fbpx
Wikipedia

Jackie Gleason

John Herbert Gleason (February 26, 1916 – June 24, 1987) was an American actor, comedian, writer, composer, and conductor known affectionately as "The Great One."[1][2][3] Developing a style and characters from growing up in Brooklyn, New York, he was known for his brash visual and verbal comedy, exemplified by his city-bus-driver character Ralph Kramden in the television series The Honeymooners. He also developed The Jackie Gleason Show, which maintained high ratings from the mid 1950s through 1970. After originating in New York City, filming moved to Miami Beach, Florida, in 1964 after Gleason took up permanent residence there.

Jackie Gleason
An early publicity photo of Jackie Gleason
Born
Herbert Walton Gleason, Jr.

(1916-02-26)February 26, 1916
DiedJune 24, 1987(1987-06-24) (aged 71)
Burial placeOur Lady of Mercy Catholic Cemetery
Doral, Florida
Occupations
  • Actor
  • comedian
  • musician
  • writer
  • composer
  • conductor
Years active1937–1986
Political partyRepublican
Spouses
  • Genevieve Halford
    (m. 1936; div. 1970)
  • Beverly McKittrick
    (m. 1970; div. 1975)
  • Marilyn Taylor
    (m. 1975)
Children2; including Linda Miller
RelativesJason Patric (grandson)

Among his notable film roles were Minnesota Fats in 1961's The Hustler (co-starring with Paul Newman) and Buford T. Justice in the Smokey and the Bandit series from 1977 to 1983 (co-starring Burt Reynolds).

Gleason enjoyed a prominent secondary music career during the 1950s and 1960s, producing a series of best-selling "mood music" albums. His first album, Music for Lovers Only, still holds the record for the longest stay on the Billboard Top Ten Charts (153 weeks), and his first 10 albums sold over a million copies each.[4] His output spans some 20-plus singles, nearly 60 long-playing record albums, and over 40 CDs.

Early life

Gleason was born on February 26, 1916, at 364 Chauncey Street in the Stuyvesant Heights (now Bedford-Stuyvesant) section of Brooklyn.[5] Named Herbert Walton Gleason Jr. at birth, he was baptized John Herbert Gleason[6] and grew up at 328 Chauncey Street, Apartment 1A (an address he later used for Ralph and Alice Kramden on The Honeymooners).[7] His parents were Herbert Walton "Herb" Gleason (1883–1939), born in New York City, and Mae Agnes "Maisie" (née Kelly; 1886–1935). Most sources indicate his mother was originally from Farranree, County Cork, Ireland.[8][9][10][11] Gleason was the younger of two children; his elder brother, Clement, died of meningitis at age 14 in 1919.[8]

Gleason remembered Clement and his father having "beautiful handwriting". He used to watch his father work at the family's kitchen table, writing insurance policies in the evenings. On the night of December 14, 1925, Gleason's father disposed of any family photos in which he appeared; just after noon on December 15, he collected his hat, coat, and paycheck, and permanently left his family and job at the insurance company. Once it became evident that he was not coming back, Mae went to work as a subway attendant for the Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation (BMT).[12]

After his father abandoned the family, young Gleason began hanging around with a local gang, hustling pool.[12] He attended P.S. 73 Elementary School in Brooklyn, John Adams High School in Queens, and Bushwick High School in Brooklyn. Gleason became interested in performing after being part of a class play; he quit school before graduating and got a job that paid $4 per night (equivalent to $84 in 2021) as master of ceremonies at a theater. Other jobs he held at that time included pool hall worker, stunt driver, and carnival barker.[12][13] Gleason and his friends made the rounds of the local theaters; he put an act together with one of his friends, and the pair performed on amateur night at the Halsey Theater, where Gleason replaced his friend Sammy Birch as master of ceremonies. He performed the same duties twice a week at the Folly Theater.[12]

Gleason was 19 when his mother died in 1935 of sepsis from a large neck carbuncle that young Jackie had tried to lance.[6] He had nowhere to go, and thirty-six cents to his name. The family of his first girlfriend, Julie Dennehy, offered to take him in; Gleason, however, was headstrong and insisted that he was going into the heart of the city.[12] His friend Birch made room for him in the hotel room he shared with another comedian. Birch also told him of a week-long gig in Reading, Pennsylvania, which would pay $19—more money than Gleason could imagine (equivalent to $376 in 2021). The booking agent advanced his bus fare for the trip against his salary, granting Gleason his first job as a professional comedian. Following this, he would always have regular work in small clubs.[14]

Career

Gleason worked his way up to a job at New York's Club 18, where insulting its patrons was the order of the day. Gleason greeted noted skater Sonja Henie by handing her an ice cube and saying, "Okay, now do something."[15] It was here that Jack L. Warner first saw Gleason, signing him to a film contract for $250 a week.[12]

By age 24, Gleason was appearing in films: first for Warner Brothers (as Jackie C. Gleason) in such films as Navy Blues (1941) with Ann Sheridan and Martha Raye and All Through the Night (1941) with Humphrey Bogart; then for Columbia Pictures for the B military comedy Tramp, Tramp, Tramp; and finally for Twentieth Century-Fox, where Gleason played Glenn Miller Orchestra bassist Ben Beck in Orchestra Wives (1942). He also had a small part as a soda shop clerk in Larceny, Inc. (1942), with Edward G. Robinson and a modest part as an actor's agent in the 1942 Betty GrableHarry James musical Springtime in the Rockies.

During World War II, Gleason was initially exempt from military service, since he was a father of two. However, in 1943 the US started drafting men with children. When Gleason reported to his induction, doctors discovered that his broken left arm had healed crooked (the area between his thumb and forefinger was nerveless and numb), that a pilonidal cyst existed at the end of his coccyx, and that he was 100 pounds overweight. Gleason was therefore classified 4-F and rejected for military service.[16]

Gleason did not make a strong impression on Hollywood at first; at the time, he developed a nightclub act that included comedy and music. At the end of 1942, Gleason and Lew Parker led a large cast of entertainers in the road show production of Olsen and Johnson's New 1943 Hellzapoppin.[17][18][19] He also became known for hosting all-night parties in his hotel suite; the hotel soundproofed his suite out of consideration for its other guests.[15] "Anyone who knew Jackie Gleason in the 1940s", wrote CBS historian Robert Metz, "would tell you The Fat Man would never make it. His pals at Lindy's watched him spend money as fast as he soaked up the booze."[citation needed] Rodney Dangerfield wrote that he witnessed Gleason purchasing marijuana in the 1940s.[20]

Gleason's first significant recognition as an entertainer came on Broadway when he appeared in the hit musical Follow the Girls (1944). While working in films in California, Gleason also worked at former boxer Maxie Rosenbloom's nightclub (Slapsy Maxie's, on Wilshire Boulevard).[12][21][22]

Early television

 
Gleason and Rosemary DeCamp as Chester and Peg Riley in The Life of Riley
 
Gleason and June Taylor dancer Margaret Jeanne get ready for St. Patrick's Day 1955

Gleason's big break occurred in 1949, when he landed the role of blunt but softhearted aircraft worker Chester A. Riley for the first television version of the radio comedy The Life of Riley. (William Bendix had originated the role on radio but was initially unable to accept the television role because of film commitments.) Despite positive reviews, the show received modest ratings and was cancelled after one year. Bendix reprised the role in 1953 for a five-year series.[23] The Life of Riley became a television hit for Bendix during the mid-to-late 1950s.[15] But long before this, Gleason's nightclub act had received attention from New York City's inner circle and the fledgling DuMont Television Network. He was working at Slapsy Maxie's when he was hired[12] to host DuMont's Cavalcade of Stars variety hour in 1950, having been recommended by comedy writer Harry Crane, whom he knew from his days as a stand-up comedian in New York.[24] The program initially had rotating hosts; Gleason was first offered two weeks at $750 per week. When he responded it was not worth the train trip to New York, the offer was extended to four weeks. Gleason returned to New York for the show.[12] He framed the acts with splashy dance numbers, developed sketch characters he would refine over the next decade, and became enough of a presence that CBS wooed him to its network in 1952.

Renamed The Jackie Gleason Show, the program became the country's second-highest-rated television show during the 1954–55 season.[25] Gleason amplified the show with even splashier opening dance numbers inspired by Busby Berkeley's screen dance routines and featuring the precision-choreographed June Taylor Dancers. Following the dance performance, he would do an opening monologue. Then, accompanied by "a little travelin' music" ("That's a Plenty", a Dixieland classic from 1914), he would shuffle toward the wings, clapping his hands and shouting, "And awaaay we go!" The phrase became one of his trademarks, along with "How sweet it is!" (which he used in reaction to almost anything).[25] Theona Bryant, a former Powers Girl, became Gleason's "And awaaay we go" girl. Ray Bloch was Gleason's first music director, followed by Sammy Spear, who stayed with Gleason through the 1960s; Gleason often kidded both men during his opening monologues. He continued developing comic characters, including:

  • Reginald Van Gleason III, a top-hatted millionaire with a taste for both the good life and fantasy;
  • Rudy the Repairman, boisterous and boorish;
  • Joe the Bartender, gregarious and with friendly words for the never-seen Mr. Dennehy (always first at the bar);
  • The Poor Soul, a silent character who could (and often did) come to grief in the least-expected places (or demonstrated gratitude at such gifts as being allowed to share a newspaper on a subway);
  • Rum Dum, a character with a brush-like mustache who often stumbled around as though drunk and confused;
  • Fenwick Babbitt, a friendly, addle-headed young man usually depicted working at various jobs and invariably failing;
  • Charlie Bratton, a loudmouth who frequently picked on the mild-mannered Clem Finch (portrayed by Art Carney, a future Honeymooners co-star);
  • Stanley R. Sogg, a pitchman who usually appeared on commercials during late night movies and sold items that came with extras or bonuses (the ultimate inducement was a 10-pound wedge of Facciamara's Macciaroni cheese); and
  • The Bachelor, a silent character (accompanied by the song "Somebody Loves Me") doing everyday things in an unusually lazy (or makeshift) way.
 
Gleason as the Poor Soul on Toast of the Town in 1954

In a 1985 interview, Gleason related some of his characters to his youth in Brooklyn. The Mr. Dennehy whom Joe the Bartender greets is a tribute to Gleason's first love, Julie Dennehy. The character of The Poor Soul was drawn from an assistant manager of an outdoor theater he frequented.[12]

Gleason disliked rehearsing. With a photographic memory[26] he read the script once, watched a rehearsal with his co-stars and stand-in, and shot the show later that day. When he made mistakes, he often blamed the cue cards.[27]

The Honeymooners

 
Gleason as Ralph Kramden with Audrey Meadows as Alice, circa 1955

Gleason's most popular character by far was blustery bus driver Ralph Kramden. Largely drawn from Gleason's harsh Brooklyn childhood, these sketches became known as The Honeymooners. The show was based on Ralph's many get-rich-quick schemes; his ambition; his antics with his best friend and neighbor, scatterbrained sewer worker Ed Norton; and clashes with his sensible wife, Alice, who typically pulled Ralph's head down from the clouds.

Gleason developed catchphrases he used on The Honeymooners, such as threats to Alice: "One of these days, Alice, pow! right in the kisser" and "Bang! Zoom! To the moon Alice, to the moon!"

The Honeymooners originated from a sketch Gleason was developing with his show's writers. He said he had an idea he wanted to enlarge: a skit with a smart, quiet wife and her very vocal husband. He went on to describe that, while the couple had their fights, underneath it all they loved each other. Titles for the sketch were tossed around until someone came up with The Honeymooners.[12]

The Honeymooners first was featured on Cavalcade of Stars on October 5, 1951, with Carney in a guest appearance as a cop (Norton did not appear until a few episodes later) and character actress Pert Kelton as Alice. Darker and fiercer than the milder later version with Audrey Meadows as Alice, the sketches proved popular with critics and viewers. As Kramden, Gleason played a frustrated bus driver with a battleaxe of a wife in harrowingly realistic arguments; when Meadows (who was 15 years younger than Kelton) took over the role after Kelton was blacklisted, the tone softened considerably.

When Gleason moved to CBS, Kelton was left behind; her name had been published in Red Channels, a book that listed and described reputed communists (and communist sympathizers) in television and radio, and the network did not want to hire her. Gleason reluctantly let her leave the cast, with a cover story for the media that she had "heart trouble". At first, he turned down Meadows as Kelton's replacement. Meadows wrote in her memoir that she slipped back to audition again and frumped herself up to convince Gleason that she could handle the role of a frustrated (but loving) working-class wife. Rounding out the cast, Joyce Randolph played Trixie, Ed Norton's wife. Elaine Stritch had played the role as a tall and attractive blonde in the first sketch but was quickly replaced by Randolph. Comedy writer Leonard Stern always felt The Honeymooners was more than sketch material and persuaded Gleason to make it into a full-hour-long episode.

In 1955, Gleason gambled on making it a separate series entirely. These are the "Classic 39" episodes, which finished 19th in the ratings for their only season.[25] They were filmed with a new DuMont process, Electronicam. Like kinescopes, it preserved a live performance on film; unlike kinescopes (which were screenshots), the film was of higher quality and comparable to a motion picture.[28] That turned out to be Gleason's most prescient move. A decade later, he aired the half-hour Honeymooners in syndicated reruns that began to build a loyal and growing audience, making the show a television icon. Its popularity was such that in 2000 a life-sized statue of Jackie Gleason, in uniform as bus driver Ralph Kramden, was installed outside the Port Authority Bus Terminal in New York City.

Gleason went back to the live format for 1956–57 with short and long versions, including hour-long musicals. These musical presentations were reprised ten years later, in color, with Sheila MacRae and Jane Keane as Alice and Trixie.

Audrey Meadows reappeared for one black-and-white remake of the '50s sketch "The Adoption", telecast January 8, 1966. Ten years later she rejoined Gleason and Carney (with Jane Kean replacing Joyce Randolph) for several TV specials (one special from 1973 was shelved).

The Jackie Gleason Show ended in June 1957. In 1959, Jackie discussed the possibility of bringing back The Honeymooners in new episodes. His dream was partially realized with a Kramden-Norton sketch on a CBS variety show in late 1960 and two more sketches on his new hour-long CBS show The American Scene Magazine in 1962.

Music

 
Prominent Irish writer Brendan Behan with Jackie Gleason in Gleason's dressing room after a performance of Take Me Along (1960)

Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, Gleason enjoyed a prominent secondary music career producing a series of best-selling "mood music" albums with jazz overtones for Capitol Records. Gleason believed there was a ready market for romantic instrumentals. His goal was to make "musical wallpaper that should never be intrusive, but conducive".[29] He recalled seeing Clark Gable play love scenes in movies; the romance was, in his words, "magnified a thousand percent" by background music. Gleason reasoned, "If Gable needs music, a guy in Brooklyn must be desperate!"[12]

Gleason's first album, Music for Lovers Only, still holds the record for the longest stay on the Billboard Top Ten Charts (153 weeks), and his first 10 albums sold over a million copies each.[4] At one point, Gleason held the record for charting the most number-one albums on the Billboard 200 without charting any hits on the Top 40 of the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart.[30]

Gleason could not read or write music; he was said to have conceived melodies in his head and described them vocally to assistants who transcribed them into musical notes.[12] These included the well-remembered themes of both The Jackie Gleason Show ("Melancholy Serenade") and The Honeymooners ("You're My Greatest Love").[13] In spite of period accounts establishing his direct involvement in musical production, varying opinions have appeared over the years as to how much credit Gleason should have received for the finished products. Biographer William A. Henry wrote in his 1992 book, The Great One: The Life and Legend of Jackie Gleason, that beyond the possible conceptualizing of many of the song melodies, Gleason had no direct involvement (such as conducting) in making the recordings. Red Nichols, a jazz great who had fallen on hard times and led one of the group's recordings, was not paid as session-leader. Cornetist and trumpeter Bobby Hackett soloed on several of Gleason's albums and was leader for seven of them. Asked late in life by musician–journalist Harry Currie in Toronto what Gleason really did at the recording sessions, Hackett replied, "He brought the checks".

But years earlier Hackett had glowingly told writer James Bacon:

Jackie knows a lot more about music than people give him credit for. I have seen him conduct a 60-piece orchestra and detect one discordant note in the brass section. He would immediately stop the music and locate the wrong note. It always amazed the professional musicians how a guy who technically did not know one note from another could do that. And he was never wrong.[31]

The composer and arranger George Williams has been cited in various biographies as having served as ghostwriter for the majority of arrangements heard on many of Gleason's albums of the 1950s and 1960s.[3][32] Williams was not given credit for his work until the early 1960s, albeit only in small print on the backs of album covers.[3][32]

Nearly all of Gleason's albums have been reissued on compact disc.

Gleason's lead role in the musical Take Me Along (1959–60) won him a Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical.

Return to television

 
Edward R. Murrow and Gleason when the comedian was the subject of an interview on Person to Person in 1956

In 1956 Gleason revived his original variety hour (including The Honeymooners), winning a Peabody Award.[33] He abandoned the show in 1957 when his ratings for the season came in at No. 29[25] and the network "suggested" he needed a break.[34] He returned in 1958 with a half-hour show featuring Buddy Hackett, which did not catch on.

In addition to his salary and royalties, CBS paid for Gleason's Peekskill, New York, mansion "Round Rock Hill".[35] Set on six acres, the architecturally noteworthy complex included a round main home, guest house, and storage building. It took Gleason two years to design the house, which was completed in 1959.[36] Gleason sold the home when he relocated to Miami.[37][38]

In October 1960, Gleason and Carney briefly returned, for a Honeymooners sketch, on a TV special. His next foray into television was the game show You're in the Picture, which was cancelled after a disastrously received premiere episode but was followed the next week by a broadcast of Gleason's[39] humorous half-hour apology, which was much better appreciated.[13] For the rest of its scheduled run, the game show was replaced by a talk show named The Jackie Gleason Show.

In 1962, Gleason resurrected his variety show with more splashiness and a new hook: a fictitious general-interest magazine called The American Scene Magazine, through which Gleason trotted out his old characters in new scenarios, including two new Honeymooners sketches. He also added another catchphrase to the American vernacular, first uttered in the 1963 film Papa's Delicate Condition: "How sweet it is!" The Jackie Gleason Show: The American Scene Magazine was a hit that continued for four seasons. Each show began with Gleason delivering a monologue and commenting on the attention-getting outfits of band leader Sammy Spear. Then the "magazine" features would be trotted out, from Hollywood gossip (reported by comedian Barbara Heller) to news flashes (played for laughs with a stock company of second bananas, chorus girls and dwarfs). Comedian Alice Ghostley occasionally appeared as a downtrodden tenement resident sitting on her front step and listening to boorish boyfriend Gleason for several minutes. After the boyfriend took his leave, the smitten Ghostley would exclaim, "I'm the luckiest girl in the world!" Veteran comics Johnny Morgan, Sid Fields, and Hank Ladd were occasionally seen opposite Gleason in comedy sketches. Helen Curtis played alongside him as a singer and actress, delighting audiences with her 'Madame Plumpadore' sketches with 'Reginald Van Gleason.'

The final sketch was always set in Joe the Bartender's saloon with Joe singing "My Gal Sal" and greeting his regular customer, the unseen Mr. Dunahy (the TV audience, as Gleason spoke to the camera in this section). During the sketch, Joe would tell Dennehy about an article he had read in the fictitious American Scene magazine, holding a copy across the bar. It had two covers: one featured the New York skyline and the other palm trees (after the show moved to Florida). Joe would bring out Frank Fontaine as Crazy Guggenheim, who would regale Joe with the latest adventures of his neighborhood pals and sometimes show Joe his current Top Cat comic book. Joe usually asked Crazy to sing—almost always a sentimental ballad in his fine, lilting baritone.

 
The Fillmore Miami Beach (originally the Miami Beach Municipal Auditorium), where Gleason taped his shows after his move to Florida

Gleason revived The Honeymooners—first with Sue Ane Langdon as Alice and Patricia Wilson as Trixie for two episodes of The American Scene Magazine, then with Sheila MacRae as Alice and Jane Kean as Trixie for the 1966 series.[13] By 1964 Gleason had moved the production from New York to Miami Beach, Florida, reportedly because he liked year-round access to the golf course at the nearby Inverrary Country Club in Lauderhill (where he built his final home). His closing line became, almost invariably, "As always, the Miami Beach audience is the greatest audience in the world!" In 1966, he abandoned the American Scene Magazine format and converted the show into a standard variety hour with guest performers.

 
Gleason and Lucille Ball in a TV special "Tea for Two" (1975)

Gleason kicked off the 1966–1967 season with new, color episodes of The Honeymooners. Carney returned as Ed Norton, with MacRae as Alice and Kean as Trixie. The sketches were remakes of the 1957 world-tour episodes, in which Kramden and Norton win a slogan contest and take their wives to international destinations. Each of the nine episodes was a full-scale musical comedy, with Gleason and company performing original songs by Lyn Duddy and Jerry Bresler. Occasionally Gleason would devote the show to musicals with a single theme, such as college comedy or political satire, with the stars abandoning their Honeymooners roles for different character roles. This was the show's format until its cancellation in 1970. (The exception was the 1968–1969 season, which had no hour-long Honeymooners episodes; that season, The Honeymooners was presented only in short sketches.) The musicals pushed Gleason back into the top five in ratings, but audiences soon began to decline. By its final season, Gleason's show was no longer in the top 25. In the last original Honeymooners episode aired on CBS ("Operation Protest" on February 28, 1970), Ralph encounters the youth-protest movement of the late 1960s, a sign of changing times in both television and society.

Gleason (who had signed a deal in the 1950s that included a guaranteed $100,000 annual payment for 20 years, even if he never went on the air) wanted The Honeymooners to be just a portion of his format, but CBS wanted another season of only The Honeymooners. The network had cancelled a mainstay variety show hosted by Red Skelton and would cancel The Ed Sullivan Show in 1971 because they had become too expensive to produce and attracted, in the executives' opinion, too old an audience. Gleason simply stopped doing the show in 1970 and left CBS when his contract expired.

Honeymooners revival

Gleason did two Jackie Gleason Show specials for CBS after giving up his regular show in the 1970s, including Honeymooners segments and a Reginald Van Gleason III sketch in which the gregarious millionaire was portrayed as a comic drunk. When the CBS deal expired, Gleason signed with NBC. He later did a series of Honeymooners specials for ABC. Gleason hosted four ABC specials during the mid-1970s. Gleason and Carney also made a television movie, Izzy and Moe (1985), about an unusual pair of historic Federal prohibition agents in New York City who achieved an unbeatable arrest record with highly successful techniques including impersonations and humor, which aired on CBS in 1985.

In April 1974, Gleason revived several of his classic characters (including Ralph Kramden, Joe the Bartender and Reginald Van Gleason III) in a television special with Julie Andrews. In a song-and-dance routine, the two performed "Take Me Along" from Gleason's Broadway musical.

In 1985, three decades after the "Classic 39" began filming, Gleason revealed he had carefully preserved kinescopes of his live 1950s programs in a vault for future use (including Honeymooners sketches with Pert Kelton as Alice). These "lost episodes" (as they came to be called) were initially previewed at the Museum of Television and Radio in New York City, aired on the Showtime cable network in 1985, and later were added to the Honeymooners syndication package. Some of them include earlier versions of plot lines later used in the 'classic 39' episodes. One (a Christmas episode duplicated several years later with Meadows as Alice) had all Gleason's best-known characters (Ralph Kramden, the Poor Soul, Rudy the Repairman, Reginald Van Gleason, Fenwick Babbitt and Joe the Bartender) featured in and outside of the Kramden apartment. The storyline involved a wild Christmas party hosted by Reginald Van Gleason up the block from the Kramdens' building at Joe the Bartender's place.

Film

Gleason did not restrict his acting to comedic roles. He had also earned acclaim for live television drama performances in "The Laugh Maker" (1953) on CBS's Studio One and William Saroyan's "The Time of Your Life" (1958), which was produced as an episode of the anthology series Playhouse 90.

He was nominated for a Best Supporting Actor Academy Award for his portrayal of pool shark Minnesota Fats in The Hustler (1961), starring Paul Newman. Gleason made all his own trick pool shots.[40] In his 1985 appearance on The Tonight Show, Gleason told Johnny Carson that he had played pool frequently since childhood, and drew from those experiences in The Hustler. He was extremely well-received as a beleaguered boxing manager in the film version of Rod Serling's Requiem for a Heavyweight (1962). Gleason played a world-weary army sergeant in Soldier in the Rain (1963), in which he received top billing over Steve McQueen.

 
Gleason as Minnesota Fats in The Hustler (1961)

Gleason wrote, produced and starred in Gigot (1962), in which he played a poor, mute janitor who befriended and rescued a prostitute and her small daughter. It was a box office flop. But the film's script was adapted and produced as the television film The Wool Cap (2004), starring William H. Macy in the role of the mute janitor; the television film received modestly good reviews.

Gleason played the lead in the Otto Preminger-directed Skidoo (1968), considered an all-star failure. In 1969 William Friedkin wanted to cast Gleason as "Popeye" Doyle in The French Connection (1971), but because of the poor reception of Gigot and Skidoo, the studio refused to offer Gleason the lead; he wanted it. Instead, Gleason wound up in How to Commit Marriage (1969) with Bob Hope, as well as the movie version of Woody Allen's play Don't Drink the Water (1969). Both were unsuccessful.

Eight years passed before Gleason had another hit film. This role was the cantankerous and cursing Texas sheriff Buford T. Justice in the films Smokey and the Bandit (1977), Smokey and the Bandit II (1980) and Smokey and the Bandit Part 3 (1983). He co-starred with Burt Reynolds as the Bandit, Sally Field as Carrie (the Bandit's love interest), and Jerry Reed as Cledus "Snowman" Snow, the Bandit's truck-driving partner. Former NFL linebacker Mike Henry played his dimwitted son, Junior Justice. Gleason's gruff and frustrated demeanor and lines such as "I'm gonna barbecue yo' ass in molasses!" made the first Bandit movie a hit.

Years later, when interviewed by Larry King, Reynolds said he agreed to do the film only if the studio hired Jackie Gleason to play the part of Sheriff Buford T. Justice (the name of a real Florida highway patrolman, who knew Reynolds' father). Reynolds said that director Hal Needham gave Gleason free rein to ad-lib a great deal of his dialog and make suggestions for the film; the scene at the "Choke and Puke" was Gleason's idea. Reynolds and Needham knew Gleason's comic talent would help make the film a success, and Gleason's characterization of Sheriff Justice strengthened the film's appeal to blue-collar audiences.

During the 1980s, Gleason earned positive reviews playing opposite Laurence Olivier in the HBO dramatic two-man special, Mr. Halpern and Mr. Johnson (1983). He also gave a memorable performance as wealthy businessman U.S. Bates in the comedy The Toy (1982) opposite Richard Pryor. Although the film was critically panned, Gleason and Pryor's performances were praised. His last film performance was opposite Tom Hanks in the Garry Marshall-directed Nothing in Common (1986), a success both critically and financially.

Personal life

 
Gleason playing golf with President Gerald Ford, c. 1975

Fear of flying

For many years, Gleason would travel only by train; his fear of flying arose from an incident in his early film career. Gleason would fly back and forth to Los Angeles for relatively minor film work. After finishing one film, the comedian boarded a plane for New York. When two of the plane's engines cut out in the middle of the flight, the pilot had to make an emergency landing in Tulsa, Oklahoma.[41]

Although another plane was prepared for the passengers, Gleason had enough of flying. He went into downtown Tulsa, walked into a hardware store, and asked its owner to lend him $200 for the train trip to New York. The owner asked Gleason why he thought anyone would lend a stranger so much money. Gleason identified himself and explained his situation. The store owner said he would lend the money if the local theater had a photo of Gleason in his latest film. However, the publicity shots showed only the principal stars. Gleason proposed to buy two tickets to the film and take the store owner; he would be able to see the actor in action. The two men watched the film for an hour before Gleason appeared on screen. The owner gave Gleason the loan, and he took the next train to New York. There, he borrowed $200 to repay his benefactor.[41]

Interest in the paranormal

 
President Richard Nixon and Jackie Gleason in a golf cart with an audience in February 1973.

Gleason was greatly interested in the paranormal, reading many books on the topic, as well as books on parapsychology and UFOs.[42][3][32][43] During the 1950s, he was a semi-regular guest on a paranormal-themed overnight radio show hosted by John Nebel, and he also wrote the introduction to Donald Bain's biography of Nebel.[44] After his death, his large book collection was donated to the library of the University of Miami.[45] A complete listing of the holdings of Gleason's library has been issued by the online cataloging service LibraryThing.[46]

According to writer Larry Holcombe, Gleason's known interest in UFOs allegedly prompted President Richard Nixon to share some information with him and to disclose some UFO data publicly.[47]

Marriages and family

 
June Taylor Dancers with Gleason on one of his television specials.

Gleason met dancer Genevieve Halford when they were working in vaudeville, and they started to date. Halford wanted to marry, but Gleason was not ready to settle down. She said she would see other men if they did not marry. One evening when Gleason went onstage at the Club Miami in Newark, New Jersey, he saw Halford in the front row with a date. At the end of his show, Gleason went to the table and proposed to Halford in front of her date. They were married on September 20, 1936.[14][48][49]

Halford wanted a quiet home life but Gleason fell back into spending his nights out.[14] Separated for the first time in 1941 and reconciled in 1948,[15] the couple had two daughters, Geraldine (b. 1940) and Linda (b. 1942).[50][51] Gleason and his wife informally separated again in 1951.[49] It was during this period that Gleason had a romantic relationship with his secretary Honey Merrill, who was Miss Hollywood of 1956 and a showgirl at The Tropicana. Their relationship ended years later after Merrill met and eventually married Dick Roman.[52]

In early 1954, Gleason suffered a broken leg and ankle on-air during his television show. His injuries sidelined him for several weeks.[53][54] Halford visited Gleason while he was hospitalized, finding dancer Marilyn Taylor from his television show there. Halford filed for a legal separation in April 1954.[51] A devout Catholic, Halford did not grant Gleason a divorce until 1970.[55][56]

Gleason met his second wife, Beverly McKittrick, at a country club in 1968, where she worked as a secretary. Ten days after his divorce from Halford was final, Gleason and McKittrick were married in a registry ceremony in Ashford, England on July 4, 1970.[57]

In 1974, Marilyn Taylor encountered Gleason again when she moved to the Miami area to be near her sister June, whose dancers had starred on Gleason's shows for many years. She had been out of show business for nearly 20 years. In September 1974, Gleason filed for divorce from McKittrick (who contested, asking for a reconciliation).[58] The divorce was granted on November 19, 1975.[59] As a widow with a young son, Marilyn Taylor married Gleason on December 16, 1975; the marriage lasted until his death in 1987.[60][42][61][62]

Gleason's daughter Linda became an actress and married actor-playwright Jason Miller. Their son, Gleason's grandson, is actor Jason Patric.[48]

Later years, health issues and death

As early as 1952, when The Jackie Gleason Show captured Saturday night for CBS, Gleason regularly smoked six packs of cigarettes a day, but he never smoked on The Honeymooners.[63]

 
Gleason's sarcophagus—with the inscription "And Away We Go"—at Our Lady of Mercy Catholic Cemetery in Miami

In 1978, he suffered chest pains while touring in the lead role of Larry Gelbart's play Sly Fox; this forced him to leave the show in Chicago and go to the hospital. He was treated and released, but after suffering another bout the following week, he returned and underwent triple-bypass surgery.[64][65][66]

Gleason delivered a critically acclaimed performance as an infirm, acerbic, and somewhat Archie Bunker-like character in the Tom Hanks comedy-drama Nothing in Common (1986). This was Gleason's final film role. During production, it was determined that he was suffering from terminal colon cancer, which had metastasized to his liver. Gleason was also suffering from phlebitis and diabetes. "I won't be around much longer", he told his daughter at dinner one evening after a day of filming. Gleason kept his medical problems private, although there were rumors that he was seriously ill.[67] A year later, on June 24, 1987, Gleason died at age 71 in his Florida home.[68][69]

After a funeral Mass at the Cathedral of Saint Mary, Gleason was entombed in a sarcophagus in a private outdoor mausoleum at Our Lady of Mercy Catholic Cemetery in Miami.[61] Gleason's sister-in-law, June Taylor of the June Taylor Dancers, is buried to the left of the mausoleum, next to her husband.

Legacy and honors

 
Ralph Kramden statue at the Port Authority Bus Terminal in Manhattan
 
Sign welcoming drivers to Brooklyn (circa 2000s)
 
The television home of The Honeymooners at 328 Chauncey Street in Brooklyn
  • Miami Beach in 1987 renamed the Miami Beach Auditorium as the Jackie Gleason Theater of the Performing Arts. As of May 2010, the theater was scheduled to be razed as part of a convention-center remodeling project and replaced by a hotel.[70][71] The demolition did not take place and The Fillmore Miami Beach is still in operation as of October 2017.
  • Gleason was inducted into the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Television Hall of Fame in 1986. In 2000 a statue of him as Ralph Kramden in "And away we go!" pose was installed at the Miami Beach Bus Terminal.
  • Gleason was nominated three times for an Emmy Award, but never won. (Carney and Keane did, however.)
  • In 1976 at the Sixth Annual American Guild of Variety Artists (AGVA) "Entertainer of the Year Awards", Paul Lynde received an award for being voted the funniest man of the year.[72] Lynde immediately turned his award over to host Jackie Gleason, citing him as "the funniest man ever." The unexpected gesture shocked Gleason.[73]
  • On June 30, 1988, the Sunset Park MTA, NYCT's 5th Avenue Bus Depot in Brooklyn was renamed the Jackie Gleason Depot in honor of the native Brooklynite.[74]
  • A statue of Gleason as Ralph Kramden in his bus driver's uniform was dedicated in August 2000 in New York City in Manhattan at the 40th Street entrance of the Port Authority Bus Terminal (PABT). The statue was briefly shown in the film World Trade Center (2006).
  • A city park in Lauderhill, Florida, was named the "Jackie Gleason Park" in his honor; it is located near his former home and features racquetball and basketball courts and a children's playground.
  • Signs on the Brooklyn Bridge which advise drivers that they are entering Brooklyn have the Gleason phrase "How Sweet It Is!"
  • Late in his life actor-playwright Jason Miller, Gleason's former son-in-law, was writing a screenplay based on Gleason's life. He died before it was completed.[48]
  • Gleason was portrayed by Brad Garrett in a 2002 television biopic about his life.[75][76]

Works

Television

1949–1959

  • Your Sports Special (1949) as Himself
  • The Lamb's Gambol (March 27, 1949) as Himself
  • On The Two A Day (1949, NBC TV) as Himself
  • The Life of Riley (October 4, 1949 – March 28, 1950, TV Series) as Chester A. Riley
  • The Arrow Show (1949) as Himself
  • Tex and Jinx (1949) as Himself
  • This Is Show Business (1950) as Himself
  • Showtime USA (1950) as Himself
  • Cavalcade of Stars (1950–1952, TV Series) as Himself - Host / Ralph Kramden / Reginald Van Gleason III
  • The Frank Sinatra Show (1950) as Himself
  • Ford Star Revue (1951) as Himself
  • The Frank Sinatra Show (1951) as Himself
  • Cavalcade of Bands (1951) as Himself
  • Stage Entrance (1951, DuMont TV) as Himself
  • Musical Comedy Time: No! No! Nanette! (1951) as Himself
  • Texaco Star Theatre (1951) as Himself
  • Ford Festival (1951) as Himself
  • The James Melton Show (May 3, 1951) as Himself
  • This Is Show Business (1951) as Himself
  • The Colgate Comedy Hour (1951) as Himself
  • Ford Star Revue (1951) as Himself
  • The Colgate Comedy Hour (1951) as Himself
  • The Kate Smith Evening Hour (1951) as Himself
  • The Jackie Gleason Show (September 20, 1952 – June 18, 1955, TV Series) as Host / Ralph Kramden / Reginald Van Gleason III
  • Arthur Murray Party (1952) as Himself
  • The Sam Levinson Show (1952) as Himself
  • The Ken Murray Show (1952) as Himself
  • Toast of the Town (1952) as Himself
  • Celebrity Time (1952) as Himself
  • Scout O' Rama (1952) as Himself
  • Jane Froman's USA Canteen (1952) as Himself
  • Arthur Godfrey and His Friends (1953) as Himself
  • Studio One: The Laugh Maker (May 18, 1953, TV Movie) as Himself
  • What's My Line? (1953) as Himself
  • This Is Show Business (1953) as Himself - Guest / Himself
  • Arthur Murray Party (1953) as Himself
  • Toast of the Town (1954) as Himself
  • The Red Skelton Show (January 5, 1954) as Himself
  • Name That Tune (1954) as Himself
  • Studio One: Short Cut (December 6, 1954, TV Movie) as Himself
  • The Best of Broadway: The Show Off (February 2, 1955, TV Movie) as Himself
  • What's My Line? (1955) as Himself
  • I've Got a Secret (1955) as Himself
  • The Jack Benny Program (May 1, 1955) as Himself
  • Stage Show (1955) as Himself
  • The Honeymooners (October 1, 1955 – September 22, 1956, TV Series) as Ralph Kramden
  • The Red Skelton Show (October 4, 1955)
  • Studio One: Uncle Ed and Circumstances (October 10, 1955, TV Movie)
  • The $64,000 Question (1956) as Himself
  • Person to Person (February 3, 1956) as Himself
  • The Herb Shriner Show (October 2, 1956) as Himself
  • The Jackie Gleason Show (September 29, 1956 – June 22, 1957, TV Series) as Himself
  • Playhouse 90: The Time of Your Life (October 9, 1958, TV Movie) as Joe
  • This Is Your Life (1958) as Himself
  • Arthur Godfrey Show (1958) as Himself
  • The Jackie Gleason Show (October 1958 – January 1959, TV Series) as Himself
  • All Star Jazz IV: The Golden Age of Jazz (January 4, 1959) as Himself

1960–1986

  • The Fabulous Fifties (1960) as Narrator
  • Arthur Godfrey Special (1960) as Himself
  • The Secret World of Eddie Hodges (June 23, 1960) (TV Movie, [narration only]) as Narrator / Himself
  • The Jackie Gleason Special: The Big Sell Review (October 9, 1960) as Salesman / Reginald Van Gleason III / Joe the Bartender / Ralph Kramden
  • Step On the Gas (CBS-10/19/60) TV special
  • The Red Skelton Show (January 24, 1961) as Himself
  • Sunday Sports Spectacular: Jackie Gleason with the putter and cue (1961) as Himself
  • You're In the Picture/The Jackie Gleason Show (January 27 – March 24, 1961) as Himself
  • The Jackie Gleason Special: The Million Dollar Incident (April 21, 1961) as Himself
  • Jackie Gleason and His American Scene Magazine (September 29, 1962 – June 4, 1966, TV Series) as Himself
  • The 35th Annual Academy Awards (1963) as Himself
  • Freedom Spectacular (May 14, 1964, NAACP Special) as Himself
  • Inquiry (June 13, 1965, June 20, 1965, NBC) as Himself
  • The Bob Hope Chrysler Theatre: The Big Stomach (November 16, 1966) as the Vast Waistline
  • The Jackie Gleason Show (September 17, 1966 – September 12, 1970, TV Series) as Himself - Host
  • Here's Lucy: Lucy Visits Jack Benny (September 30, 1968) as Ralph Kramden
  • The Mike Douglas Show (October 15, 1968) as Himself
  • The David Frost Show (February 17, 1970) as Himself
  • The David Frost Show (April 6, 1970) as Himself
  • The David Frost Show (May 7, 1970) as Himself
  • The Jackie Gleason Special (December 20, 1970) as Ralph Kramden / Reginald Van Gleason III / the Poor Soul
  • The Mike Douglas Show (November 13–17, 20-24 and 29, 1972) as Himself
  • The Jackie Gleason Special (November 11, 1973) as Ralph Kramden / Reginald Van Gleason III / the Poor Soul
  • Show Business Tribute to Milton Berle (1973)
  • Julie & Jackie: How Sweet It Is! (1974)
  • Bob Hope Special (1974) as Himself
  • The Dean Martin Celebrity Roast (1975) as Himself
  • The Dick Cavett Show (August 30, 1975) as Himself
  • Dinah! (January 13, 1975) as Himself
  • Lucille Ball and Jackie Gleason: Two for Three (December 3, 1975) as Himself
  • Super Night at the Super Bowl (1976) as Himself
  • The Mike Douglas Show (January 12–16, 1976) as Himself
  • The Honeymooners Second Honeymoon (February 2, 1976) as Ralph Kramden
  • Donahue (1976) as Himself
  • The Captain and Tennille (September 20, 1976) as Himself
  • Bing Crosby's White Christmas (1976) as Himself
  • Dinah! (February 11, 1977) as Himself
  • The Honeymooners Christmas Special (November 28, 1977) as Ralph Kramden
  • The Honeymooners Valentine Special (February 13, 1978) as Ralph Kramden
  • The Second Honeymooners Christmas Special (December 10, 1978) as Ralph Kramden
  • The Mike Douglas Show (May 7, 1980) as Himself
  • Mr. Halpern and Mr. Johnson (June 3, 1983, TV Movie) as Ernest Johnson
  • All Star Party for Burt Reynolds (1984) as Himself
  • 60 Minutes (1984) as Himself
  • Izzy and Moe (September 23, 1985, TV Movie) as Himself
  • The Honeymooners Reunion (May 13, 1985) as Ralph Kramden
  • The 39th Annual Tony Awards (June 2, 1985) as Himself
  • The Honeymooners Anniversary Celebration (October 18, 1985) as Ralph Kramden
  • The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (October 18, 1985) as Himself
  • Gleason: In His Own Words (February 14, 1986) as Himself

Stage

Film

Music

Singles discography

Year Titles (A-side, B-side) Label and Number Album (or EP-Extended Play)
1951 "What Is a Girl?"
b/w "What Is a Boy?"
Both sides with narratives by Gleason
Decca 27684 Non-album tracks
1952 "Melancholy Serenade"
b/w "You're Getting to Be a Habit"
Capitol F2361 Melancholy Serenade (EP)
1953 "Alone Together"
b/w "Body & Soul"
Capitol F2437 Music For Lovers Only
1953 "My Funny Valentine"
b/w "Love Is Here to Stay"
Capitol F2438
1953 "But Not for Me"
b/w "Love"
Capitol F2439
1953 "I'm in the Mood for Love"
b/w "I Only Have Eyes For You"
Capitol F2440
1953 "Terry's Theme from Limelight"
b/w "Peg O' My Heart" (from Melancholy Serenade (EP))
Capitol F2507 Non-album track
1953 "White House Serenade"
b/w "The President's Lady" (Non-album track)
Capitol F2515 Melancholy Serenade (EP)
1953 "Mystery Street"
b/w "Golden Violins"
Capitol F2659 Non-album tracks
1955 "I'll Never Be The Same"
b/w "Rain"
Capitol F3092
1955 "The Band Played On"
b/w "In the Good Old Summertime"
Capitol F3144
1955 "Autumn Leaves"
b/w "Oo! What You Do to Me"
Capitol F3223 Autumn Leaves (EP)
1956 "Capri in May"
b/w "You're My Greatest Love" (from Music To Change Her Mind)
Capitol F3337 Non-album track
1957 "To A Sleeping Beauty"
b/w "Apology at Bedtime"
Capitol EAP871 The Best of Jackie Gleason
1958 "Where Is She Now?"
b/w "Just Only Yesterday"
Capitol F4062 Non-album tracks
1962 "Melancholy Serenade"
b/w "Apology at Bedtime"
Capitol 4704 The Best of Jackie Gleason
1962 "Allo 'Allo 'Allo"
b/w "Joi De Vivre"
Capitol 4800 Jackie Gleason Presents His Original Music For "Gigot"
1963 "La La La La"
b/w "It's Such A Happy Day" (from Silk 'n' Brass)
Capitol 4933 The Best of Jackie Gleason
1964 "Bird Brain"
b/w "Soldier in the Rain"
Capitol 5131 Non-album tracks
1965 "I Had But .50"
b/w "Casey at the Bat"
Shown as by "Reginald Van Gleason, III"
Capitol 5420
1966 "One of Those Songs"
b/w "Love Theme From 'Madame X'" (from Music Around The World For Lovers Only)
Capitol 5584 Silk 'n' Brass

Album discography

# Year Title Label and Number U.S. Billboard Best Selling Popular Albums
1 1952 Music for Lovers Only Capitol H352 (10") # 1 (153 total weeks within the Billboard Top Ten)[77]
2 1953 Lover's Rhapsody Capitol H366 (10") No. 1
3 1953 Music to Make You Misty Capitol H455 (10") No. 1
4 1954 Tawny Capitol L471 (10") No. 8
5 1954 And Awaaay We Go! Capitol H511 (10") No. 1
6 1954 Music, Martinis and Memories Capitol W509 No. 1
7 1954 Melancholy Serenade Capitol E532 (EP) -
8 1955 Lonesome Echo Capitol H627 (10") No. 1
9 1955 Music for Lovers Only Capitol W352 No. 7
10 1955 Music to Make You Misty Capitol W455 No. 11
11 1955 And Awaaay We Go! Capitol W511 No. 85
12 1955 Jackie Gleason Plays Romantic Jazz Capitol W568 No. 2
13 1955 Music to Remember Her Capitol W570 No. 5
14 1955 Lonesome Echo Capitol W627 No. 1
15 1956 Captain Gleason's Garden Band Capitol E646 (EP) -
16 1956 Music to Change Her Mind Capitol W632 No. 8
17 1956 Night Winds Capitol W717 No. 10
18 1956 Merry Christmas Capitol W758 No. 16
19 1957 Music for the Love Hours Capitol W816 No. 13
20 1957 Velvet Brass Capitol SW/W859 No. 16
21 1957 "Oooo!" Capitol SW/W905 No. 14
22 1958 The Torch with the Blue Flame Capitol SW/W961 # 2
23 1958 Riff Jazz Capitol SW/W1020 No. 27
24 1959 Rebound Capitol SW/W1075 No. 18
25 1959 That Moment Capitol SW/W1147 No. 36
26 1959 Take Me Along (original cast) RCA Victor LSO1050 -
27 1960 Aphrodisia Capitol SW/W1250 No. 49
28 1960 The Actor's Prayer (spoken by Gleason) The Marsalin Institute -
29 1960 Opiate D'Amour Capitol SW/W1314 No. 53
30 1961 Lazy Lively Love Capitol SW/W1439 No. 57
31 1961 The Gentle Touch Capitol SW/W1519 No. 62
32 1962 A Lover's Portfolio (two records in a "briefcase") Capitol SWBO/SBO1619 No. 135
33 1962 Love Embers and Flame Capitol SW/W1689 No. 103
34 1963 Gigot (soundtrack) Capitol SW/W1754 -
35 1963 Champagne, Candlelight and Kisses Capitol SW/W1830 No. 97
36 1963 Movie Themes – For Lovers Only Capitol SW/W1877 No. 82
37 1963 Today's Romantic Hits – For Lovers Only Capitol SW/W1978 No. 115
38 1964 Lover's Portfolio Vol. 1 (Music for Sippin' – Music for Dancin') Capitol SW/W1979 No. 128
39 1964 Lover's Portfolio Vol. 2 (Music for Listenin' – Music for Lovin') Capitol SW/W1980 No. 137
40 1964 Today's Romantic Hits – For Lovers Only Vol. 2 Capitol SW/W2056 No. 82
41 1965 Last Dance – For Lover's Only Capitol SW/W2144 No. 131
42 1965 Silk 'n' Brass Capitol SW/W2409 No. 141
43 1966 Music from Around the World – For Lovers Only Capitol SW/W2471 No. 102
44 1966 How Sweet It Is for Lovers Capitol SW/W2582 No. 71
45 1967 A Taste of Brass – For Lovers Only Capitol SW/W2684 No. 200
46 1967 'Tis the Season Capitol ST/T2791 No. 37
47 1967 The Best of Jackie Gleason Capitol SW/W2796 -
48 1967 The Best of Jackie Gleason Capitol Record Club SWAO-90601 -
49 1968 Doublin' in Brass Capitol SW/W2880 No. 165
50 1969 The Best of Jackie Gleason, vol. 2 Capitol SKAO-146 -
51 1969 The Now Sound Capitol SW/W2935 No. 200
52 1969 Irving Berlin's Music – For Lovers Only Capitol SW106 -
53 1969 Close Up Capitol SW255 No. 192
54 1969 All I Want for Christmas Capitol ST346 No. 13
55 1970 Softly Capitol SL6664 -
56 1970 Romeo and Juliet – A Theme for Lovers Capitol ST398 -
57 1971 Come Saturday Morning Capitol ST480 -
58 1972 Words of Love Capitol ST693 -

Compact disc discography

Year Title Label
1984 Lush Moods Pair
1987 Music, Martinis and Memories Capitol
1987 Intimate Music for Lovers CEMA Special Markets
1990 Merry Christmas Capitol
1991 Night Winds / Music to Make You Misty Capitol
1993 The Best of Jackie Gleason Curb
1994 Shangri-La Pair
1995 Merry Christmas Razor & Tie
1995 Body & Soul Pair
1995 22 Melancholy Serenades CEMA Special Markets
1996 And Awaaay We Go Scamp
1996 How Sweet It Is! The Velvet Brass Collection Razor & Tie
1996 Romantic Moods of Jackie Gleason (Two Disc Set) EMI Capitol
1996 Thinking of You CEMA Special Markets
1996 'Tis the Season Capitol
1996 The Best of Jackie Gleason Collectibles
1999 Music for Lovers Only / Music to Make You Misty Collector's Choice
2000 Best of Jackie Gleason EMI Special Products
2000 Tawny / Music, Martinis and Memories Collector's Choice
2000 Music, Moonlight and Memories (Three Disc Set) Reader's Digest
2001 Lonesome Echo Collector's Choice
2001 Music to Remember Her Collector's Choice
2001 Lover's Rhapsody / And Awaaay We Go Collector's Choice
2001 Snowfall EMI
2002 For Lovers Only: 36 All Time Greatest Hits (Three disc set) Timeless Media Group
2003 Plays Romantic Jazz Collector's Choice
2004 Music to Change Her Mind Collector's Choice
2005 Night Winds Collector's Choice
2006 A Taste of Brass & Doublin' in Brass Capitol
2007 Complete Bobby Hackett Sessions (Four Disc Set) Fine & Mellow
2009 Take Me Along (1959 Original Broadway Cast) DRG
2009 'Tis the Season Capitol
2011 That Moment / Opiate D'Amour Dutton Vocalion
2011 The Torch with the Blue Flame / The Best of 'Oooo!' Dutton Vocalion
2012 Music For Lovers Only Real Gone Music
2012 Movie Themes - For Lovers Only / The Last Dance - For Lovers Only Dutton Vocalion
2012 Romeo and Juliet - A Theme for Lovers / Music Around the World - For Lovers Only Dutton Vocalion
2012 Gigot Dutton Vocalion
2012 Champagne, Candlelight and Kisses / Love Embers and Flame Dutton Vocalion
2012 'Tis the Season / Merry Christmas Relayer Records

References

  1. ^ Musiker, Naomi; Musiker, Reuben (February 25, 2014). Conductors and Composers of Popular Orchestral Music: A Biographical and Discographical Sourcebook. Routledge. ISBN 9781135917708 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ "Jackie Gleason Biography". JackieGleason.com. Retrieved November 27, 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d Henry, William A. (1992). The Great One: The Life and Legend of Jackie Gleason. Internet Archive. Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-385-41533-0. OCLC 651898009.
  4. ^ a b Joel Whitburn Presents the Billboard Albums, 6th edition, ISBN 0-89820-166-7
  5. ^ "Kid's talk". News & Record. September 19, 1995. Retrieved June 8, 2009 – via newsbank.com.
  6. ^ a b "Jackie Gleason Biography". JackieGleason.com. from the original on November 2, 2008. Retrieved November 23, 2008.
  7. ^ . Fifties Web. Archived from the original on August 12, 2003.
  8. ^ a b Yudell, Cliff (December 28, 1980). "Famed funnyman shows a simpler, wiser side". The Milwaukee Journal.
  9. ^ "Jackie Gleason Biography (1916–1987)". filmreference.com. from the original on 22 December 2008. Retrieved 13 January 2009.
  10. ^ Bishop, Jim (February 11, 1976). "Jackie Gleason soon to be 60". Reading Eagle. p. 8.
  11. ^ Pace, Eric (25 June 1987). "Jackie Gleason dies of cancer; comedian and actor was 71". The New York Times (obituary). from the original on 13 March 2017.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Hamill, Pete (September 23, 1985). Gleason's Second Honeymoon. New York Magazine. Retrieved February 3, 2011.
  13. ^ a b c d Lester, Will (June 25, 1987). "Entertainer Jackie Gleason, the Great One, dies of cancer". The Rock Hill Herald. Retrieved January 20, 2011.[dead link]
  14. ^ a b c Bacon, James (June 30, 1987). "Funny comic, terrible husband". The Milwaukee Journal.
  15. ^ a b c d "A sound-proof suite for the noisiest man on Broadway". The Sydney Morning Herald. December 26, 1954. Retrieved January 28, 2011.
  16. ^ The Golden Ham: A Candid Biography of Jackie Gleason
  17. ^ "Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - Google News Archive Search". News.google.com.
  18. ^ Billboard. October 10, 1942. p. 9. Retrieved August 17, 2015 – via Google Books.
  19. ^ "Jackie Gleason Lew Parker Hellzapoppin 1943 Hanna Theater Cleveland OHIO Program (01/14/2012)". Worthpoint.com. Retrieved August 17, 2015.
  20. ^ Dangerfield, Rodney (2004). It's Not Easy Being Me: A Lifetime of No Respect But Plenty of Sex and Drugs. HarperCollins.
  21. ^ . The Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on February 10, 2011. Retrieved February 3, 2011.
  22. ^ "Photo-Slapsy Maxie's Nightclub". Worthpoint. from the original on April 27, 2018. Retrieved February 3, 2011.
  23. ^ "The Life of Riley". Museum of Broadcast Communications. from the original on February 11, 2011. Retrieved February 3, 2011.
  24. ^ UCLA Newsroom: "UCLA Library Acquires Papers of Television Pioneer Harry Crane" by Teri Bond Michael July 31, 2015, at the Wayback Machine November 18, 2004
  25. ^ a b c d Brooks, Tim; Marsh, Earle (2007). The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows, 1946–present. Ballantine Books. ISBN 978-0-345-49773-4.
  26. ^ Jim Callo (November 3, 1980). "After 53 Years in the Limelight, Jackie Gleason Revels in How Sweet It Still Is". People. Time Inc. from the original on February 14, 2013. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
  27. ^ Billy Ingram (1995–2011). "Mistakes & Blunders". www.TVParty.com. Billy Ingram. from the original on September 23, 2012. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
  28. ^ Ingraham, Clarke. "Electronicam". DuMont Television Network Historical Website.
  29. ^ AoL Music (2012). "Jackie Gleason Albums". AoL Music. AOL Inc. Archived from the original on July 12, 2012. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
  30. ^ Gael Fashingbauer Cooper (June 15, 2014). Casey Kasem's 'American Top 40' reached for the stars June 15, 2014, at the Wayback Machine. NBC News. Retrieved June 15, 2014. "An unparalleled storyteller, Kasem loved to drop a teasing question about a song or a band, then cut to commercial, making his trivia so tantalizing that listeners just had to stay tuned to find out the answer. (…) Who had the most No. 1 albums without a Top 40 single? (Comic and mood-music expert Jackie Gleason, at least at the time.)"
  31. ^ Bacon, James. How Sweet It Is. ISBN 0-312-39621-X. p. 118.
  32. ^ a b c Bacon, James (1986). How Sweet it Is: The Jackie Gleason Story. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-90229-8.
  33. ^ "Como, Gleason Win Peabody Award". Long Beach Independent. April 12, 1956. p. 32. from the original on January 6, 2017. Retrieved January 5, 2017 – via Newspapers.com.  
  34. ^ Slifka, Adrian M. (July 4, 1957). "Gleason Blasts Ratings As Senseless TV Critics". Youngstown Vindicator. Retrieved November 29, 2010. For his final season, 1956–57, he returned to live Honeymooners of varying lengths and presented a number of hour long musicals (reprised a decade later, in colour, with a "new" Alice and Tricia, Sheila McCrae and Jane Kean).
  35. ^ Pace, Eric (June 15, 1987). "Jackie Gleason Dies of Cancer; Comedian And Actor Was 71". The New York Times. Retrieved November 21, 2010.
  36. ^ . Popular Mechanix. April 1960. Archived from the original on December 31, 2010. Retrieved November 21, 2010.
  37. ^ Statham, Richard (July 31, 1963). "Jackie Gleason's fabulous home is now up for sale". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved November 21, 2010.
  38. ^ "Here's House For Sale, Jackie Gleason Special". St. Petersburg Times. July 28, 1963. Retrieved November 21, 2010.
  39. ^ Brooks, Tim; Marsh, Earle (2007). The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows, 1946–present. Ballantine Books. ISBN 978-0-345-49773-4.
  40. ^ Brown, Wesley (July 12, 2014). "Gleason showed real Hustler skills in Augusta". The Augusta Chronicle. Augusta, Georgia, US. from the original on December 20, 2014. Retrieved December 20, 2014. Jackie Gleason needed no help to portray the real-life Minnesota Fats, the cutthroat pool shark he portrayed in the 1961 film who toyed with opponents before making decisive trick shots to collect from local hustlers.
  41. ^ a b Bishop, Jim (December 31, 1976). "The Great Gleason". Lewiston Evening Journal. Retrieved January 21, 2011.
  42. ^ a b Rosenblatt, Andy (May 21, 1978). "Jackie Gleason: Why The Great One Is Great". Lakeland Ledger. Retrieved January 21, 2011.
  43. ^ Meadows, Audrey; Daley, Joe (1994). "Jackie the Hypnotist". Love, Alice: My Life as a Honeymooner. Crown Publishing Group. ISBN 0-517-59881-7.
  44. ^ Bain, Donald (1974). Long John Nebel: Radio Talk King, Master Salesman, and Magnificent Charlatan. New York: Macmillan. ISBN 0-02-505950-5.
  45. ^ "The Jackie Gleason Collection". University of Miami. from the original on August 28, 2015. Retrieved August 17, 2015.
  46. ^ "JackieGleason". Legacy Libraries. LibraryThing. from the original on December 20, 2013. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  47. ^ Larry Holcombe: The Presidents and UFOs: A Secret History from FDR to Obama. New York: Macmillan, March 2015.
  48. ^ a b c Scott, Vernon (November 9, 1983). "Actress seeks place beyond the shadow of her legendary father". St. Petersburg Times. Retrieved January 28, 2011.
  49. ^ a b "Jackie Gleason Asks Divorce in New York". The Times-News. October 24, 1968. Retrieved January 28, 2011.
  50. ^ "Squabble Erupts in Hospital Room For Bedridden Gleason's Affections". The Miami News. February 9, 1954.[dead link]
  51. ^ a b "Squabble Erupts in Hospital Room For Bedridden Gleason's Affections". The Miami News. February 9, 1954.[dead link]
  52. ^ Clemens, Samuel (2020). Pat: A Biography of Hollywood's Blonde Starlet. Sequoia Press. p. 111. ISBN 978-0578682822.
  53. ^ Wilson, Earl (February 13, 1954). "New York". St. Petersburg Times. Retrieved November 19, 2010.
  54. ^ "Gleason's Ankle, Leg Are Broken". Youngstown Vindicator. February 1, 1954. Retrieved November 19, 2010.
  55. ^ Darrach, Brad (July 13, 1987). "A Fond Goodbye to the Great One". People. from the original on February 17, 2015. Retrieved February 17, 2015.
  56. ^ "Jackie Gleason Is Granted Divorce". Gettysburg Times. June 24, 1970. Retrieved November 19, 2010.
  57. ^ Forbes, Donald (July 4, 1970). "Jackie Gleason Weds Secretary". The Tuscaloosa News. Retrieved January 20, 2011.
  58. ^ "People in the News-Action Contested". Reading Eagle. September 18, 1974. Retrieved January 20, 2011.
  59. ^ "Gleasons Divorce". The Evening News. November 20, 1975. Retrieved January 20, 2011.
  60. ^ "How Sweet She Is". The Evening News. December 17, 1975. Retrieved January 20, 2011.
  61. ^ a b Dickerson, A. J. (June 27, 1987). "Gleason's widow pins last carnation on 'Great One's' lapel; fans gather". Schenectady Gazette. Retrieved November 19, 2010.
  62. ^ "Jackie Gleason To Marry For Third Time Tuesday". Sarasota Herald-Tribune. December 12, 1975. Retrieved November 19, 2010.
  63. ^ "Jackie Gleason". people.com. from the original on December 6, 2017. Retrieved April 27, 2018.
  64. ^ "Doctors Say heart attack was imminent before Gleason surgery". Daytona Beach Morning Journal. June 6, 1978. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  65. ^ "Gleason ails; Schnoz better". The Miami News. June 1, 1978.[dead link]
  66. ^ "Gleason in hospital again". The Telegraph-Herald. May 30, 1978. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  67. ^ Wilson, Catherine (June 26, 1987). "Gleason hid nature of illness from fans". The Times-News. Retrieved January 28, 2011.
  68. ^ Konicki, Steve (June 25, 1987). "Gleason's death came quietly at age 71". The Miami News.
  69. ^ Pace, Eric (June 25, 1987). "JACKIE GLEASON DIES OF CANCER; COMEDIAN AND ACTOR WAS 71". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved April 9, 2022.
  70. ^ "Jackie Gleason Theater:Away It Goes!". NBC Miami. May 5, 2010. Retrieved October 1, 2010.
  71. ^ . Palm Beach Post. June 16, 2010. Archived from the original on June 23, 2010. Retrieved October 1, 2010.
  72. ^ "Entertainer of the Year Awards: Special with Jackie Gleason as host". Lumberton, North Carolina: The Robesonian. January 11, 1976. Retrieved August 15, 2019.
  73. ^ Rudolph, Cathy (December 2, 2013). Paul Lynde: A Biography - His Life, His Love(s) and His Laughter. BearManor Media. p. 202. ISBN 978-1629330655.
  74. ^ "Bus Depot is dedicated to Jackie Gleason". The Pittsburgh Press. July 1, 1988. Retrieved January 20, 2011.
  75. ^ Miller, Darryl H. (October 12, 2002). "'Gleason' Just Skims the Star's Surface". Los Angeles Times. from the original on August 7, 2016. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
  76. ^ Hart, Hugh (October 10, 2002). "And awaaay he goes / Brad Garrett fulfills dream of playing troubled, talented Jackie Gleason in CBS biopic". San Francisco Chronicle. from the original on December 11, 2017. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
  77. ^ "The Quick 10: 10 Billboard 200 Milestones". Mental Floss. April 23, 2009. from the original on September 5, 2015. Retrieved August 17, 2015.

Sources

  • Joel Whitburn Presents the Billboard Albums, 6th edition, ISBN 0-89820-166-7
  • Whitburn, Joel (1991), The Billboard Book of Top 40 Albums (Revised and enlarged 2nd ed.), Billboard Books, ISBN 0-8230-7534-6
  • Additional information obtained can be verified within Billboard's online archive services and print editions of the magazine.

Further reading

External links

jackie, gleason, john, herbert, gleason, february, 1916, june, 1987, american, actor, comedian, writer, composer, conductor, known, affectionately, great, developing, style, characters, from, growing, brooklyn, york, known, brash, visual, verbal, comedy, exemp. John Herbert Gleason February 26 1916 June 24 1987 was an American actor comedian writer composer and conductor known affectionately as The Great One 1 2 3 Developing a style and characters from growing up in Brooklyn New York he was known for his brash visual and verbal comedy exemplified by his city bus driver character Ralph Kramden in the television series The Honeymooners He also developed The Jackie Gleason Show which maintained high ratings from the mid 1950s through 1970 After originating in New York City filming moved to Miami Beach Florida in 1964 after Gleason took up permanent residence there Jackie GleasonAn early publicity photo of Jackie GleasonBornHerbert Walton Gleason Jr 1916 02 26 February 26 1916New York City U S DiedJune 24 1987 1987 06 24 aged 71 Lauderhill Florida U S Burial placeOur Lady of Mercy Catholic CemeteryDoral FloridaOccupationsActorcomedianmusicianwritercomposerconductorYears active1937 1986Political partyRepublicanSpousesGenevieve Halford m 1936 div 1970 wbr Beverly McKittrick m 1970 div 1975 wbr Marilyn Taylor m 1975 wbr Children2 including Linda MillerRelativesJason Patric grandson Among his notable film roles were Minnesota Fats in 1961 s The Hustler co starring with Paul Newman and Buford T Justice in the Smokey and the Bandit series from 1977 to 1983 co starring Burt Reynolds Gleason enjoyed a prominent secondary music career during the 1950s and 1960s producing a series of best selling mood music albums His first album Music for Lovers Only still holds the record for the longest stay on the Billboard Top Ten Charts 153 weeks and his first 10 albums sold over a million copies each 4 His output spans some 20 plus singles nearly 60 long playing record albums and over 40 CDs Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Early television 2 1 1 The Honeymooners 2 2 Music 2 3 Return to television 2 3 1 Honeymooners revival 2 4 Film 3 Personal life 3 1 Fear of flying 3 2 Interest in the paranormal 3 3 Marriages and family 3 4 Later years health issues and death 4 Legacy and honors 5 Works 5 1 Television 5 2 Stage 5 3 Film 5 4 Music 5 4 1 Singles discography 5 4 2 Album discography 5 4 3 Compact disc discography 6 References 7 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life EditGleason was born on February 26 1916 at 364 Chauncey Street in the Stuyvesant Heights now Bedford Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn 5 Named Herbert Walton Gleason Jr at birth he was baptized John Herbert Gleason 6 and grew up at 328 Chauncey Street Apartment 1A an address he later used for Ralph and Alice Kramden on The Honeymooners 7 His parents were Herbert Walton Herb Gleason 1883 1939 born in New York City and Mae Agnes Maisie nee Kelly 1886 1935 Most sources indicate his mother was originally from Farranree County Cork Ireland 8 9 10 11 Gleason was the younger of two children his elder brother Clement died of meningitis at age 14 in 1919 8 Gleason remembered Clement and his father having beautiful handwriting He used to watch his father work at the family s kitchen table writing insurance policies in the evenings On the night of December 14 1925 Gleason s father disposed of any family photos in which he appeared just after noon on December 15 he collected his hat coat and paycheck and permanently left his family and job at the insurance company Once it became evident that he was not coming back Mae went to work as a subway attendant for the Brooklyn Manhattan Transit Corporation BMT 12 After his father abandoned the family young Gleason began hanging around with a local gang hustling pool 12 He attended P S 73 Elementary School in Brooklyn John Adams High School in Queens and Bushwick High School in Brooklyn Gleason became interested in performing after being part of a class play he quit school before graduating and got a job that paid 4 per night equivalent to 84 in 2021 as master of ceremonies at a theater Other jobs he held at that time included pool hall worker stunt driver and carnival barker 12 13 Gleason and his friends made the rounds of the local theaters he put an act together with one of his friends and the pair performed on amateur night at the Halsey Theater where Gleason replaced his friend Sammy Birch as master of ceremonies He performed the same duties twice a week at the Folly Theater 12 Gleason was 19 when his mother died in 1935 of sepsis from a large neck carbuncle that young Jackie had tried to lance 6 He had nowhere to go and thirty six cents to his name The family of his first girlfriend Julie Dennehy offered to take him in Gleason however was headstrong and insisted that he was going into the heart of the city 12 His friend Birch made room for him in the hotel room he shared with another comedian Birch also told him of a week long gig in Reading Pennsylvania which would pay 19 more money than Gleason could imagine equivalent to 376 in 2021 The booking agent advanced his bus fare for the trip against his salary granting Gleason his first job as a professional comedian Following this he would always have regular work in small clubs 14 Career EditGleason worked his way up to a job at New York s Club 18 where insulting its patrons was the order of the day Gleason greeted noted skater Sonja Henie by handing her an ice cube and saying Okay now do something 15 It was here that Jack L Warner first saw Gleason signing him to a film contract for 250 a week 12 By age 24 Gleason was appearing in films first for Warner Brothers as Jackie C Gleason in such films as Navy Blues 1941 with Ann Sheridan and Martha Raye and All Through the Night 1941 with Humphrey Bogart then for Columbia Pictures for the B military comedy Tramp Tramp Tramp and finally for Twentieth Century Fox where Gleason played Glenn Miller Orchestra bassist Ben Beck in Orchestra Wives 1942 He also had a small part as a soda shop clerk in Larceny Inc 1942 with Edward G Robinson and a modest part as an actor s agent in the 1942 Betty Grable Harry James musical Springtime in the Rockies During World War II Gleason was initially exempt from military service since he was a father of two However in 1943 the US started drafting men with children When Gleason reported to his induction doctors discovered that his broken left arm had healed crooked the area between his thumb and forefinger was nerveless and numb that a pilonidal cyst existed at the end of his coccyx and that he was 100 pounds overweight Gleason was therefore classified 4 F and rejected for military service 16 Gleason did not make a strong impression on Hollywood at first at the time he developed a nightclub act that included comedy and music At the end of 1942 Gleason and Lew Parker led a large cast of entertainers in the road show production of Olsen and Johnson s New 1943 Hellzapoppin 17 18 19 He also became known for hosting all night parties in his hotel suite the hotel soundproofed his suite out of consideration for its other guests 15 Anyone who knew Jackie Gleason in the 1940s wrote CBS historian Robert Metz would tell you The Fat Man would never make it His pals at Lindy s watched him spend money as fast as he soaked up the booze citation needed Rodney Dangerfield wrote that he witnessed Gleason purchasing marijuana in the 1940s 20 Gleason s first significant recognition as an entertainer came on Broadway when he appeared in the hit musical Follow the Girls 1944 While working in films in California Gleason also worked at former boxer Maxie Rosenbloom s nightclub Slapsy Maxie s on Wilshire Boulevard 12 21 22 Early television Edit Gleason and Rosemary DeCamp as Chester and Peg Riley in The Life of Riley Gleason and June Taylor dancer Margaret Jeanne get ready for St Patrick s Day 1955 Gleason s big break occurred in 1949 when he landed the role of blunt but softhearted aircraft worker Chester A Riley for the first television version of the radio comedy The Life of Riley William Bendix had originated the role on radio but was initially unable to accept the television role because of film commitments Despite positive reviews the show received modest ratings and was cancelled after one year Bendix reprised the role in 1953 for a five year series 23 The Life of Riley became a television hit for Bendix during the mid to late 1950s 15 But long before this Gleason s nightclub act had received attention from New York City s inner circle and the fledgling DuMont Television Network He was working at Slapsy Maxie s when he was hired 12 to host DuMont s Cavalcade of Stars variety hour in 1950 having been recommended by comedy writer Harry Crane whom he knew from his days as a stand up comedian in New York 24 The program initially had rotating hosts Gleason was first offered two weeks at 750 per week When he responded it was not worth the train trip to New York the offer was extended to four weeks Gleason returned to New York for the show 12 He framed the acts with splashy dance numbers developed sketch characters he would refine over the next decade and became enough of a presence that CBS wooed him to its network in 1952 Renamed The Jackie Gleason Show the program became the country s second highest rated television show during the 1954 55 season 25 Gleason amplified the show with even splashier opening dance numbers inspired by Busby Berkeley s screen dance routines and featuring the precision choreographed June Taylor Dancers Following the dance performance he would do an opening monologue Then accompanied by a little travelin music That s a Plenty a Dixieland classic from 1914 he would shuffle toward the wings clapping his hands and shouting And awaaay we go The phrase became one of his trademarks along with How sweet it is which he used in reaction to almost anything 25 Theona Bryant a former Powers Girl became Gleason s And awaaay we go girl Ray Bloch was Gleason s first music director followed by Sammy Spear who stayed with Gleason through the 1960s Gleason often kidded both men during his opening monologues He continued developing comic characters including Reginald Van Gleason III a top hatted millionaire with a taste for both the good life and fantasy Rudy the Repairman boisterous and boorish Joe the Bartender gregarious and with friendly words for the never seen Mr Dennehy always first at the bar The Poor Soul a silent character who could and often did come to grief in the least expected places or demonstrated gratitude at such gifts as being allowed to share a newspaper on a subway Rum Dum a character with a brush like mustache who often stumbled around as though drunk and confused Fenwick Babbitt a friendly addle headed young man usually depicted working at various jobs and invariably failing Charlie Bratton a loudmouth who frequently picked on the mild mannered Clem Finch portrayed by Art Carney a future Honeymooners co star Stanley R Sogg a pitchman who usually appeared on commercials during late night movies and sold items that came with extras or bonuses the ultimate inducement was a 10 pound wedge of Facciamara s Macciaroni cheese and The Bachelor a silent character accompanied by the song Somebody Loves Me doing everyday things in an unusually lazy or makeshift way Gleason as the Poor Soul on Toast of the Town in 1954 In a 1985 interview Gleason related some of his characters to his youth in Brooklyn The Mr Dennehy whom Joe the Bartender greets is a tribute to Gleason s first love Julie Dennehy The character of The Poor Soul was drawn from an assistant manager of an outdoor theater he frequented 12 Gleason disliked rehearsing With a photographic memory 26 he read the script once watched a rehearsal with his co stars and stand in and shot the show later that day When he made mistakes he often blamed the cue cards 27 The Honeymooners Edit Main article The Honeymooners Gleason as Ralph Kramden with Audrey Meadows as Alice circa 1955 Gleason s most popular character by far was blustery bus driver Ralph Kramden Largely drawn from Gleason s harsh Brooklyn childhood these sketches became known as The Honeymooners The show was based on Ralph s many get rich quick schemes his ambition his antics with his best friend and neighbor scatterbrained sewer worker Ed Norton and clashes with his sensible wife Alice who typically pulled Ralph s head down from the clouds Gleason developed catchphrases he used on The Honeymooners such as threats to Alice One of these days Alice pow right in the kisser and Bang Zoom To the moon Alice to the moon The Honeymooners originated from a sketch Gleason was developing with his show s writers He said he had an idea he wanted to enlarge a skit with a smart quiet wife and her very vocal husband He went on to describe that while the couple had their fights underneath it all they loved each other Titles for the sketch were tossed around until someone came up with The Honeymooners 12 The Honeymooners first was featured on Cavalcade of Stars on October 5 1951 with Carney in a guest appearance as a cop Norton did not appear until a few episodes later and character actress Pert Kelton as Alice Darker and fiercer than the milder later version with Audrey Meadows as Alice the sketches proved popular with critics and viewers As Kramden Gleason played a frustrated bus driver with a battleaxe of a wife in harrowingly realistic arguments when Meadows who was 15 years younger than Kelton took over the role after Kelton was blacklisted the tone softened considerably When Gleason moved to CBS Kelton was left behind her name had been published in Red Channels a book that listed and described reputed communists and communist sympathizers in television and radio and the network did not want to hire her Gleason reluctantly let her leave the cast with a cover story for the media that she had heart trouble At first he turned down Meadows as Kelton s replacement Meadows wrote in her memoir that she slipped back to audition again and frumped herself up to convince Gleason that she could handle the role of a frustrated but loving working class wife Rounding out the cast Joyce Randolph played Trixie Ed Norton s wife Elaine Stritch had played the role as a tall and attractive blonde in the first sketch but was quickly replaced by Randolph Comedy writer Leonard Stern always felt The Honeymooners was more than sketch material and persuaded Gleason to make it into a full hour long episode In 1955 Gleason gambled on making it a separate series entirely These are the Classic 39 episodes which finished 19th in the ratings for their only season 25 They were filmed with a new DuMont process Electronicam Like kinescopes it preserved a live performance on film unlike kinescopes which were screenshots the film was of higher quality and comparable to a motion picture 28 That turned out to be Gleason s most prescient move A decade later he aired the half hour Honeymooners in syndicated reruns that began to build a loyal and growing audience making the show a television icon Its popularity was such that in 2000 a life sized statue of Jackie Gleason in uniform as bus driver Ralph Kramden was installed outside the Port Authority Bus Terminal in New York City Gleason went back to the live format for 1956 57 with short and long versions including hour long musicals These musical presentations were reprised ten years later in color with Sheila MacRae and Jane Keane as Alice and Trixie Audrey Meadows reappeared for one black and white remake of the 50s sketch The Adoption telecast January 8 1966 Ten years later she rejoined Gleason and Carney with Jane Kean replacing Joyce Randolph for several TV specials one special from 1973 was shelved The Jackie Gleason Show ended in June 1957 In 1959 Jackie discussed the possibility of bringing back The Honeymooners in new episodes His dream was partially realized with a Kramden Norton sketch on a CBS variety show in late 1960 and two more sketches on his new hour long CBS show The American Scene Magazine in 1962 Music Edit Prominent Irish writer Brendan Behan with Jackie Gleason in Gleason s dressing room after a performance of Take Me Along 1960 Throughout the 1950s and 1960s Gleason enjoyed a prominent secondary music career producing a series of best selling mood music albums with jazz overtones for Capitol Records Gleason believed there was a ready market for romantic instrumentals His goal was to make musical wallpaper that should never be intrusive but conducive 29 He recalled seeing Clark Gable play love scenes in movies the romance was in his words magnified a thousand percent by background music Gleason reasoned If Gable needs music a guy in Brooklyn must be desperate 12 Gleason s first album Music for Lovers Only still holds the record for the longest stay on the Billboard Top Ten Charts 153 weeks and his first 10 albums sold over a million copies each 4 At one point Gleason held the record for charting the most number one albums on the Billboard 200 without charting any hits on the Top 40 of the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart 30 Gleason could not read or write music he was said to have conceived melodies in his head and described them vocally to assistants who transcribed them into musical notes 12 These included the well remembered themes of both The Jackie Gleason Show Melancholy Serenade and The Honeymooners You re My Greatest Love 13 In spite of period accounts establishing his direct involvement in musical production varying opinions have appeared over the years as to how much credit Gleason should have received for the finished products Biographer William A Henry wrote in his 1992 book The Great One The Life and Legend of Jackie Gleason that beyond the possible conceptualizing of many of the song melodies Gleason had no direct involvement such as conducting in making the recordings Red Nichols a jazz great who had fallen on hard times and led one of the group s recordings was not paid as session leader Cornetist and trumpeter Bobby Hackett soloed on several of Gleason s albums and was leader for seven of them Asked late in life by musician journalist Harry Currie in Toronto what Gleason really did at the recording sessions Hackett replied He brought the checks But years earlier Hackett had glowingly told writer James Bacon Jackie knows a lot more about music than people give him credit for I have seen him conduct a 60 piece orchestra and detect one discordant note in the brass section He would immediately stop the music and locate the wrong note It always amazed the professional musicians how a guy who technically did not know one note from another could do that And he was never wrong 31 The composer and arranger George Williams has been cited in various biographies as having served as ghostwriter for the majority of arrangements heard on many of Gleason s albums of the 1950s and 1960s 3 32 Williams was not given credit for his work until the early 1960s albeit only in small print on the backs of album covers 3 32 Nearly all of Gleason s albums have been reissued on compact disc Gleason s lead role in the musical Take Me Along 1959 60 won him a Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical Return to television Edit Edward R Murrow and Gleason when the comedian was the subject of an interview on Person to Person in 1956 In 1956 Gleason revived his original variety hour including The Honeymooners winning a Peabody Award 33 He abandoned the show in 1957 when his ratings for the season came in at No 29 25 and the network suggested he needed a break 34 He returned in 1958 with a half hour show featuring Buddy Hackett which did not catch on In addition to his salary and royalties CBS paid for Gleason s Peekskill New York mansion Round Rock Hill 35 Set on six acres the architecturally noteworthy complex included a round main home guest house and storage building It took Gleason two years to design the house which was completed in 1959 36 Gleason sold the home when he relocated to Miami 37 38 In October 1960 Gleason and Carney briefly returned for a Honeymooners sketch on a TV special His next foray into television was the game show You re in the Picture which was cancelled after a disastrously received premiere episode but was followed the next week by a broadcast of Gleason s 39 humorous half hour apology which was much better appreciated 13 For the rest of its scheduled run the game show was replaced by a talk show named The Jackie Gleason Show In 1962 Gleason resurrected his variety show with more splashiness and a new hook a fictitious general interest magazine called The American Scene Magazine through which Gleason trotted out his old characters in new scenarios including two new Honeymooners sketches He also added another catchphrase to the American vernacular first uttered in the 1963 film Papa s Delicate Condition How sweet it is The Jackie Gleason Show The American Scene Magazine was a hit that continued for four seasons Each show began with Gleason delivering a monologue and commenting on the attention getting outfits of band leader Sammy Spear Then the magazine features would be trotted out from Hollywood gossip reported by comedian Barbara Heller to news flashes played for laughs with a stock company of second bananas chorus girls and dwarfs Comedian Alice Ghostley occasionally appeared as a downtrodden tenement resident sitting on her front step and listening to boorish boyfriend Gleason for several minutes After the boyfriend took his leave the smitten Ghostley would exclaim I m the luckiest girl in the world Veteran comics Johnny Morgan Sid Fields and Hank Ladd were occasionally seen opposite Gleason in comedy sketches Helen Curtis played alongside him as a singer and actress delighting audiences with her Madame Plumpadore sketches with Reginald Van Gleason The final sketch was always set in Joe the Bartender s saloon with Joe singing My Gal Sal and greeting his regular customer the unseen Mr Dunahy the TV audience as Gleason spoke to the camera in this section During the sketch Joe would tell Dennehy about an article he had read in the fictitious American Scene magazine holding a copy across the bar It had two covers one featured the New York skyline and the other palm trees after the show moved to Florida Joe would bring out Frank Fontaine as Crazy Guggenheim who would regale Joe with the latest adventures of his neighborhood pals and sometimes show Joe his current Top Cat comic book Joe usually asked Crazy to sing almost always a sentimental ballad in his fine lilting baritone The Fillmore Miami Beach originally the Miami Beach Municipal Auditorium where Gleason taped his shows after his move to Florida Gleason revived The Honeymooners first with Sue Ane Langdon as Alice and Patricia Wilson as Trixie for two episodes of The American Scene Magazine then with Sheila MacRae as Alice and Jane Kean as Trixie for the 1966 series 13 By 1964 Gleason had moved the production from New York to Miami Beach Florida reportedly because he liked year round access to the golf course at the nearby Inverrary Country Club in Lauderhill where he built his final home His closing line became almost invariably As always the Miami Beach audience is the greatest audience in the world In 1966 he abandoned the American Scene Magazine format and converted the show into a standard variety hour with guest performers Gleason and Lucille Ball in a TV special Tea for Two 1975 Gleason kicked off the 1966 1967 season with new color episodes of The Honeymooners Carney returned as Ed Norton with MacRae as Alice and Kean as Trixie The sketches were remakes of the 1957 world tour episodes in which Kramden and Norton win a slogan contest and take their wives to international destinations Each of the nine episodes was a full scale musical comedy with Gleason and company performing original songs by Lyn Duddy and Jerry Bresler Occasionally Gleason would devote the show to musicals with a single theme such as college comedy or political satire with the stars abandoning their Honeymooners roles for different character roles This was the show s format until its cancellation in 1970 The exception was the 1968 1969 season which had no hour long Honeymooners episodes that season The Honeymooners was presented only in short sketches The musicals pushed Gleason back into the top five in ratings but audiences soon began to decline By its final season Gleason s show was no longer in the top 25 In the last original Honeymooners episode aired on CBS Operation Protest on February 28 1970 Ralph encounters the youth protest movement of the late 1960s a sign of changing times in both television and society Gleason who had signed a deal in the 1950s that included a guaranteed 100 000 annual payment for 20 years even if he never went on the air wanted The Honeymooners to be just a portion of his format but CBS wanted another season of only The Honeymooners The network had cancelled a mainstay variety show hosted by Red Skelton and would cancel The Ed Sullivan Show in 1971 because they had become too expensive to produce and attracted in the executives opinion too old an audience Gleason simply stopped doing the show in 1970 and left CBS when his contract expired Honeymooners revival Edit Gleason did two Jackie Gleason Show specials for CBS after giving up his regular show in the 1970s including Honeymooners segments and a Reginald Van Gleason III sketch in which the gregarious millionaire was portrayed as a comic drunk When the CBS deal expired Gleason signed with NBC He later did a series of Honeymooners specials for ABC Gleason hosted four ABC specials during the mid 1970s Gleason and Carney also made a television movie Izzy and Moe 1985 about an unusual pair of historic Federal prohibition agents in New York City who achieved an unbeatable arrest record with highly successful techniques including impersonations and humor which aired on CBS in 1985 In April 1974 Gleason revived several of his classic characters including Ralph Kramden Joe the Bartender and Reginald Van Gleason III in a television special with Julie Andrews In a song and dance routine the two performed Take Me Along from Gleason s Broadway musical In 1985 three decades after the Classic 39 began filming Gleason revealed he had carefully preserved kinescopes of his live 1950s programs in a vault for future use including Honeymooners sketches with Pert Kelton as Alice These lost episodes as they came to be called were initially previewed at the Museum of Television and Radio in New York City aired on the Showtime cable network in 1985 and later were added to the Honeymooners syndication package Some of them include earlier versions of plot lines later used in the classic 39 episodes One a Christmas episode duplicated several years later with Meadows as Alice had all Gleason s best known characters Ralph Kramden the Poor Soul Rudy the Repairman Reginald Van Gleason Fenwick Babbitt and Joe the Bartender featured in and outside of the Kramden apartment The storyline involved a wild Christmas party hosted by Reginald Van Gleason up the block from the Kramdens building at Joe the Bartender s place Film Edit With Betsy Palmer in The Time of Your Life on Playhouse 90 1958 Gleason did not restrict his acting to comedic roles He had also earned acclaim for live television drama performances in The Laugh Maker 1953 on CBS s Studio One and William Saroyan s The Time of Your Life 1958 which was produced as an episode of the anthology series Playhouse 90 He was nominated for a Best Supporting Actor Academy Award for his portrayal of pool shark Minnesota Fats in The Hustler 1961 starring Paul Newman Gleason made all his own trick pool shots 40 In his 1985 appearance on The Tonight Show Gleason told Johnny Carson that he had played pool frequently since childhood and drew from those experiences in The Hustler He was extremely well received as a beleaguered boxing manager in the film version of Rod Serling s Requiem for a Heavyweight 1962 Gleason played a world weary army sergeant in Soldier in the Rain 1963 in which he received top billing over Steve McQueen Gleason as Minnesota Fats in The Hustler 1961 Gleason wrote produced and starred in Gigot 1962 in which he played a poor mute janitor who befriended and rescued a prostitute and her small daughter It was a box office flop But the film s script was adapted and produced as the television film The Wool Cap 2004 starring William H Macy in the role of the mute janitor the television film received modestly good reviews Gleason played the lead in the Otto Preminger directed Skidoo 1968 considered an all star failure In 1969 William Friedkin wanted to cast Gleason as Popeye Doyle in The French Connection 1971 but because of the poor reception of Gigot and Skidoo the studio refused to offer Gleason the lead he wanted it Instead Gleason wound up in How to Commit Marriage 1969 with Bob Hope as well as the movie version of Woody Allen s play Don t Drink the Water 1969 Both were unsuccessful Eight years passed before Gleason had another hit film This role was the cantankerous and cursing Texas sheriff Buford T Justice in the films Smokey and the Bandit 1977 Smokey and the Bandit II 1980 and Smokey and the Bandit Part 3 1983 He co starred with Burt Reynolds as the Bandit Sally Field as Carrie the Bandit s love interest and Jerry Reed as Cledus Snowman Snow the Bandit s truck driving partner Former NFL linebacker Mike Henry played his dimwitted son Junior Justice Gleason s gruff and frustrated demeanor and lines such as I m gonna barbecue yo ass in molasses made the first Bandit movie a hit Years later when interviewed by Larry King Reynolds said he agreed to do the film only if the studio hired Jackie Gleason to play the part of Sheriff Buford T Justice the name of a real Florida highway patrolman who knew Reynolds father Reynolds said that director Hal Needham gave Gleason free rein to ad lib a great deal of his dialog and make suggestions for the film the scene at the Choke and Puke was Gleason s idea Reynolds and Needham knew Gleason s comic talent would help make the film a success and Gleason s characterization of Sheriff Justice strengthened the film s appeal to blue collar audiences During the 1980s Gleason earned positive reviews playing opposite Laurence Olivier in the HBO dramatic two man special Mr Halpern and Mr Johnson 1983 He also gave a memorable performance as wealthy businessman U S Bates in the comedy The Toy 1982 opposite Richard Pryor Although the film was critically panned Gleason and Pryor s performances were praised His last film performance was opposite Tom Hanks in the Garry Marshall directed Nothing in Common 1986 a success both critically and financially Personal life Edit Gleason playing golf with President Gerald Ford c 1975 Fear of flying Edit For many years Gleason would travel only by train his fear of flying arose from an incident in his early film career Gleason would fly back and forth to Los Angeles for relatively minor film work After finishing one film the comedian boarded a plane for New York When two of the plane s engines cut out in the middle of the flight the pilot had to make an emergency landing in Tulsa Oklahoma 41 Although another plane was prepared for the passengers Gleason had enough of flying He went into downtown Tulsa walked into a hardware store and asked its owner to lend him 200 for the train trip to New York The owner asked Gleason why he thought anyone would lend a stranger so much money Gleason identified himself and explained his situation The store owner said he would lend the money if the local theater had a photo of Gleason in his latest film However the publicity shots showed only the principal stars Gleason proposed to buy two tickets to the film and take the store owner he would be able to see the actor in action The two men watched the film for an hour before Gleason appeared on screen The owner gave Gleason the loan and he took the next train to New York There he borrowed 200 to repay his benefactor 41 Interest in the paranormal Edit President Richard Nixon and Jackie Gleason in a golf cart with an audience in February 1973 Gleason was greatly interested in the paranormal reading many books on the topic as well as books on parapsychology and UFOs 42 3 32 43 During the 1950s he was a semi regular guest on a paranormal themed overnight radio show hosted by John Nebel and he also wrote the introduction to Donald Bain s biography of Nebel 44 After his death his large book collection was donated to the library of the University of Miami 45 A complete listing of the holdings of Gleason s library has been issued by the online cataloging service LibraryThing 46 According to writer Larry Holcombe Gleason s known interest in UFOs allegedly prompted President Richard Nixon to share some information with him and to disclose some UFO data publicly 47 Marriages and family Edit June Taylor Dancers with Gleason on one of his television specials Gleason met dancer Genevieve Halford when they were working in vaudeville and they started to date Halford wanted to marry but Gleason was not ready to settle down She said she would see other men if they did not marry One evening when Gleason went onstage at the Club Miami in Newark New Jersey he saw Halford in the front row with a date At the end of his show Gleason went to the table and proposed to Halford in front of her date They were married on September 20 1936 14 48 49 Halford wanted a quiet home life but Gleason fell back into spending his nights out 14 Separated for the first time in 1941 and reconciled in 1948 15 the couple had two daughters Geraldine b 1940 and Linda b 1942 50 51 Gleason and his wife informally separated again in 1951 49 It was during this period that Gleason had a romantic relationship with his secretary Honey Merrill who was Miss Hollywood of 1956 and a showgirl at The Tropicana Their relationship ended years later after Merrill met and eventually married Dick Roman 52 In early 1954 Gleason suffered a broken leg and ankle on air during his television show His injuries sidelined him for several weeks 53 54 Halford visited Gleason while he was hospitalized finding dancer Marilyn Taylor from his television show there Halford filed for a legal separation in April 1954 51 A devout Catholic Halford did not grant Gleason a divorce until 1970 55 56 Gleason met his second wife Beverly McKittrick at a country club in 1968 where she worked as a secretary Ten days after his divorce from Halford was final Gleason and McKittrick were married in a registry ceremony in Ashford England on July 4 1970 57 In 1974 Marilyn Taylor encountered Gleason again when she moved to the Miami area to be near her sister June whose dancers had starred on Gleason s shows for many years She had been out of show business for nearly 20 years In September 1974 Gleason filed for divorce from McKittrick who contested asking for a reconciliation 58 The divorce was granted on November 19 1975 59 As a widow with a young son Marilyn Taylor married Gleason on December 16 1975 the marriage lasted until his death in 1987 60 42 61 62 Gleason s daughter Linda became an actress and married actor playwright Jason Miller Their son Gleason s grandson is actor Jason Patric 48 Later years health issues and death Edit As early as 1952 when The Jackie Gleason Show captured Saturday night for CBS Gleason regularly smoked six packs of cigarettes a day but he never smoked on The Honeymooners 63 Gleason s sarcophagus with the inscription And Away We Go at Our Lady of Mercy Catholic Cemetery in Miami In 1978 he suffered chest pains while touring in the lead role of Larry Gelbart s play Sly Fox this forced him to leave the show in Chicago and go to the hospital He was treated and released but after suffering another bout the following week he returned and underwent triple bypass surgery 64 65 66 Gleason delivered a critically acclaimed performance as an infirm acerbic and somewhat Archie Bunker like character in the Tom Hanks comedy drama Nothing in Common 1986 This was Gleason s final film role During production it was determined that he was suffering from terminal colon cancer which had metastasized to his liver Gleason was also suffering from phlebitis and diabetes I won t be around much longer he told his daughter at dinner one evening after a day of filming Gleason kept his medical problems private although there were rumors that he was seriously ill 67 A year later on June 24 1987 Gleason died at age 71 in his Florida home 68 69 After a funeral Mass at the Cathedral of Saint Mary Gleason was entombed in a sarcophagus in a private outdoor mausoleum at Our Lady of Mercy Catholic Cemetery in Miami 61 Gleason s sister in law June Taylor of the June Taylor Dancers is buried to the left of the mausoleum next to her husband Legacy and honors Edit Ralph Kramden statue at the Port Authority Bus Terminal in Manhattan Sign welcoming drivers to Brooklyn circa 2000s The television home of The Honeymooners at 328 Chauncey Street in Brooklyn Miami Beach in 1987 renamed the Miami Beach Auditorium as the Jackie Gleason Theater of the Performing Arts As of May 2010 update the theater was scheduled to be razed as part of a convention center remodeling project and replaced by a hotel 70 71 The demolition did not take place and The Fillmore Miami Beach is still in operation as of October 2017 update Gleason was inducted into the Academy of Television Arts amp Sciences Television Hall of Fame in 1986 In 2000 a statue of him as Ralph Kramden in And away we go pose was installed at the Miami Beach Bus Terminal Gleason was nominated three times for an Emmy Award but never won Carney and Keane did however In 1976 at the Sixth Annual American Guild of Variety Artists AGVA Entertainer of the Year Awards Paul Lynde received an award for being voted the funniest man of the year 72 Lynde immediately turned his award over to host Jackie Gleason citing him as the funniest man ever The unexpected gesture shocked Gleason 73 On June 30 1988 the Sunset Park MTA NYCT s 5th Avenue Bus Depot in Brooklyn was renamed the Jackie Gleason Depot in honor of the native Brooklynite 74 A statue of Gleason as Ralph Kramden in his bus driver s uniform was dedicated in August 2000 in New York City in Manhattan at the 40th Street entrance of the Port Authority Bus Terminal PABT The statue was briefly shown in the film World Trade Center 2006 A city park in Lauderhill Florida was named the Jackie Gleason Park in his honor it is located near his former home and features racquetball and basketball courts and a children s playground Signs on the Brooklyn Bridge which advise drivers that they are entering Brooklyn have the Gleason phrase How Sweet It Is Late in his life actor playwright Jason Miller Gleason s former son in law was writing a screenplay based on Gleason s life He died before it was completed 48 Gleason was portrayed by Brad Garrett in a 2002 television biopic about his life 75 76 Works EditTelevision Edit 1949 1959 Your Sports Special 1949 as Himself The Lamb s Gambol March 27 1949 as Himself On The Two A Day 1949 NBC TV as Himself The Life of Riley October 4 1949 March 28 1950 TV Series as Chester A Riley The Arrow Show 1949 as Himself Tex and Jinx 1949 as Himself This Is Show Business 1950 as Himself Showtime USA 1950 as Himself Cavalcade of Stars 1950 1952 TV Series as Himself Host Ralph Kramden Reginald Van Gleason III The Frank Sinatra Show 1950 as Himself Ford Star Revue 1951 as Himself The Frank Sinatra Show 1951 as Himself Cavalcade of Bands 1951 as Himself Stage Entrance 1951 DuMont TV as Himself Musical Comedy Time No No Nanette 1951 as Himself Texaco Star Theatre 1951 as Himself Ford Festival 1951 as Himself The James Melton Show May 3 1951 as Himself This Is Show Business 1951 as Himself The Colgate Comedy Hour 1951 as Himself Ford Star Revue 1951 as Himself The Colgate Comedy Hour 1951 as Himself The Kate Smith Evening Hour 1951 as Himself The Jackie Gleason Show September 20 1952 June 18 1955 TV Series as Host Ralph Kramden Reginald Van Gleason III Arthur Murray Party 1952 as Himself The Sam Levinson Show 1952 as Himself The Ken Murray Show 1952 as Himself Toast of the Town 1952 as Himself Celebrity Time 1952 as Himself Scout O Rama 1952 as Himself Jane Froman s USA Canteen 1952 as Himself Arthur Godfrey and His Friends 1953 as Himself Studio One The Laugh Maker May 18 1953 TV Movie as Himself What s My Line 1953 as Himself This Is Show Business 1953 as Himself Guest Himself Arthur Murray Party 1953 as Himself Toast of the Town 1954 as Himself The Red Skelton Show January 5 1954 as Himself Name That Tune 1954 as Himself Studio One Short Cut December 6 1954 TV Movie as Himself The Best of Broadway The Show Off February 2 1955 TV Movie as Himself What s My Line 1955 as Himself I ve Got a Secret 1955 as Himself The Jack Benny Program May 1 1955 as Himself Stage Show 1955 as Himself The Honeymooners October 1 1955 September 22 1956 TV Series as Ralph Kramden The Red Skelton Show October 4 1955 Studio One Uncle Ed and Circumstances October 10 1955 TV Movie The 64 000 Question 1956 as Himself Person to Person February 3 1956 as Himself The Herb Shriner Show October 2 1956 as Himself The Jackie Gleason Show September 29 1956 June 22 1957 TV Series as Himself Playhouse 90 The Time of Your Life October 9 1958 TV Movie as Joe This Is Your Life 1958 as Himself Arthur Godfrey Show 1958 as Himself The Jackie Gleason Show October 1958 January 1959 TV Series as Himself All Star Jazz IV The Golden Age of Jazz January 4 1959 as Himself 1960 1986 The Fabulous Fifties 1960 as Narrator Arthur Godfrey Special 1960 as Himself The Secret World of Eddie Hodges June 23 1960 TV Movie narration only as Narrator Himself The Jackie Gleason Special The Big Sell Review October 9 1960 as Salesman Reginald Van Gleason III Joe the Bartender Ralph Kramden Step On the Gas CBS 10 19 60 TV special The Red Skelton Show January 24 1961 as Himself Sunday Sports Spectacular Jackie Gleason with the putter and cue 1961 as Himself You re In the Picture The Jackie Gleason Show January 27 March 24 1961 as Himself The Jackie Gleason Special The Million Dollar Incident April 21 1961 as Himself Jackie Gleason and His American Scene Magazine September 29 1962 June 4 1966 TV Series as Himself The 35th Annual Academy Awards 1963 as Himself Freedom Spectacular May 14 1964 NAACP Special as Himself Inquiry June 13 1965 June 20 1965 NBC as Himself The Bob Hope Chrysler Theatre The Big Stomach November 16 1966 as the Vast Waistline The Jackie Gleason Show September 17 1966 September 12 1970 TV Series as Himself Host Here s Lucy Lucy Visits Jack Benny September 30 1968 as Ralph Kramden The Mike Douglas Show October 15 1968 as Himself The David Frost Show February 17 1970 as Himself The David Frost Show April 6 1970 as Himself The David Frost Show May 7 1970 as Himself The Jackie Gleason Special December 20 1970 as Ralph Kramden Reginald Van Gleason III the Poor Soul The Mike Douglas Show November 13 17 20 24 and 29 1972 as Himself The Jackie Gleason Special November 11 1973 as Ralph Kramden Reginald Van Gleason III the Poor Soul Show Business Tribute to Milton Berle 1973 Julie amp Jackie How Sweet It Is 1974 Bob Hope Special 1974 as Himself The Dean Martin Celebrity Roast 1975 as Himself The Dick Cavett Show August 30 1975 as Himself Dinah January 13 1975 as Himself Lucille Ball and Jackie Gleason Two for Three December 3 1975 as Himself Super Night at the Super Bowl 1976 as Himself The Mike Douglas Show January 12 16 1976 as Himself The Honeymooners Second Honeymoon February 2 1976 as Ralph Kramden Donahue 1976 as Himself The Captain and Tennille September 20 1976 as Himself Bing Crosby s White Christmas 1976 as Himself Dinah February 11 1977 as Himself The Honeymooners Christmas Special November 28 1977 as Ralph Kramden The Honeymooners Valentine Special February 13 1978 as Ralph Kramden The Second Honeymooners Christmas Special December 10 1978 as Ralph Kramden The Mike Douglas Show May 7 1980 as Himself Mr Halpern and Mr Johnson June 3 1983 TV Movie as Ernest Johnson All Star Party for Burt Reynolds 1984 as Himself 60 Minutes 1984 as Himself Izzy and Moe September 23 1985 TV Movie as Himself The Honeymooners Reunion May 13 1985 as Ralph Kramden The 39th Annual Tony Awards June 2 1985 as Himself The Honeymooners Anniversary Celebration October 18 1985 as Ralph Kramden The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson October 18 1985 as Himself Gleason In His Own Words February 14 1986 as Himself Stage Edit Keep Off the Grass 1940 Hellzapoppin 1942 Artists and Models 1943 Follow the Girls 1944 The Duchess Misbehaves 1945 Heaven on Earth 1948 Along Fifth Avenue 1949 Take Me Along 1959 Sly Fox 1978 Film Edit Navy Blues 1941 as Tubby Steel Against the Sky 1941 as Starchy All Through the Night 1942 as Starchy Lady Gangster 1942 as Wilson Tramp Tramp Tramp 1942 as Hank Larceny Inc 1942 as Hobart Escape from Crime 1942 as Screwball Evans Orchestra Wives 1942 as Ben Beck Springtime in the Rockies 1942 as Commissioner uncredited The Desert Hawk 1950 as Aladdin The Hustler 1961 as Minnesota Fats Gigot 1962 as Gigot also writer Requiem for a Heavyweight 1962 as Maish Rennick Papa s Delicate Condition 1963 as Jack Griffith Soldier in the Rain 1963 as MSgt Maxwell Slaughter Skidoo 1968 as Tony Banks How to Commit Marriage 1969 as Oliver Poe Don t Drink the Water 1969 as Walter Hollander How Do I Love Thee 1970 as Stanley Waltz Mr Billion 1977 as John Cutler Smokey and the Bandit 1977 as Sheriff Buford T Justice of Portague County Smokey and the Bandit II 1980 as Sheriff Buford T Justice Gaylord Justice Reginald Van Justice The Toy 1982 as U S Bates The Sting II 1983 as Fargo Gondorff Smokey and the Bandit Part 3 1983 as Buford T Justice Izzy and Moe 1985 as Izzy Einstein Nothing in Common 1986 as Max Basner final film role Music Edit Singles discography Edit Year Titles A side B side Label and Number Album or EP Extended Play 1951 What Is a Girl b w What Is a Boy Both sides with narratives by Gleason Decca 27684 Non album tracks1952 Melancholy Serenade b w You re Getting to Be a Habit Capitol F2361 Melancholy Serenade EP 1953 Alone Together b w Body amp Soul Capitol F2437 Music For Lovers Only1953 My Funny Valentine b w Love Is Here to Stay Capitol F24381953 But Not for Me b w Love Capitol F24391953 I m in the Mood for Love b w I Only Have Eyes For You Capitol F24401953 Terry s Theme from Limelight b w Peg O My Heart from Melancholy Serenade EP Capitol F2507 Non album track1953 White House Serenade b w The President s Lady Non album track Capitol F2515 Melancholy Serenade EP 1953 Mystery Street b w Golden Violins Capitol F2659 Non album tracks1955 I ll Never Be The Same b w Rain Capitol F30921955 The Band Played On b w In the Good Old Summertime Capitol F31441955 Autumn Leaves b w Oo What You Do to Me Capitol F3223 Autumn Leaves EP 1956 Capri in May b w You re My Greatest Love from Music To Change Her Mind Capitol F3337 Non album track1957 To A Sleeping Beauty b w Apology at Bedtime Capitol EAP871 The Best of Jackie Gleason1958 Where Is She Now b w Just Only Yesterday Capitol F4062 Non album tracks1962 Melancholy Serenade b w Apology at Bedtime Capitol 4704 The Best of Jackie Gleason1962 Allo Allo Allo b w Joi De Vivre Capitol 4800 Jackie Gleason Presents His Original Music For Gigot 1963 La La La La b w It s Such A Happy Day from Silk n Brass Capitol 4933 The Best of Jackie Gleason1964 Bird Brain b w Soldier in the Rain Capitol 5131 Non album tracks1965 I Had But 50 b w Casey at the Bat Shown as by Reginald Van Gleason III Capitol 54201966 One of Those Songs b w Love Theme From Madame X from Music Around The World For Lovers Only Capitol 5584 Silk n BrassAlbum discography Edit Year Title Label and Number U S Billboard Best Selling Popular Albums1 1952 Music for Lovers Only Capitol H352 10 1 153 total weeks within the Billboard Top Ten 77 2 1953 Lover s Rhapsody Capitol H366 10 No 13 1953 Music to Make You Misty Capitol H455 10 No 14 1954 Tawny Capitol L471 10 No 85 1954 And Awaaay We Go Capitol H511 10 No 16 1954 Music Martinis and Memories Capitol W509 No 17 1954 Melancholy Serenade Capitol E532 EP 8 1955 Lonesome Echo Capitol H627 10 No 19 1955 Music for Lovers Only Capitol W352 No 710 1955 Music to Make You Misty Capitol W455 No 1111 1955 And Awaaay We Go Capitol W511 No 8512 1955 Jackie Gleason Plays Romantic Jazz Capitol W568 No 213 1955 Music to Remember Her Capitol W570 No 514 1955 Lonesome Echo Capitol W627 No 115 1956 Captain Gleason s Garden Band Capitol E646 EP 16 1956 Music to Change Her Mind Capitol W632 No 817 1956 Night Winds Capitol W717 No 1018 1956 Merry Christmas Capitol W758 No 1619 1957 Music for the Love Hours Capitol W816 No 1320 1957 Velvet Brass Capitol SW W859 No 1621 1957 Oooo Capitol SW W905 No 1422 1958 The Torch with the Blue Flame Capitol SW W961 223 1958 Riff Jazz Capitol SW W1020 No 2724 1959 Rebound Capitol SW W1075 No 1825 1959 That Moment Capitol SW W1147 No 3626 1959 Take Me Along original cast RCA Victor LSO1050 27 1960 Aphrodisia Capitol SW W1250 No 4928 1960 The Actor s Prayer spoken by Gleason The Marsalin Institute 29 1960 Opiate D Amour Capitol SW W1314 No 5330 1961 Lazy Lively Love Capitol SW W1439 No 5731 1961 The Gentle Touch Capitol SW W1519 No 6232 1962 A Lover s Portfolio two records in a briefcase Capitol SWBO SBO1619 No 13533 1962 Love Embers and Flame Capitol SW W1689 No 10334 1963 Gigot soundtrack Capitol SW W1754 35 1963 Champagne Candlelight and Kisses Capitol SW W1830 No 9736 1963 Movie Themes For Lovers Only Capitol SW W1877 No 8237 1963 Today s Romantic Hits For Lovers Only Capitol SW W1978 No 11538 1964 Lover s Portfolio Vol 1 Music for Sippin Music for Dancin Capitol SW W1979 No 12839 1964 Lover s Portfolio Vol 2 Music for Listenin Music for Lovin Capitol SW W1980 No 13740 1964 Today s Romantic Hits For Lovers Only Vol 2 Capitol SW W2056 No 8241 1965 Last Dance For Lover s Only Capitol SW W2144 No 13142 1965 Silk n Brass Capitol SW W2409 No 14143 1966 Music from Around the World For Lovers Only Capitol SW W2471 No 10244 1966 How Sweet It Is for Lovers Capitol SW W2582 No 7145 1967 A Taste of Brass For Lovers Only Capitol SW W2684 No 20046 1967 Tis the Season Capitol ST T2791 No 3747 1967 The Best of Jackie Gleason Capitol SW W2796 48 1967 The Best of Jackie Gleason Capitol Record Club SWAO 90601 49 1968 Doublin in Brass Capitol SW W2880 No 16550 1969 The Best of Jackie Gleason vol 2 Capitol SKAO 146 51 1969 The Now Sound Capitol SW W2935 No 20052 1969 Irving Berlin s Music For Lovers Only Capitol SW106 53 1969 Close Up Capitol SW255 No 19254 1969 All I Want for Christmas Capitol ST346 No 1355 1970 Softly Capitol SL6664 56 1970 Romeo and Juliet A Theme for Lovers Capitol ST398 57 1971 Come Saturday Morning Capitol ST480 58 1972 Words of Love Capitol ST693 Compact disc discography Edit Year Title Label1984 Lush Moods Pair1987 Music Martinis and Memories Capitol1987 Intimate Music for Lovers CEMA Special Markets1990 Merry Christmas Capitol1991 Night Winds Music to Make You Misty Capitol1993 The Best of Jackie Gleason Curb1994 Shangri La Pair1995 Merry Christmas Razor amp Tie1995 Body amp Soul Pair1995 22 Melancholy Serenades CEMA Special Markets1996 And Awaaay We Go Scamp1996 How Sweet It Is The Velvet Brass Collection Razor amp Tie1996 Romantic Moods of Jackie Gleason Two Disc Set EMI Capitol1996 Thinking of You CEMA Special Markets1996 Tis the Season Capitol1996 The Best of Jackie Gleason Collectibles1999 Music for Lovers Only Music to Make You Misty Collector s Choice2000 Best of Jackie Gleason EMI Special Products2000 Tawny Music Martinis and Memories Collector s Choice2000 Music Moonlight and Memories Three Disc Set Reader s Digest2001 Lonesome Echo Collector s Choice2001 Music to Remember Her Collector s Choice2001 Lover s Rhapsody And Awaaay We Go Collector s Choice2001 Snowfall EMI2002 For Lovers Only 36 All Time Greatest Hits Three disc set Timeless Media Group2003 Plays Romantic Jazz Collector s Choice2004 Music to Change Her Mind Collector s Choice2005 Night Winds Collector s Choice2006 A Taste of Brass amp Doublin in Brass Capitol2007 Complete Bobby Hackett Sessions Four Disc Set Fine amp Mellow2009 Take Me Along 1959 Original Broadway Cast DRG2009 Tis the Season Capitol2011 That Moment Opiate D Amour Dutton Vocalion2011 The Torch with the Blue Flame The Best of Oooo Dutton Vocalion2012 Music For Lovers Only Real Gone Music2012 Movie Themes For Lovers Only The Last Dance For Lovers Only Dutton Vocalion2012 Romeo and Juliet A Theme for Lovers Music Around the World For Lovers Only Dutton Vocalion2012 Gigot Dutton Vocalion2012 Champagne Candlelight and Kisses Love Embers and Flame Dutton Vocalion2012 Tis the Season Merry Christmas Relayer RecordsReferences Edit Musiker Naomi Musiker Reuben February 25 2014 Conductors and Composers of Popular Orchestral Music A Biographical and Discographical Sourcebook Routledge ISBN 9781135917708 via Google Books Jackie Gleason Biography JackieGleason com Retrieved November 27 2020 a b c d Henry William A 1992 The Great One The Life and Legend of Jackie Gleason Internet Archive Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 41533 0 OCLC 651898009 a b Joel Whitburn Presents the Billboard Albums 6th edition ISBN 0 89820 166 7 Kid s talk News amp Record September 19 1995 Retrieved June 8 2009 via newsbank com a b Jackie Gleason Biography JackieGleason com Archived from the original on November 2 2008 Retrieved November 23 2008 Honeymooners Fifties Web Archived from the original on August 12 2003 a b Yudell Cliff December 28 1980 Famed funnyman shows a simpler wiser side The Milwaukee Journal Jackie Gleason Biography 1916 1987 filmreference com Archived from the original on 22 December 2008 Retrieved 13 January 2009 Bishop Jim February 11 1976 Jackie Gleason soon to be 60 Reading Eagle p 8 Pace Eric 25 June 1987 Jackie Gleason dies of cancer comedian and actor was 71 The New York Times obituary Archived from the original on 13 March 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Hamill Pete September 23 1985 Gleason s Second Honeymoon New York Magazine Retrieved February 3 2011 a b c d Lester Will June 25 1987 Entertainer Jackie Gleason the Great One dies of cancer The Rock Hill Herald Retrieved January 20 2011 dead link a b c Bacon James June 30 1987 Funny comic terrible husband The Milwaukee Journal a b c d A sound proof suite for the noisiest man on Broadway The Sydney Morning Herald December 26 1954 Retrieved January 28 2011 The Golden Ham A Candid Biography of Jackie Gleason Pittsburgh Post Gazette Google News Archive Search News google com Billboard October 10 1942 p 9 Retrieved August 17 2015 via Google Books Jackie Gleason Lew Parker Hellzapoppin 1943 Hanna Theater Cleveland OHIO Program 01 14 2012 Worthpoint com Retrieved August 17 2015 Dangerfield Rodney 2004 It s Not Easy Being Me A Lifetime of No Respect But Plenty of Sex and Drugs HarperCollins History of Los Angeles Restaurants that are extinct The Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on February 10 2011 Retrieved February 3 2011 Photo Slapsy Maxie s Nightclub Worthpoint Archived from the original on April 27 2018 Retrieved February 3 2011 The Life of Riley Museum of Broadcast Communications Archived from the original on February 11 2011 Retrieved February 3 2011 UCLA Newsroom UCLA Library Acquires Papers of Television Pioneer Harry Crane by Teri Bond Michael Archived July 31 2015 at the Wayback Machine November 18 2004 a b c d Brooks Tim Marsh Earle 2007 The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946 present Ballantine Books ISBN 978 0 345 49773 4 Jim Callo November 3 1980 After 53 Years in the Limelight Jackie Gleason Revels in How Sweet It Still Is People Time Inc Archived from the original on February 14 2013 Retrieved August 16 2012 Billy Ingram 1995 2011 Mistakes amp Blunders www TVParty com Billy Ingram Archived from the original on September 23 2012 Retrieved August 16 2012 Ingraham Clarke Electronicam DuMont Television Network Historical Website AoL Music 2012 Jackie Gleason Albums AoL Music AOL Inc Archived from the original on July 12 2012 Retrieved August 16 2012 Gael Fashingbauer Cooper June 15 2014 Casey Kasem s American Top 40 reached for the stars Archived June 15 2014 at the Wayback Machine NBC News Retrieved June 15 2014 An unparalleled storyteller Kasem loved to drop a teasing question about a song or a band then cut to commercial making his trivia so tantalizing that listeners just had to stay tuned to find out the answer Who had the most No 1 albums without a Top 40 single Comic and mood music expert Jackie Gleason at least at the time Bacon James How Sweet It Is ISBN 0 312 39621 X p 118 a b c Bacon James 1986 How Sweet it Is The Jackie Gleason Story St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 90229 8 Como Gleason Win Peabody Award Long Beach Independent April 12 1956 p 32 Archived from the original on January 6 2017 Retrieved January 5 2017 via Newspapers com Slifka Adrian M July 4 1957 Gleason Blasts Ratings As Senseless TV Critics Youngstown Vindicator Retrieved November 29 2010 For his final season 1956 57 he returned to live Honeymooners of varying lengths and presented a number of hour long musicals reprised a decade later in colour with a new Alice and Tricia Sheila McCrae and Jane Kean Pace Eric June 15 1987 Jackie Gleason Dies of Cancer Comedian And Actor Was 71 The New York Times Retrieved November 21 2010 Jackie Gleason s Round House Popular Mechanix April 1960 Archived from the original on December 31 2010 Retrieved November 21 2010 Statham Richard July 31 1963 Jackie Gleason s fabulous home is now up for sale Ottawa Citizen Retrieved November 21 2010 Here s House For Sale Jackie Gleason Special St Petersburg Times July 28 1963 Retrieved November 21 2010 Brooks Tim Marsh Earle 2007 The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946 present Ballantine Books ISBN 978 0 345 49773 4 Brown Wesley July 12 2014 Gleason showed real Hustler skills in Augusta The Augusta Chronicle Augusta Georgia US Archived from the original on December 20 2014 Retrieved December 20 2014 Jackie Gleason needed no help to portray the real life Minnesota Fats the cutthroat pool shark he portrayed in the 1961 film who toyed with opponents before making decisive trick shots to collect from local hustlers a b Bishop Jim December 31 1976 The Great Gleason Lewiston Evening Journal Retrieved January 21 2011 a b Rosenblatt Andy May 21 1978 Jackie Gleason Why The Great One Is Great Lakeland Ledger Retrieved January 21 2011 Meadows Audrey Daley Joe 1994 Jackie the Hypnotist Love Alice My Life as a Honeymooner Crown Publishing Group ISBN 0 517 59881 7 Bain Donald 1974 Long John Nebel Radio Talk King Master Salesman and Magnificent Charlatan New York Macmillan ISBN 0 02 505950 5 The Jackie Gleason Collection University of Miami Archived from the original on August 28 2015 Retrieved August 17 2015 JackieGleason Legacy Libraries LibraryThing Archived from the original on December 20 2013 Retrieved December 20 2013 Larry Holcombe The Presidents and UFOs A Secret History from FDR to Obama New York Macmillan March 2015 a b c Scott Vernon November 9 1983 Actress seeks place beyond the shadow of her legendary father St Petersburg Times Retrieved January 28 2011 a b Jackie Gleason Asks Divorce in New York The Times News October 24 1968 Retrieved January 28 2011 Squabble Erupts in Hospital Room For Bedridden Gleason s Affections The Miami News February 9 1954 dead link a b Squabble Erupts in Hospital Room For Bedridden Gleason s Affections The Miami News February 9 1954 dead link Clemens Samuel 2020 Pat A Biography of Hollywood s Blonde Starlet Sequoia Press p 111 ISBN 978 0578682822 Wilson Earl February 13 1954 New York St Petersburg Times Retrieved November 19 2010 Gleason s Ankle Leg Are Broken Youngstown Vindicator February 1 1954 Retrieved November 19 2010 Darrach Brad July 13 1987 A Fond Goodbye to the Great One People Archived from the original on February 17 2015 Retrieved February 17 2015 Jackie Gleason Is Granted Divorce Gettysburg Times June 24 1970 Retrieved November 19 2010 Forbes Donald July 4 1970 Jackie Gleason Weds Secretary The Tuscaloosa News Retrieved January 20 2011 People in the News Action Contested Reading Eagle September 18 1974 Retrieved January 20 2011 Gleasons Divorce The Evening News November 20 1975 Retrieved January 20 2011 How Sweet She Is The Evening News December 17 1975 Retrieved January 20 2011 a b Dickerson A J June 27 1987 Gleason s widow pins last carnation on Great One s lapel fans gather Schenectady Gazette Retrieved November 19 2010 Jackie Gleason To Marry For Third Time Tuesday Sarasota Herald Tribune December 12 1975 Retrieved November 19 2010 Jackie Gleason people com Archived from the original on December 6 2017 Retrieved April 27 2018 Doctors Say heart attack was imminent before Gleason surgery Daytona Beach Morning Journal June 6 1978 Retrieved April 9 2012 Gleason ails Schnoz better The Miami News June 1 1978 dead link Gleason in hospital again The Telegraph Herald May 30 1978 Retrieved April 9 2012 Wilson Catherine June 26 1987 Gleason hid nature of illness from fans The Times News Retrieved January 28 2011 Konicki Steve June 25 1987 Gleason s death came quietly at age 71 The Miami News Pace Eric June 25 1987 JACKIE GLEASON DIES OF CANCER COMEDIAN AND ACTOR WAS 71 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 9 2022 Jackie Gleason Theater Away It Goes NBC Miami May 5 2010 Retrieved October 1 2010 Future of Former Jackie Gleason Theater Uncertain Palm Beach Post June 16 2010 Archived from the original on June 23 2010 Retrieved October 1 2010 Entertainer of the Year Awards Special with Jackie Gleason as host Lumberton North Carolina The Robesonian January 11 1976 Retrieved August 15 2019 Rudolph Cathy December 2 2013 Paul Lynde A Biography His Life His Love s and His Laughter BearManor Media p 202 ISBN 978 1629330655 Bus Depot is dedicated to Jackie Gleason The Pittsburgh Press July 1 1988 Retrieved January 20 2011 Miller Darryl H October 12 2002 Gleason Just Skims the Star s Surface Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on August 7 2016 Retrieved December 10 2017 Hart Hugh October 10 2002 And awaaay he goes Brad Garrett fulfills dream of playing troubled talented Jackie Gleason in CBS biopic San Francisco Chronicle Archived from the original on December 11 2017 Retrieved December 10 2017 The Quick 10 10 Billboard 200 Milestones Mental Floss April 23 2009 Archived from the original on September 5 2015 Retrieved August 17 2015 Sources EditJoel Whitburn Presents the Billboard Albums 6th edition ISBN 0 89820 166 7 Whitburn Joel 1991 The Billboard Book of Top 40 Albums Revised and enlarged 2nd ed Billboard Books ISBN 0 8230 7534 6 Additional information obtained can be verified within Billboard s online archive services and print editions of the magazine Further reading EditBishop Jim The Golden Ham Simon amp Schuster 1956 Metz Robert CBS Reflections in a Bloodshot Eye New York 1975 Bacon James How Sweet It Is Jackie Gleason New York St Martin s Press 1985 Weatherby W J Jackie Gleason An Intimate Portrait of the Great One Pharos Books 1992 Henry William A The Great One The Life and Legend of Jackie Gleason New York Doubleday 1992 Meadows Audrey Love Alice New York Crown Publishers 1994 American Legends Series The Life of Jackie Gleason Charles River Editors ISBN 9781496125811 2014 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jackie Gleason Jackie Gleason at IMDb Jackie Gleason at the TCM Movie Database Jackie Gleason at the Internet Broadway Database Jackie Gleason Discography at Space Age Pop Music Honeymooners at The Fifties Web Cavalcade of Stars 1950 episode at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jackie Gleason amp oldid 1130971545, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.