harangue the honoree with wild cries of "Some of the most famous people in history never got a dinner!"

  • Also Credited As:
    Aaron Chwatt, Red Button
  • Born:
    February 5, 1919 in Bronx, New York, USA
  • Died:
    July 13, 2006.
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Comedian, Singer, Bellhop
Family
  • Daughter: Amy Buttons. married Sean Morgress in summer 1999
  • Father: Michael Chwatt.
  • Mother: Sophie Chwatt.
Education
  • Evander Childs High School, Bronx, New York
Milestones
  • 1931 Won an amateur night entertainment contest at age 12 (date approximate)
  • 1935 Worked as a combination bellhop and singer at a tavern in the Bronx at age 16; supposedly acquired the nickname Red Buttons because of his uniform
  • 1942 Made Broadway acting debut in a supporting role in Vickie
  • 1944 Made feature film debut in Winged Victory
  • 1952 Starred in the CBS sketch comedy and variety show, The Red Buttons Show
  • 1966 Starred in the title role of the ABC sitcom, The Double Life of Henry Phyfe ; also performed title theme along with series co-star Fred Clark
  • 1985 Played the White Rabbit on the CBS musical miniseries, Alice in Wonderland
  • 1987 Played recurring role of Al Baker on the CBS primetime soap, Knot s Landing
  • 1988 Returned to feature films after an eight-year absence in 18 Again!
  • 1994 Appeared in the feature It Could Happen to You
  • 1999 Made cameo appearance in the Rob Reiner-directed comedy-drama The Story of Us
  • 2002 Had regular role on the Showtime series Street Time
  • 2005 Emmy nominated guest-starring role on the drama series ER (NBC)
  • Acted on Broadway after WWII in Barefoot Boy with Cheek
  • Performed in the Catskills at resorts along the famous Borscht Belt ; also played in burlesque at Minsky s, among other places
  • Served during WWII; acted onstage in Winged Victory
  • The Red Buttons Show moved to NBC; format revamped into more of a sitcom style
  • Was a regular on the NBC comic tribute series, Dean Martin s Celebrity Roast

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