One of the best TV shows of all time. |
The award will be presented during a televised ceremony on Sunday, January 27,2012 at 8 p.m. on TNT and TBS.
"Dick is the consummate entertainer — an enormously talented performer whose work has crossed nearly every major category of entertainment,” said SAG-AFTRA President Ken Howard. “From his career-changing Broadway turn in Bye Bye Birdie and his deadpan humor in The Dick Van Dyke Show, to his unforgettable performance as Bert in Mary Poppins, he sets a high bar for actors. Stage, big screen, small screen, literally everywhere he has worked he has inspired millions of fans and has had a tremendously positive impact on the industry and the world.”
In addition to his ground-breaking sitcom from the early sixties, co-starring Mary Tyler Moore and produced by Carl Reiner, Van Dyke has appeared in many movies and television shows, including Diagnosis Murder. Another big film for him was the children's classic Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.
Here's his full bio:
He was born Richard Wayne Van Dyke in West
Plains, Missouri, on December 13, 1925, and raised in Danville,
Illinois, hometown as well to Donald O’Connor, Gene Hackman and Bobby
Short. As a youngster he taught himself music, magic and pantomime. By
16, he was appearing in school plays, running track, serving as junior
class president and working part time as an announcer on a local radio
station. Enlisting in the Air Force at 18, he soon was performing for
the troops and hosting a radio show called “Flight Time.” After one
year of duty he was back in Danville, giving advertising a try, but it
was not a fit. With another Danville local, Phil Erickson, he hit the
road in a record-pantomime act called “The Merry Mutes,” a perfect
showcase for his physical comedy gifts. While appearing in Los Angeles,
he sent for his high school sweetheart, Marjorie Willet. The two were
married on “Bride and Groom,” a network radio program offering gifts
and a honeymoon to newlyweds.
After a run hosting a
daytime talk show in Atlanta and a morning show in New Orleans, CBS put
him under contract. Van Dyke moved to New York where in 1954 he began
hosting “The Morning Show” (which featured up and coming newscaster
Walter Cronkite). Other hosting jobs preceded his 1957 television-acting
debut on an episode of “The Phil Silvers Show.” and his Broadway debut
in 1959 with Bert Lahr in the comedy revue “The Boys Against the
Girls.” The following year his career soared when he was cast by
director/choreographer Gower Champion opposite Chita Rivera in “Bye Bye
Birdie.” His performance as rock star Conrad Birdie’s
songwriter/manager Albert Peterson earned Van Dyke a Tony® Award and
brought him to the attention of Sheldon Leonard and Carl Reiner, who
signed him for a pilot opposite newcomer Mary Tyler Moore. The now
eponymous “The Dick Van Dyke Show,” starring Van Dyke and Moore as Rob
and Laura Petrie, premiered in 1961 and ran for five seasons. With a
perfect ensemble cast including Rose Marie and Morey Amsterdam, the
wittily written series was a showcase for Van Dyke’s genius for
physical comedy, earning him three lead actor Emmy® Awards.
The
tireless Van Dyke spent his series’ hiatus shooting the film version
of “Bye Bye Birdie” in 1963 followed by “What a Way to Go” and Disney’s
1964 musical classic “Mary Poppins,” It won five Academy Awards®
including one for star Julie Andrews (SAG’s 2006 Life Achievement Award
recipient) and earned Van Dyke a Golden Globe® nomination and, with
Andrews, a Grammy®. A run of films followed including “Lt. Robin
Crusoe, USN,” (1966), “Divorce American Style” (1967), “Fitzwilly”
(1967), the musical “Chitty Chitty Bang-Bang” (1968), Garson Kanin’s
satire on conformity “Some Kind of a Nut” (1969) and Norman Lear’s
anti-smoking “Cold Turkey” (1970). Van Dyke, who had delivered the
eulogies for his comedy idols Stan Laurel and Buster Keaton, explored
the role of a fictional silent movie star in 1969’s “The Comic,” He
would return to the big screen again in Stanley Kramer’s “The Runner
Stumbles” (1978), Warren Beatty’s “Dick Tracy” (1990) and more recently
the Ben Stiller comedy “Night at the Museum” (2006).
After
a year of filming “Chitty Chitty Bang-Bang” in England, Van Dyke moved
with his family to their ranch in Carefree, Arizona where “The New
Dick Van Dyke Show” was produced for CBS for three seasons. In 1974,
his stunning portrayal of an alcoholic family man in David Wolper’s
groundbreaking ABC Television movie “The Morning After” earned Van Dyke
an Emmy nomination. A guest-star turn as a homicidal photographer
opposite Peter Falk’s “Columbo” followed.
It was
back to song, dance and comedy in NBC’s variety series “Van Dyke and
Company,” earning him a fourth Emmy® (this time shared with his fellow
producers,) followed by a national tour in “The Music Man,” which
brought Van Dyke back to Broadway and a national tour in “Damn
Yankees.” The 1980s brought a run of television movies including the
Showtime production of “The Country Girl” opposite Faye Dunaway,
”Drop-Out Father," opposite Mariette Hartley, “Found Money” opposite Sid
Caesar, “Breakfast with Les and Bess” opposite Cloris Leachman for
PBS’s “American Playhouse” and the miniseries “Strong Medicine.”
In
1982, Van Dyke earned his fifth Emmy for his vocal performance as the
Father in the CBS Library special “Wrong Way Kid.” His voice over
talents were employed most recently in the 2006 animated feature
“Curious George” and the 2010 short “The Caretaker 3D,” a tribute to the
Hollywood Sign.
Van Dyke’s crime solving physician, Dr.
Mark Sloan, was introduced in a 1991 episode of “Jake and the Fat Man”
and became the central character in three TV movies before evolving
into the CBS series “Diagnosis: Murder.” It ran from 1993 to 2001,
followed by two Dr. Sloan television movies in 2002. “Diagnosis:
Murder” co-starred Van Dyke’s son Barry as a police detective and
during its run provided guest-star opportunities for Van Dyke’s
daughter Stacy, grandchildren Carey, Shane, Wes and Taryn and brother
Jerry Van Dyke. From 2006 to 2008, the father-son team reunited for a
series of four Hallmark Channel “Murder 101” movies, casting Barry as a
private investigator opposite Dick’s absent-minded but brilliant
criminology professor, Dr. Jonathan Maxwell.
In
2003, Van Dyke and Mary Tyler Moore re-teamed to portray lonely seniors
in D.L. Coburn’s Pulitzer Prize-winning drama “The Gin Game” on “PBS
Hollywood Presents” and the following year recreated husband and wife
Rob and Laura Petrie for Carl Reiner’s CBS telefilm “The Dick Van Dyke
Show Revisited.” They were notably reunited this past January when Van
Dyke presented Moore with SAG’s 48th Life Achievement Award on the 18th
Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards.
Van Dyke, whose
2011 memoir “My Lucky Life In and Out of Show Business” made the New
York Times Best Sellers list, admits that his retirement plans have yet
to work out. In 2006 he returned to Broadway receiving standing
ovations in his “Bye Bye Birdie” leading lady’s “Chita Rivera: The
Dancers Life.” In addition to his memoir, Van Dyke is the author of
“Faith, Hope and Hilarity: The Child’s Eye View of Religion” (1970) and
“Those Funny Kids” (1975), a collection of classroom humor.
Music,
Van Dyke’s spiritual nourishment, became richer when he teamed twelve
years ago with Eric Bradley, Bryan Chadima and Mike Mendyke to form The
Vantastix. Their first major public appearance was at the Society of
Singers Ella Awards honoring his “Mary Poppins” leading lady Julie
Andrews. They’ve since performed the National Anthem at L.A. Lakers
playoffs, mounted a musical memoir at L.A.’s Geffen Theatre, appeared at
the Hollywood Bowl, Disney Hall and at Ford’s Theatre in Washington
D.C. with the President and First Lady in the front row and released an
album of children’s song: “Put on A Happy Face.”
For
nearly twenty years Van Dyke has been tirelessly committed to his
volunteer work at The Midnight Mission, Los Angeles’ century-old
downtown shelter for the troubled and homeless. He helped raise
millions for their new building program and is there without fail every
Thanksgiving, Christmas, Easter and times in between offering comfort
and cheer, often with the Vantastix and members of his own family. He
is passionate about raising funds for music and art programs for public
schools and has performed at countless fundraisers. He became a
spokesperson for the National Reye’s Syndrome Foundation in 1967 after
losing a granddaughter to that disease and in 2010 was named the first
spokesperson for the Cell Therapy Foundation.
Van
Dyke has four children from his marriage to the late Marjorie Willet
Van Dyke -- sons Christian and Barry, and daughters Stacey and Carrie
Beth -- and seven grandchildren.
On February 29,
2012, he married make-up artist Arlene Silver (whom he met at the 2007
SAG Awards) and whose vocal talents now occasionally blend with those
of Dick and The Vantastix. They live in Malibu, California.
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