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Bert Lahr

Irving Lahrheim (August 13, 1895 – December 4, 1967), known professionally as Bert Lahr, was an American actor. He was best known for his role as the Cowardly Lion, as well as his counterpart Kansas farmworker "Zeke", in the MGM adaptation of The Wizard of Oz (1939). He was well known for his quick-witted humor and his work in burlesque and vaudeville and on Broadway.

Bert Lahr
Lahr pictured c. 1936
Born
Irving Lahrheim

(1895-08-13)August 13, 1895
New York City, U.S.
DiedDecember 4, 1967(1967-12-04) (aged 72)
New York City, U.S.
Resting placeUnion Field Cemetery, Ridgewood, New York
Occupations
Years active1910–1967
Spouse(s)
(m. 1929; div. 1939)

Mildred Schroeder
(m. 1940)
Children3, including John and Jane
Signature

Early life, family and education

Lahr was born as Irving Lahrheim on August 13, 1895, at First Avenue and 81st Street,[1] in the Yorkville section of Upper East Side of Manhattan, New York City.[2] He was the son of Augusta (1871–1932) and Jacob Lahrheim (1870–1947), an upholsterer.[3] His parents were German-Jewish immigrants.[citation needed]

He attended P.S. 77 and Morris High School,[1] although he left school at age 15.

Lahr later served in the U.S. Navy during World War I as a seaman second class.[1]

Stage career

Lahr began performing in minor parts on vaudeville stages at age 14.[2] He quit school at age 15 to join a juvenile vaudeville act. He eventually received top billing, working for the Columbia Amusement Company. In 1927, he debuted on Broadway in Harry Delmar's Revels on November 28, 1927.[1] He played to packed houses, performing classic routines such as "The Song of the Woodman" (which he reprised in the film Merry-Go-Round of 1938). Lahr's first major success in a stage musical was playing the prizefighter hero of Hold Everything![1] (1928–29). Other musicals followed, notably Flying High (1930), Florenz Ziegfeld's Hot-Cha! (1932) and The Show is On (1936) in which he co-starred with Beatrice Lillie. In 1939, he co-starred as Louis Blore alongside Ethel Merman in the Broadway production of DuBarry Was a Lady, receiving acclaim.[2]

Later performances included Hotel Paradiso on Broadway and A Midsummer Night's Dream with a touring company in the 1950s. In 1962, he performed on Broadway again, in S. J. Perelman's The Beauty Part[1]

Film career

 
Lahr as the Cowardly Lion in the MGM feature film The Wizard of Oz, 1939

Lahr made his feature film debut in 1931's Flying High, playing the oddball aviator he had played on stage. He signed with New York-based Educational Pictures for a series of two-reel comedies. When that series ended, he went to Hollywood to work in feature films. Aside from The Wizard of Oz (1939), his movie career was limited. In the 1944 patriotic film Meet the People, Lahr uttered the phrase "Heavens to Murgatroyd!" later popularized by cartoon character Snagglepuss.

Cowardly Lion in The Wizard of Oz

Lahr's most famous role was that of the Cowardly Lion in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's 1939 adaptation of The Wizard of Oz. Lahr was signed to play the role on July 25, 1938. Lahr's lion costume was composed of lion fur and, under the high-intensity lighting required for Oz's Technicolor scenes, the costume was unbearably hot. Lahr contributed ad-lib comedic lines for his character. Many of Lahr's scenes took several takes because other cast members, especially Garland, couldn't complete the scenes without laughing. The Cowardly Lion is the only character who sings two solo song numbers-"If I Only Had the Nerve", performed after the initial meeting with Dorothy, The Scarecrow, and The Tin Man in the forest, and "If I Were King of the Forest", performed while he and the others are awaiting their audience with the Wizard.

The Wizard of Oz was Lahr's 17th movie. When warned that Hollywood had a habit of typecasting actors, Lahr replied, "Yeah, but how many parts are there for lions?"

An original Cowardly Lion costume worn by Lahr in The Wizard of Oz is in the holdings of The Comisar Collection,[4] which is also the largest collection of television artifacts and memorabilia in the world.[5]

In June 2013, Lahr's original reading script for The Wizard of Oz, bequeathed to his great-grandson, was appraised with an insurance value of $150,000 on PBS's Antiques Roadshow in an episode filmed in Detroit, Michigan.[6][7]

Waiting for Godot

Lahr later made the transition to straight theater. He got a script of Waiting for Godot, and was greatly impressed but unsure of how the revolutionary play would be received in the United States. It was performed in Europe to great acclaim but was somewhat obscure and intellectual. He co-starred in the US premiere of Waiting for Godot in 1956 at the Coconut Grove Playhouse in Miami, Florida, playing Estragon[2] to Tom Ewell's Vladimir. The performance bombed, with audience members walking out in large numbers, and the critics did not treat it kindly. In his book Notes on a Cowardly Lion, Bert's son John Lahr states that the problems were caused partly by the choices of the director, including the decision to limit Bert's movement on stage; filling the stage with platforms; and a misguided description of the play as a light comedy, along with other difficulties.[8]

Lahr reprised his role in a short-lived Broadway run, co-starring with E. G. Marshall as Vladimir. This time, it was with a new director, Herbert Berghof, who had met with Samuel Beckett, the playwright, in Europe and discussed the play. The set was cleared, and Bert was allowed more freedom in his performance. Advertisements were taken out urging intellectuals to support the play, which was a success and received enthusiastic ovations from the audience. Bert was praised and though he claimed he did not understand the play, others would disagree and say he understood it a great deal.[8]

Television

Lahr occasionally appeared on television, including NBC's live version of the Cole Porter musical Let's Face It (1954), the 1964 Hallmark Hall of Fame production of The Fantasticks, and occasional appearances as the mystery guest on What's My Line? (for example, December 30, 1956).[9]

He performed in commercials, including a memorable series for Lay's potato chips during its long-running "Betcha can't eat just one" campaign with Lahr appearing in different costumes. He performed in classical works on television adaptations of Androcles and the Lion and the School for Wives (1956). He played Moonface Martin in a television version of Anything Goes, with Ethel Merman reprising her role as Reno Sweeney and Frank Sinatra as Billy Crocker. In 1959, he played Mr. O'Malley in an adaptation of Barnaby for the anthology series General Electric Theater. In 1963, he appeared as Go-Go Garrity in the episode "Is Mr. Martian Coming Back" on NBC's medical drama The Eleventh Hour.

He was sometimes mistaken for actor Allan Melvin by casual observers.[10]

Other work

 
Lahr as Skid in the Broadway revival of Burlesque, 1946

Among his numerous Broadway roles, Lahr starred as Skid in the Broadway revival of Burlesque from 1946 to 1948 and played several roles, including Queen Victoria, in the original Broadway musical Two on the Aisle from 1951 to 1952. In the late 1950s, he supplied the voice of a bloodhound in "Old Whiff," a short cartoon produced by Mike Todd which featured the olfactory Smell-O-Vision process developed for Todd's feature film Scent of Mystery (1960).

In 1964, he won the Tony Award for Best Leading Actor in a Musical for his role in the musical Foxy. At the American Shakespeare Festival he played Bottom in A Midsummer Night's Dream (1960), for which he received the Best Shakespearean Actor of the Year Award.

"Laughter is never too far away from tears," he reflected on his comedy. Lahr said: "You will cry at a pedlar much easier than you would cry at a woman dressed in ermine who had just lost her whole family."[2]

 
Lahr pictured c. 1948

Personal life

Lahr's first wife, Mercedes Delpino, developed mental health problems that left her hospitalized.[1] This complicated his relationship with his second wife, Mildred Schroeder, as he had legal problems with getting a divorce in New York. She grew tired of waiting, became involved with another man and married him. Lahr was heartbroken, but eventually won her back.[8] Lahr had three children: a son, Herbert (1929–2002), with Delpino, and a son John (born 1941) and daughter Jane (born 1943) with Schroeder.[1] John Lahr is a London-based drama critic who married the actress and comedian turned psychotherapist Connie Booth (Fawlty Towers) in 2000; she was previously married to British actor/comedian John Cleese.[citation needed] Jane Lahr is an author and literary editor who was married to drama critic Martin Gottfried.[citation needed]

Lahr was an avid golfer.[1] He was considered a serious personality offstage, prone to melancholy and, like his mother, hypochondria.[1] Lahr's son John has written, "While we were growing up, there was not one Oz image or memento of any kind in the apartment". He also describes his father as living in "habitual solitude" and plagued by "morbid worry", "moroseness" and "the thick fog of some ontological anxiety, which seemed to have settled permanently around [him] and was palpable, impenetrable".[11]

A staunch Democrat, he supported Adlai Stevenson's campaign in the 1952 presidential election.[12]

Death

Lahr died on December 4, 1967, at the age of 72. Around the time of his death, he was filming The Night They Raided Minsky's[1] The official cause of death was listed as pneumonia. Lahr had been hospitalized on November 21 for what was reported as a back ailment. However, his son John Lahr explained that although two weeks earlier, Bert "had returned home at 2 a.m., chilled and feverish, from the damp studio where The Night They Raided Minsky's was being filmed," and although "newspapers reported the cause of death as pneumonia...he succumbed to cancer, a disease he feared but never knew he had." (Bert Lahr's father had also died of cancer.)[8] Official cause of death was reported as being massive intestinal hemorrhage.[1]

At the time, most of Lahr's scenes had already been shot. All in the Family creator/producer Norman Lear told The New York Times that "through judicious editing, we will be able to shoot the rest of the film so that his wonderful performance will remain intact." The producers used test footage of Lahr, plus an uncredited voice double and a body double, burlesque actor Joey Faye, to complete Lahr's role.[8]

Lahr was buried at the Union Field Cemetery in Ridgewood, Queens, New York.

Filmography

Stage productions

 
Lahr as Louis Blore in the Broadway production of DuBarry Was a Lady, 1939

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Whitman, Alden (December 5, 1967). "Bert Lahr, Comic Actor, Dies; Played Burlesque and Beckett; Bert Lahr, Comic Actor, Is Dead at 72 Child of Immigrants 'Boy Wonder' of Burlesque Broadway Debut". The New York Times.
  2. ^ a b c d e Appel, Jacob (2002). "Lahr, Bert (1895-1967)". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved April 18, 2022.
  3. ^ Garraty, John Arthur; Carnes, Mark Christopher, eds. (1999). American National Biography. Vol. 13. Oxford University Press. p. 56. ISBN 9780195206357. Retrieved September 18, 2012 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ "LOT 128: Bert Lahr's Cowardly Lion Costume from The Wizard of Oz". Bonhams.com. 2014. Retrieved April 18, 2022.
  5. ^ Comisar, James. . Interviewed by Ann Curry. Archived from the original on November 7, 2011.{{cite AV media}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  6. ^ "Bert Lahr's 'Wizard of Oz' Script". Antiques Roadshow. PBS. 2013. Retrieved October 7, 2017 – via PBS.org..
  7. ^ "Bert Lahr's 'Wizard of Oz' Script - Owner Interview - Detroit". Antiques Roadshow PBS. February 18, 2014. Retrieved October 7, 2017 – via YouTube.com.
  8. ^ a b c d e Lahr, John (2013). Notes on a Cowardly Lion. Open Road Media. ISBN 9781453288740.
  9. ^ "What's My Line? - The Harlem Globetrotters; Bert Lahr; Stubby Kaye [panel] (Dec 30, 1956)". Archived from the original on December 12, 2021 – via YouTube.
  10. ^ "What episode of the Andy griffth show was Bert lahr in?". Answers.com. 2014. Retrieved April 18, 2022.
  11. ^ Lahr, John (November 16, 1998). "The Lion and Me". The New Yorker – via newyorker.com.
  12. ^ "Bert Lahr". Motion Picture and Television Magazine. Ideal Publishers. November 1952. p. 33.

External links

bert, lahr, irving, lahrheim, august, 1895, december, 1967, known, professionally, american, actor, best, known, role, cowardly, lion, well, counterpart, kansas, farmworker, zeke, adaptation, wizard, 1939, well, known, quick, witted, humor, work, burlesque, va. Irving Lahrheim August 13 1895 December 4 1967 known professionally as Bert Lahr was an American actor He was best known for his role as the Cowardly Lion as well as his counterpart Kansas farmworker Zeke in the MGM adaptation of The Wizard of Oz 1939 He was well known for his quick witted humor and his work in burlesque and vaudeville and on Broadway Bert LahrLahr pictured c 1936BornIrving Lahrheim 1895 08 13 August 13 1895New York City U S DiedDecember 4 1967 1967 12 04 aged 72 New York City U S Resting placeUnion Field Cemetery Ridgewood New YorkOccupationsActorcomedianvaudevillianYears active1910 1967Spouse s Mercedes Delpino m 1929 div 1939 wbr Mildred Schroeder m 1940 wbr Children3 including John and JaneSignature Contents 1 Early life family and education 2 Stage career 3 Film career 3 1 Cowardly Lion in The Wizard of Oz 3 2 Waiting for Godot 4 Television 5 Other work 6 Personal life 7 Death 8 Filmography 9 Stage productions 10 References 11 External linksEarly life family and education EditLahr was born as Irving Lahrheim on August 13 1895 at First Avenue and 81st Street 1 in the Yorkville section of Upper East Side of Manhattan New York City 2 He was the son of Augusta 1871 1932 and Jacob Lahrheim 1870 1947 an upholsterer 3 His parents were German Jewish immigrants citation needed He attended P S 77 and Morris High School 1 although he left school at age 15 Lahr later served in the U S Navy during World War I as a seaman second class 1 Stage career EditLahr began performing in minor parts on vaudeville stages at age 14 2 He quit school at age 15 to join a juvenile vaudeville act He eventually received top billing working for the Columbia Amusement Company In 1927 he debuted on Broadway in Harry Delmar s Revels on November 28 1927 1 He played to packed houses performing classic routines such as The Song of the Woodman which he reprised in the film Merry Go Round of 1938 Lahr s first major success in a stage musical was playing the prizefighter hero of Hold Everything 1 1928 29 Other musicals followed notably Flying High 1930 Florenz Ziegfeld s Hot Cha 1932 and The Show is On 1936 in which he co starred with Beatrice Lillie In 1939 he co starred as Louis Blore alongside Ethel Merman in the Broadway production of DuBarry Was a Lady receiving acclaim 2 Later performances included Hotel Paradiso on Broadway and A Midsummer Night s Dream with a touring company in the 1950s In 1962 he performed on Broadway again in S J Perelman s The Beauty Part 1 Film career Edit Lahr as the Cowardly Lion in the MGM feature film The Wizard of Oz 1939 Lahr made his feature film debut in 1931 s Flying High playing the oddball aviator he had played on stage He signed with New York based Educational Pictures for a series of two reel comedies When that series ended he went to Hollywood to work in feature films Aside from The Wizard of Oz 1939 his movie career was limited In the 1944 patriotic film Meet the People Lahr uttered the phrase Heavens to Murgatroyd later popularized by cartoon character Snagglepuss Cowardly Lion in The Wizard of Oz Edit Lahr s most famous role was that of the Cowardly Lion in Metro Goldwyn Mayer s 1939 adaptation of The Wizard of Oz Lahr was signed to play the role on July 25 1938 Lahr s lion costume was composed of lion fur and under the high intensity lighting required for Oz s Technicolor scenes the costume was unbearably hot Lahr contributed ad lib comedic lines for his character Many of Lahr s scenes took several takes because other cast members especially Garland couldn t complete the scenes without laughing The Cowardly Lion is the only character who sings two solo song numbers If I Only Had the Nerve performed after the initial meeting with Dorothy The Scarecrow and The Tin Man in the forest and If I Were King of the Forest performed while he and the others are awaiting their audience with the Wizard The Wizard of Oz was Lahr s 17th movie When warned that Hollywood had a habit of typecasting actors Lahr replied Yeah but how many parts are there for lions An original Cowardly Lion costume worn by Lahr in The Wizard of Oz is in the holdings of The Comisar Collection 4 which is also the largest collection of television artifacts and memorabilia in the world 5 In June 2013 Lahr s original reading script for The Wizard of Oz bequeathed to his great grandson was appraised with an insurance value of 150 000 on PBS s Antiques Roadshow in an episode filmed in Detroit Michigan 6 7 Waiting for Godot Edit Lahr later made the transition to straight theater He got a script of Waiting for Godot and was greatly impressed but unsure of how the revolutionary play would be received in the United States It was performed in Europe to great acclaim but was somewhat obscure and intellectual He co starred in the US premiere of Waiting for Godot in 1956 at the Coconut Grove Playhouse in Miami Florida playing Estragon 2 to Tom Ewell s Vladimir The performance bombed with audience members walking out in large numbers and the critics did not treat it kindly In his book Notes on a Cowardly Lion Bert s son John Lahr states that the problems were caused partly by the choices of the director including the decision to limit Bert s movement on stage filling the stage with platforms and a misguided description of the play as a light comedy along with other difficulties 8 Lahr reprised his role in a short lived Broadway run co starring with E G Marshall as Vladimir This time it was with a new director Herbert Berghof who had met with Samuel Beckett the playwright in Europe and discussed the play The set was cleared and Bert was allowed more freedom in his performance Advertisements were taken out urging intellectuals to support the play which was a success and received enthusiastic ovations from the audience Bert was praised and though he claimed he did not understand the play others would disagree and say he understood it a great deal 8 Television EditLahr occasionally appeared on television including NBC s live version of the Cole Porter musical Let s Face It 1954 the 1964 Hallmark Hall of Fame production of The Fantasticks and occasional appearances as the mystery guest on What s My Line for example December 30 1956 9 He performed in commercials including a memorable series for Lay s potato chips during its long running Betcha can t eat just one campaign with Lahr appearing in different costumes He performed in classical works on television adaptations of Androcles and the Lion and the School for Wives 1956 He played Moonface Martin in a television version of Anything Goes with Ethel Merman reprising her role as Reno Sweeney and Frank Sinatra as Billy Crocker In 1959 he played Mr O Malley in an adaptation of Barnaby for the anthology series General Electric Theater In 1963 he appeared as Go Go Garrity in the episode Is Mr Martian Coming Back on NBC s medical drama The Eleventh Hour He was sometimes mistaken for actor Allan Melvin by casual observers 10 Other work Edit Lahr as Skid in the Broadway revival of Burlesque 1946 Among his numerous Broadway roles Lahr starred as Skid in the Broadway revival of Burlesque from 1946 to 1948 and played several roles including Queen Victoria in the original Broadway musical Two on the Aisle from 1951 to 1952 In the late 1950s he supplied the voice of a bloodhound in Old Whiff a short cartoon produced by Mike Todd which featured the olfactory Smell O Vision process developed for Todd s feature film Scent of Mystery 1960 In 1964 he won the Tony Award for Best Leading Actor in a Musical for his role in the musical Foxy At the American Shakespeare Festival he played Bottom in A Midsummer Night s Dream 1960 for which he received the Best Shakespearean Actor of the Year Award Laughter is never too far away from tears he reflected on his comedy Lahr said You will cry at a pedlar much easier than you would cry at a woman dressed in ermine who had just lost her whole family 2 Lahr pictured c 1948Personal life EditLahr s first wife Mercedes Delpino developed mental health problems that left her hospitalized 1 This complicated his relationship with his second wife Mildred Schroeder as he had legal problems with getting a divorce in New York She grew tired of waiting became involved with another man and married him Lahr was heartbroken but eventually won her back 8 Lahr had three children a son Herbert 1929 2002 with Delpino and a son John born 1941 and daughter Jane born 1943 with Schroeder 1 John Lahr is a London based drama critic who married the actress and comedian turned psychotherapist Connie Booth Fawlty Towers in 2000 she was previously married to British actor comedian John Cleese citation needed Jane Lahr is an author and literary editor who was married to drama critic Martin Gottfried citation needed Lahr was an avid golfer 1 He was considered a serious personality offstage prone to melancholy and like his mother hypochondria 1 Lahr s son John has written While we were growing up there was not one Oz image or memento of any kind in the apartment He also describes his father as living in habitual solitude and plagued by morbid worry moroseness and the thick fog of some ontological anxiety which seemed to have settled permanently around him and was palpable impenetrable 11 A staunch Democrat he supported Adlai Stevenson s campaign in the 1952 presidential election 12 Death EditLahr died on December 4 1967 at the age of 72 Around the time of his death he was filming The Night They Raided Minsky s 1 The official cause of death was listed as pneumonia Lahr had been hospitalized on November 21 for what was reported as a back ailment However his son John Lahr explained that although two weeks earlier Bert had returned home at 2 a m chilled and feverish from the damp studio where The Night They Raided Minsky s was being filmed and although newspapers reported the cause of death as pneumonia he succumbed to cancer a disease he feared but never knew he had Bert Lahr s father had also died of cancer 8 Official cause of death was reported as being massive intestinal hemorrhage 1 At the time most of Lahr s scenes had already been shot All in the Family creator producer Norman Lear told The New York Times that through judicious editing we will be able to shoot the rest of the film so that his wonderful performance will remain intact The producers used test footage of Lahr plus an uncredited voice double and a body double burlesque actor Joey Faye to complete Lahr s role 8 Lahr was buried at the Union Field Cemetery in Ridgewood Queens New York Filmography EditFaint Heart 1929 Short Rudolf Flying High 1931 Rusty Mr Broadway 1933 Himself Hizzoner 1933 Short Bert Lahr Cop Henry the Ache 1934 Short King Henry VIII No More West 1934 Short Gunpowder Bert Gold Bricks 1936 Short Bert Boy Oh Boy 1936 Short The Butler Whose Baby Are You 1936 Short Bert Halibut Off the Horses 1937 Short Chester Twitt Montague the Magnificent 1937 Short Egbert Bunting Roland Montague Merry Go Round of 1938 1937 Bert Lahr Love and Hisses 1937 Sugar Boles Josette 1938 Barney Barnaby Just Around the Corner 1938 Gus Zaza 1939 Cascart The Wizard of Oz 1939 Zeke The Cowardly Lion Sing Your Worries Away 1942 Clarence Chow Brewster Ship Ahoy 1942 Skip Owens Meet the People 1944 The Commander Always Leave Them Laughing 1949 Eddie Eagen Mister Universe 1951 Joe Pulaski Rose Marie 1954 Barney McCorkle Anything Goes 1954 Moonface Martin The Second Greatest Sex 1955 Job McClure The Night They Raided Minsky s 1968 Professor Spats final film role Stage productions Edit Lahr as Louis Blore in the Broadway production of DuBarry Was a Lady 1939 Harry Delmar s Revels 1927 Hold Everything 1928 Flying High 1930 George White s Music Hall Varieties 1932 Life Begins at 8 40 1934 George White s Scandals of 1936 1936 The Show is On 1936 DuBarry Was a Lady 1939 Seven Lively Arts 1944 Burlesque 1946 Two on the Aisle 1951 Waiting for Godot 1956 Hotel Paradiso 1957 The Girls Against the Boys 1959 The Beauty Part 1962 Foxy 1964 Never Too Late 1965 The Birds 1966 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l Whitman Alden December 5 1967 Bert Lahr Comic Actor Dies Played Burlesque and Beckett Bert Lahr Comic Actor Is Dead at 72 Child of Immigrants Boy Wonder of Burlesque Broadway Debut The New York Times a b c d e Appel Jacob 2002 Lahr Bert 1895 1967 Encyclopedia com Retrieved April 18 2022 Garraty John Arthur Carnes Mark Christopher eds 1999 American National Biography Vol 13 Oxford University Press p 56 ISBN 9780195206357 Retrieved September 18 2012 via Google Books LOT 128 Bert Lahr s Cowardly Lion Costume from The Wizard of Oz Bonhams com 2014 Retrieved April 18 2022 Comisar James The Today Show Interviewed by Ann Curry Archived from the original on November 7 2011 a href Template Cite AV media html title Template Cite AV media cite AV media a CS1 maint unfit URL link Bert Lahr s Wizard of Oz Script Antiques Roadshow PBS 2013 Retrieved October 7 2017 via PBS org Bert Lahr s Wizard of Oz Script Owner Interview Detroit Antiques Roadshow PBS February 18 2014 Retrieved October 7 2017 via YouTube com a b c d e Lahr John 2013 Notes on a Cowardly Lion Open Road Media ISBN 9781453288740 What s My Line The Harlem Globetrotters Bert Lahr Stubby Kaye panel Dec 30 1956 Archived from the original on December 12 2021 via YouTube What episode of the Andy griffth show was Bert lahr in Answers com 2014 Retrieved April 18 2022 Lahr John November 16 1998 The Lion and Me The New Yorker via newyorker com Bert Lahr Motion Picture and Television Magazine Ideal Publishers November 1952 p 33 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bert Lahr Biography portalBert Lahr at the Internet Broadway Database Bert Lahr at IMDb Bert Lahr at the TCM Movie Database Bert Lahr at Find a Grave Bert Lahr at Virtual History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bert Lahr amp oldid 1125604796, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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