Bert Lahr
Lahr made his film debut in 1931's "Flying High" playing an oddball inventor. Like several other stage stars (e.g., Ethel Merman), his personality was too larger-than-life to be captured on screen. In his early films, Lahr comes off as too broad and overbearing. Despite an on-again, off-again film career over the next thirty-odd years, he had only one role that perfectly suited his unique abilities. Some critics have made a case that Lahr's portrayal of the Cowardly Lion in "The Wizard of Oz" is not only his best screen work, but also one of the greatest screen performances ever. Debate over that will undoubtedly rage into the next century, but there is not doubting that children of all ages respond to the character. Teamed with fellow vaudevillians Ray Bolger and Jack Haley, Lahr proves close to perfection whether warbling the number "If I Were King of the Forest" or cowering in fear of Margaret Hamilton's truly scary Wicked Witch of the West. None of his other film roles allowed him to tap into his personality in quite the same way.Even though his film career proved minor, Lahr continued to triumph as a stage performer. The same year as "Oz," he and Ethel Merman scored a hit in the Cole Porter musical "Du Barry Was a Lady" as did his reteaming with Bea Lillie for Billy Rose's "Seven Lively Arts" (with another Porter score) in 1944, A rare dramatic role in "Burlesque" (1946) proved that there was more to his talent than just a funny man and it paved the way for future roles that would tap hitherto unknown sides of his persona. Notable stage successes in revues like "Two on the Aisle" (1951) and "The Girls Against the Boys" (1959) bookended triumphs like his starring role opposite E.G. Marshall in the 1956 landmark Broadway production of Samuel Beckett's "Waiting for Godot." Beckett had conceived the piece as a vaudeville and Lahr was more than in his element. Turns in Shakespeare (particularly as Bottom, one of the Bard's best comic roles, in "A Midsummer Night's Dream" in 1960) and in such sophisticated comedies as "Hotel Paradiso" (1957) and "The Beauty Part" (1962) further testified to his versatility. Lahr's career culminated in a Tony-winning star performance in "Foxy" (1964), a musical adaptation of "Volpone." The actor collapsed on the set of his last film "The Night They Raided Minsky's" (1967), which ironically was set in the heyday of burlesque. A trouper to the end, Lahr succumbed to a hemorrhage that was a result of complications from cancer on December 4, 1967 as age 72. His son, author and critic John Lahr, wrote a biography "Notes on a Cowardly Lion," that proved (like many other comedians) he was a troubled and unhappy individual. Despite his private persona, the public Lahr was a consummate entertainer and forever holds a special place in the hearts of children everywhere who perennially watched "The Wizard of Oz."