9780880641739
Art Carney: A Biography share button
Michael Seth Starr
Format Hardcover
Dimensions 6.25 (w) x 9.33 (h) x 1.05 (d)
Pages 256
Publisher Fromm Intl
Publication Date 1997/04/01
ISBN 9780880641739
Book ISBN 10 0880641738
About Book
Art Carney is one of the first legendary superstars spawned by the age of television. His meteoric rise to fame began in the Fifties as Jackie Gleason's sidekick, sewer worker Ed Norton in "The Honeymooners" - one of TV's all-time favorites, a perennial fixture on the small screen. Carney's irrepressible comic genius earned him his first breaks, in clubs and on radio, and with bit parts on the new medium of television. When he landed the supporting role opposite Jackie Gleason - a B-movie Hollywood actor and mediocre nightclub comic then producing some of the most brilliant sketch comedy on the small screen - television history was about to be made. The screwball antics of Gleason and Carney became an instant classic. But Carney had to spend years trying to shake the image of Norton, lamenting time and again how he was always identified as Gleason's goofy pal. But shake it he did, on Broadway and in Hollywood, revealing himself as a brilliant actor who garnered some of the most prized awards of stage and screen, including six Emmys. In this first biography of Art Carney, Michael Seth Starr tells the story of an extremely private, nearly unapproachable figure, a show business recluse whose sweetness and introverted nature mask the ferocity of rare acting talent, a man who struggled with clinical depression and alcohol to become one of America's most beloved comic actors.
Reviews

Publishers Weekly - Cahners\\Publishers_Weekly

The life of TV, stage and film actor Art Carney (b. 1918) is treated compassionately in this genial, briskly paced bio by Starr (Peter Sellers, 1991), a deputy TV editor of the New York Post. The youngest son of an Irish family in Mount Vernon, New York, Carney in the 1940s parlayed a talent for clowning and doing celebrity impersonations into a radio career. Severely wounded during WWII (he walks with a limp to this day), Carney returned to work in TV to become "a seminal figure in popularizing the new medium," playing sewer worker Ed Norton to Jackie Gleason's bus-driving Ralph Kramden on The Honeymooners. Starr's account of Carney and Gleason's working relationship is a main thread of the book, which depicts two enormously talented men who never quite made friends off camera, but who created magic together on screen. Carney comes across as one of the nicest men in show business; none of his many co-workers interviewed by Starr-including Lily Tomlin, Neil Simon and director Robert Benton-has an unkind word for him. Starr writes of Carney's insecurity as an artist and of his lifelong battle with alcohol. The author's affection for his subject is manifest throughout, and he seems to take pleasure in describing Carney's comeback (one of several) as an actor in such films as Harry and Tonto (for which he won the 1974 Best Actor Oscar) and The Late Show. If the book has a weakness, it is in Starr's hinting at Carney's "demons" without ever quite telling us what they are. But overall this is a warm portrait of a complicated man who is also a gifted actor. The book includes a list of Carney's film, TV and theater performances.

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

The life of TV, stage and film actor Art Carney (b. 1918) is treated compassionately in this genial, briskly paced bio by Starr (Peter Sellers, 1991), a deputy TV editor of the New York Post. The youngest son of an Irish family in Mount Vernon, New York, Carney in the 1940s parlayed a talent for clowning and doing celebrity impersonations into a radio career. Severely wounded during WWII (he walks with a limp to this day), Carney returned to work in TV to become "a seminal figure in popularizing the new medium," playing sewer worker Ed Norton to Jackie Gleason's bus-driving Ralph Kramden on The Honeymooners. Starr's account of Carney and Gleason's working relationship is a main thread of the book, which depicts two enormously talented men who never quite made friends off camera, but who created magic together on screen. Carney comes across as one of the nicest men in show business; none of his many co-workers interviewed by Starrincluding Lily Tomlin, Neil Simon and director Robert Bentonhas an unkind word for him. Starr writes of Carney's insecurity as an artist and of his lifelong battle with alcohol. The author's affection for his subject is manifest throughout, and he seems to take pleasure in describing Carney's comeback (one of several) as an actor in such films as Harry and Tonto (for which he won the 1974 Best Actor Oscar) and The Late Show. If the book has a weakness, it is in Starr's hinting at Carney's "demons" without ever quite telling us what they are. But overall this is a warm portrait of a complicated man who is also a gifted actor. The book includes a list of Carney's film, TV and theater performances. Photos not seen by PW. (Apr.)

Booknews

A editor pays homage to a comedian often typecast as a "second banana" in such roles as Ed Norton in the popular TV show . Starr includes a resum<'e> of Carney's long career in television, film (notably, ), and theater (e.g. ). This is a reprint of a 1998 book. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)