Don Knotts, TV's Barney Fife, dies at 81 (AP) Updated: 2006-02-26 10:14
Knotts' G-rated films were family fun, not box-office blockbusters. In most,
he ends up the hero and gets the girl — a girl who can see through his
nervousness to the heart of gold.
In the part-animated 1964 film "The Incredible Mr. Limpet," Knotts played a
meek clerk who turns into a fish after he is rejected by the Navy.
When it was announced in 1998 that Jim Carrey would star in a "Limpet"
remake, Knotts responded: "I'm just flattered that someone of Carrey's caliber
is remaking something I did. Now, if someone else did Barney Fife, THAT would be
different."
In the 1967 film "The Reluctant Astronaut," co-starring Leslie Nielsen,
Knotts' father enrolls his wimpy son — operator of a Kiddieland rocket ride — in
NASA's space program. Knotts poses as a famous astronaut to the joy of his
parents and hometown but is eventually exposed for what he really is, a janitor
so terrified of heights he refuses to ride an airplane.
In the 1969 film "The Love God?," he was a geeky bird-watcher who is duped
into becoming publisher of a naughty men's magazine and then becomes a national
sex symbol. Eventually, he comes to his senses, leaves the big city and marries
the sweet girl next door.
He was among an army of comedians from Buster Keaton to Jonathan Winters to
liven up the 1963 megacomedy "It's A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World." Other films
include "The Ghost and Mr. Chicken" (1966); "The Shakiest Gun in the West"
(1968); and a few Disney films such as "The Apple Dumpling Gang" (1974); "Gus"
(1976); and "Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo" (1977).
In 1998, he had a key role in the back-to-the-past movie "Pleasantville,"
playing a folksy television repairman whose supercharged remote control sends a
teen boy and his sister into a TV sitcom past.
Knotts began his show biz career even before he graduated from high school,
performing as a ventriloquist at local clubs and churches. He majored in speech
at West Virginia University, then took off for the big city.
"I went to New York cold. On a $100 bill. Bummed a ride," he recalled in a
visit to his hometown of Morgantown, where city officials renamed a street for
him in 1998.
Within six months, Knotts had taken a job on a radio Western called "Bobby
Benson and the B-Bar-B Riders," playing a wisecracking, know-it-all handyman. He
stayed with it for five years, then came his series TV debut on "The Steve Allen
Show."
He married Kay Metz in 1948, the year he graduated from college. The couple
had two children before divorcing in 1969. Knotts later married, then divorced
Lara Lee Szuchna.
In recent years, he said he had no plans to retire, traveling with theater
productions and appearing in print and TV ads for Kodiak pressure treated wood.
The world laughed at Knotts, but it also laughed with him.
He treasured his comedic roles and could point to only one role that wasn't
funny, a brief stint on the daytime drama "Search for Tomorrow."
"That's the only serious thing I've done. I don't miss
that," Knotts said.
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