Tom Poston Movies
Though many casual observers perceive that comic actor
Tom Poston was "discovered" by
Steve Allen in 1956, Poston had in fact been a performer long before
Allen ever set foot on a stage. At age 9, Poston was a member of the Flying Zebleys, an acrobatic troupe. After Air Force service in World War II, he began his formal acting training at the AADA. Poston made his "legit" New York stage debut in
Jose Ferrer's Cyrano de Bergerac (1947). With several years of stage work under his belt, Poston was engaged to host the local New York TV variety series Entertainment (1955), and it was this effort that brought him to the attention of
Steve Allen. The story goes that Poston was so flustered at his audition for
Allen's TV variety series that he forgot his own name when asked. From 1956 through 1960, Poston was seen along with
Louis Nye and
Don Knotts as a member of the
Allen stock company; appropriately, he was most often cast as a "man on the street" interviewee who could never remember his name. Poston won an Emmy for his work on
Allen's show in 1959, and that same year hosted the weekday TV game show Split Personality; this gig led to a long tenure as a guest panelist on other quiz programs. In films from 1953, Poston starred in a pair of offbeat
William Castle-directed comedies,
Zotz (1962) and The Old Dark House (1963). Poston's TV sitcom credits include such roles as prison guard Sullivan on On the Rocks (1975), absentminded Damon Jerome on
We've Got Each Other (1977), cantankerous neighbor Franklin Delano Bickley on
Mork and Mindy and Ringo Crowley on
Good Grief (1990). In 1982, Poston beat out
Jerry Van Dyke for his most famous prime-time TV role: caretaker George Utley on Newhart. Poston died at age 85 in April 2007, of undisclosed causes. Until the time of his death, he was married to Suzanne Pleshette of The Bob Newhart Show. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide