Dom DeLuise Movies
With his trademark heavyset figure and attitude of manic glee, the genial
Dom DeLuise rose to prominence as one of America's most beloved comedic character actors. Born
Dominick DeLuise in Brooklyn in 1933, the future star attended the High School for the Performing Arts in Manhattan, then graduated from Tufts University in Boston.
DeLuise wasted no time in making a beeline for television, and though early efforts were low-profiled, including a turn as Tinker the Toymaker on the daytime children's show Tinker's Workshop and the portrayal of a bumbling detective named Kenny Ketchum on The Shari Lewis Show,
DeLuise's popularity spread, carrying him swiftly into other formats and venues.
DeLuise initially graduated to primetime variety courtesy of
The Garry Moore show, where he enjoyed recurring sketches as an inept magician named Dominick the Great. He then appeared on innumerable subsequent variety programs (often as a regular contributor) including
The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour,
The Dean Martin Show, and
The Flip Wilson Show. The comic made the leap into filmdom as early as the earnest Cold War thriller
Fail-Safe (1964) (as an edgy flier), but drama didn't serve him well. He found a much stronger suit in comedy, initially courtesy of
Mel Brooks, who cast him in films beginning with
The Twelve Chairs (1970), as a shifty priest, Father Fyodor. Their collaborations extended to the 1976
Silent Movie (as studio man Dom Bell), the 1981
History of the World, Part I (as Emperor Nero), the 1986
Spaceballs (as the voice of Pizza the Hut), and the 1993
Robin Hood: Men in Tights (as the godfather-like Don Giovanni).
The actor received additional screen exposure via friendships with
Gene Wilder (in whose outings
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother and
The World's Greatest Lover he co-starred) and
Burt Reynolds, who -- in one of either's finest moments -- cast
DeLuise as an around-the-bend asylum resident who tries to assist
Reynolds' character with a suicide bid in the jet-black comedy
The End (1978). Unfortunately, additional
Reynolds collaborations didn't fare so well -- they included such schlocky vehicles as the
Cannonball Run series -- but helped
DeLuise maintain a familiar profile. He teamed with
Mel Brooks' wife,
Anne Bancroft, for a starring role in that actress' directorial debut, the comedy-drama
Fatso (1980), but it earned mostly lukewarm reviews. In the meantime,
DeLuise himself took the director's chair for the nutty caper comedy
Hot Stuff, which gleaned a generally positive critical and public reception.
As time rolled on,
DeLuise unfortunately drifted into filmic material that suffered from serious lapses in quality and judgment, witness his performances as a porn lord in
Bob Clark's wretched buddy farce
Loose Cannons and convict Dr. Animal Cannibal Pizza in the horror send-up
Silence of the Hams, both enormous box office flops. Taking critical and public reactions to these efforts as a cue, the comic accepted fewer and few assignments as the misfires happened and instead began to place a strong emphasis on his own cooking skills; the gifted chef authored two well-received cookbooks, the 1988 Eat This...It'll Make You Feel Better! and the 1997 Eat This Too!...It'll Also Make You Feel Better.
DeLuise also published a series of books for children, such as the 1990 Charlie the Caterpillar and the 2007 The Pouch Potato.
Dom DeLuise died in May 2009 at the age of 75. He was survived by his wife since 1965, actress
Carol Arthur, and three sons,
Peter,
Michael, and
David. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

- 2005
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- 2000
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- Add The Lion of Oz to Queue
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In this animated adventure inspired by the well-loved characters created by Frank L. Baum, a performing lion from a circus (Jason Priestley) is given a special prize for courage and is sent out to visit the fabled Land of Oz to claim his reward. En route, the lion encounters the Wicked Witch of the East (Lynn Redgrave), who demands that the lion bring her the magical flower of Oz, which will allow her to possess even more power. With the help of a girl named Wimsik, the lion finds the flowers the Wicked Witch needs, but he realizes that he's thrown away his valor in the process, becoming the Cowardly Lion. The Lion of Oz and the Badge of Courage also features the voice talents of Tim Curry, Bob Goldthwait, Jane Horrocks, and Dom DeLuise. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Jason Priestley, Lynn Redgrave, (more)

- 2000
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En route to a paradise planet, the SG-1 passes through the Stargate--and unexpectedly ends up at Stargate Command. A barrage of curious and contradictory events leads to the realization that each of the SG-1 team members has been given an alien brain implant. As Dr. Frasier (Teryl Rothery) endeavors to remove them, the implants manifest themselves as an odd-looking man named Urgo (Dom DeLuise), who can be seen and heard only by the team members--and who cannot be disposed of without causing the deaths of everyone who has been implanted. Director Peter DeLuise, the son of guest star Dom DeLuise, shows up unbilled in a significant cameo role. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1997
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Along with Hush Puppy, Charlie Horse, and Lamb Chop, Shari Lewis offers children an introduction to the history and traditions of the Jewish holiday Passover in Shari Lewis: Shari's Passover Surprise. Guest star Dom DeLuise cooks the traditional Seder per Charlie Horse's request, while Lamb Chop rehearses her Four Questions. Hush Puppy, meanwhile, is busy trying to sniff out the hidden matzo bread. ~ Tracie Cooper, Rovi
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- 1995
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Shelley Long makes her first appearance as Dottie Wilcox, one-half of the hosting team of the popular daytime talk show "Dick and Dottie" (based on guess-which syndicated talkfest). Unable to hide her disdain for the lightweight Dottie, Murphy (Candice Bergen) makes a catty comment about the woman during an "FYI" broadcast. Forced by the network to apologize to Dottie, Murphy proceeds in her own inimitable fashion to make a bad situation worse. Comedian Dom DeLuise and Hollywood columnists Army Archerd and Liz Smith appear as themselves. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1993
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Feeling neglected, the Bundys' dog Buck (voiced by Cheech Martin) runs away from home--only to end up in the pound. If no one claims him within a week, Buck is going to be taken through the "little green door" and gassed to death. Unfortunately, no one in the Bundy family is aware that Buck is gone; they're more concerned with such important matters as Al's physical abuse on the job ("Kneed in the Nay-Nays"!) This is the only episode in which we see the Bundy living room's fabled "fourth wall." ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1992
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A Tribute to the Boys is a well-intentioned salute to the comedy genius of Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy. Dom DeLuise hosts this 90-minute gushfest, while celebrities ranging from John Landis to Johnny Carson offer their affectionate memories of Stan and Ollie's best films. The team's silent work is given short shrift with a brief snippet from Two Tars (1928); the bulk of the clips are gleaned from the talkie era. Unfortunately, these precious black and white vignettes have been computer colorized, and none too attractively (wait until you see the horrendous color scheme of Oliver Hardy's apartment in the "new" version of 1938's Block-Heads). In addition, Dom DeLuise's narration is often wildly inaccurate: to quote one example of many, DeLuise claims that Oliver Hardy died with Stan Laurel at his bedside, when in fact Laurel was himself so ill at the time that he was forbidden even to attend Hardy's funeral.. A Tribute to the Boys is enjoyable enough, but given the subject matter, it could have been infinitely better. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1992
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Dom DeLuise hosts this star-studded homage to the comedy genius of Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi
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- 1991
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Dom DeLuise's son Michael holds the directorial reins in the direct-to-video Almost Pregnant. Onetime "Charlie's Angel" Tanya Roberts plays a woman who'll do anything to become pregnant. Since her hubby Jeff Conaway can't deliver the goods, she decides to rely upon a surrogate. Her first new partner turns out to have had a vasectomy-and this is only the beginning. The director's dad makes an amusing appearance in this strident but undeniably funny bedroom farce. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1989
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- 1987
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For all we know, there may be even more unknown and unseen Dom DeLuise films lurking around out there. Until we did the research, we didn't know My African Adventure existed. Based loosely on a comic novel by Tamar Burstein, the film concerns the son of an American ambassador who meets a steady stream of merry mercenaries while heading into the African interior. One of the plot-motivating factors is a talking monkey; other devices aren't quite as subtle. In addition to Mr. DeLuise (who isn't the lead, though he gets top billing), My African Adventure also features Jimmy "Dy-No-Mite" Walker. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Dom DeLuise, Jimmie "J.J." Walker, (more)

- 1987
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In this comedy/thriller, starring writer/director Alberto Sordi, Pietro (Sordi) and his wife (Anna Longhi) are Romans through-and-through. In their whole lives, they have never traveled far from their beloved city, though once they traveled to Bologna. Somehow, their son, the apple of their eye, has enrolled in New York University, in Manhattan. In this film, they decide to visit him there, and when Pietro witnesses a mafia killing, the police set him up in his own taxi and give him a phony identity. Since he doesn't know the city at all and doesn't speak English, this probably puts him an equal footing with a lot of other taxi drivers, so he fits right in. Eventually, in order to flush out the killers, the police use him as bait in a sting operation set in Miami. Meanwhile, the hapless fellow must cope with the peculiar culture he finds in America, (a country where everyone evidently speaks fluent Italian, as that is the language the film is shot in). ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Alberto Sordi, Anna Longhi, (more)

- 1983
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- 1983
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- Add Happy to Queue
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Roger Hanover (Dom DeLuise) once enjoyed TV stardom as "Happy the Clown." Now, however, Roger is a has-been, reduced to private parties and store openings. Even so, he remains a hero in the eyes of his adoring son Roger Jr. (played, appropriately enough, by David DeLuise). To prove his true worth to his boy, Roger personally investigates the murder of his partner Bernie Nelson (Jack Gilford), thereby placing himself and his family in dire peril. Virtually a DeLuise family reunion, Happy also featured Dom's wife, comedienne Carol Arthur, and his other two sons, Michael and Peter. Made for television, the film debuted October 26, 1983. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 198z
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Gallows humor abounds in this satirical compilation of skits. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- 1979
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The eponymous young comic is Richard Lewis, Mr. Jewish Angst himself. Lewis agonizes over moving from his native New York to Los Angeles. No matter how successful he becomes, he is never satisfied. Fortunately, he is able to channel his inner demons into his morbidly hilarious nightclub act. Cowritten by Lewis and Bennett Trainer, Diary of a Young Comic was directed by Gary Weis, whose short films were once a mainstay of TV's Saturday Night Live. In fact, Young Comic was first offered to the world as a one-shot replacement for SNL in 1979. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1974
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In this made-for-television comedy, a young woman gets herself into trouble when she begins fulfilling her man-craving with a string of married men. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- 1971
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- Add Evil Roy Slade to Queue
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Overlooked when it first aired February 18, 1972, the made-for-TV Evil Roy Slade has gained a loyal and protective cult following in the past 20 years. The film was the second pilot for a never-sold TV western spoof created by Garry Marshall and Jerry Belson, Sheriff Who?. Actually, it was the second and third pilot, since Evil Roy Slade has been cobbled together from two hour-long films. John Astin is terrific in the title role, playing an outlaw so repulsive that, when he was orphaned and left stranded in the desert as a baby, even the wolves didn't want him! As an adult, Evil Roy Slade can't resist "going the extra mile" in his nastiness: while robbing a bank, he stops to pilfer a fountain pen chained to one of the desks, and the next shot shows Slade riding off into the sunset, dragging the desk behind him. Attempting to reform for the sake of pretty schoolmarm Betsy Potter (Pamela Austin), Slade simply cannot curb his crooked tendencies, so it's up to Dick Shawn as singing Sheriff Bing Bell ("Will somebody please answer that door?") to bring the criminal to justice. Shawn previously appeared in the original 1967 Sheriff Who? pilot as the "fastest interior decorator in the West"; in both films, he's almost unbearably funny. The Marshall/Belson script is full of hilarious running gags and throwaway jokes. Our favorite bit concerns railroad magnate Mickey Rooney's legendary stubby index finger: "They still sing about it around campfires at night," claims Rooney--and indeed, they do. The supporting cast includes such never-fail laughgetters as Milton Berle, Henry Gibson, Dom DeLuise and Edie Adams; also, keep a lookout for John Ritter and Penny Marshall in unbilled bits. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1970
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In this romance, an ex-Marine begins looking for a fellow Vietnam vet in hopes of making it as musicians in New York. He does not realize it, but he is driving in stolen cars. After being chased by the police, he ditches the cars and hitchhikes the New York. By the time he arrives, his pal has already left. At the friend's former apartment, the Marine gets romantic with a hippie chick and begins singing in the Village where he finds audiences unreceptive. He then boards a bus where he meets a young woman on her way to marry a Marine who ends up refusing to marry her. Soon she and the musical Marine are traveling companions. They are accompanied by a trick chicken, and a midget. Just as he finally finds his friend, the girl states that she is pregnant and the honorable fellow offers to marry her, but she will not. Then her old fiancé appears and a fight ensues. She ends up going with him. When the singer finally gets his big chance, he sees the girl watching him and realizes they are in love. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Glen Campbell, Kim Darby, (more)

- 1968
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In this comedy, New York City undergoes a dramatic change when a toucan carrying a strange virus is smuggled through customs. In those it infects, the virus causes an intense euphoria and a desire to do good. The first man to receive the infected bird is a misanthropic, cynical artist who lives in an apartment with his girlfriend. The couple names the toucan "Amigo," and soon they are indeed happy. They decide to spread it around and so the bird is freed. The Big Apple goes into an economic tailspin as its residents become deliriously happy and stop buying cigarettes, booze and tranquilizers. To save the financially foundering city, the mayor and a presidential envoy begin distributing unpleasant masks to the happy city-dwellers. The artist and friends thwart the officials' scheme by infecting the masks. So begins a battle between the officials and the artist. Eventually Amigo is caught, and an antidote is delivered. The renowned rudeness, cruelty and selfishness of the native New Yorkers quickly returns, and the city is saved. The artist realizes that his quest has been futile, and he devotes the rest of his time and energy to making his girlfriend happy. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- George Peppard, Mary Tyler Moore, (more)

- 1967
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- Add The Busybody to Queue
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A nosey housewife (Marguerite Viby) takes on extra responsibilities when her husband (Buster Larsen) hurts his back while reading the Sunday paper. When she finds a dead body in the upstairs office, she calls the police. The detective (Ole Monty) is summoned, and he discovers the woman is his old school dancing partner. When she turns around to renew the old acquaintance, the corpse is gone in this offbeat situation comedy. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Sid Caesar, Robert Ryan, (more)

- 1966
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A bolt of lightning from Grandpa's machinery causes Herman (Fred Gwynne) to become horribly "disfigured"--at least by Munster standards. Specifically, Herman now looks exactly like actor Fred Gwynne without his Munster makeup. Horrified at the prospect of going through life in this fashion, Herman seeks the aid of a plastic surgeon, who turns out to be none other than his old friend Dr. Dudley (previously played by Paul Lynde, and now enacted by Dom DeLuise). ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1966
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- Add The Glass Bottom Boat to Queue
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The Glass Bottom Boat is hardly a high point in the careers of star Doris Day and director Frank Tashlin, though it is a better-than-usual example of that pure-'60s genre, the "spy spoof." Day plays Jennifer Nelson, a PR worker at NASA in Florida. She also doubles as a "mermaid" for her father, Axel (Arthur Godfrey), the skipper of a glass-bottom tourist boat. While garbed in her skimpy mermaid costume, she has a run-in with handsome space technician Bruce Templeton (Rod Taylor). Through a series of misunderstandings, Bruce is led to believe that Jennifer is an enemy spy, determined to steal scientific secrets. Several other characters enter into the plot, including bumbling secret agent Julius Pritter (Dom DeLuise) and prissy security chief Homer Cripps (Paul Lynde). Also on hand are TV favorites Dick Martin as Jennifer's erstwhile beau and Eric Fleming as a man of mystery. A few cute celebrity cameos round out this ribtickler, while Doris Day, as always, gets a few opportunities to sing. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Doris Day, Rod Taylor, (more)

- 1964
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In this comedy, a reluctant groom gets into deep trouble when his fiancee accidentally finds one of his diaries. The book is chock full of detailed accounts of his previous sexploits and yet the mortified girl continues to read on. The entries unfold on screen via flashback. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Dagne Crane, Joe Silver, (more)