Veteran actor and comedian Orson Bean, a familiar face on TV and in movies since the 1950s, was struck by two cars and killed in Los Angeles Friday night. He was 91.
For Mr. Bean, his elevation to hero status was due to his participation as a panelist on ‘To Tell The Truth’. And that ties in with my memories of my home life at the time.
Until I was eight years old, we lived in a second floor apartment. At that time there were just the five of us – Mom and Dad and my next two oldest brothers. (It wouldn’t be until we had been living in our house for a few years before my youngest brother and sister came along.)
Dad held a series of jobs – gas station attendant, milkman – with an eye to becoming a full-time letter carrier. (He was a sub for a number of years before he got his own route.) Mom was a nurse working at the hospital in town on second shift, so by the late afternoon, they switched places in watching the kids and going to work.
Dad took the easy way out when it came time to fixing us dinner – hot dogs, grilled cheese sandwiches, that sort of thing. Once we moved into the house, he upped the fare by cooking French toast or baking pre-packaged pot pies. But there was a trade-off – once in the house, we definitely had to eat dinner in the kitchen.
Back in the apartment, we’d be seated on the floor in the den, the TV room, where Dad would bring us our dinner. And along with that, he’d give us slips of paper and pencils so that we could play along in the two games of ‘To Tell The Truth’.
‘To Tell the Truth’ is an American television panel game show in which four celebrity panelists are presented with three contestants (the "team of challengers", each an individual or pair) and must identify which is the "central character" whose unusual occupation or experience has been read out by the show's moderator/host. When the panelists question the contestants, the two "impostors" may lie whereas the "central character" must tell the truth.
When the panelists revealed their guesses as to whom they believed to be the “central character”, they would write the numeric designation on the card – one, two, or three. And we would do the same at home.
But Orson Bean would put his own spin on his answers. He would surround his answer with doodles usually related somehow with the subject matter of that person’s life. And I thought that was so cool. It made me want to be Orson Bean. But as a six-eight year old, my doodles were shite.
“In the parlance of the twentieth century, this is an oddball. His name is James B. W. Bevis, and his tastes lean toward stuffed animals, zither music, professional football, Charles Dickens, moose heads, carnivals, dogs, children, and young ladies. Mr. Bevis is accident prone, a little vague, a little discombobulated, with a life that possesses all the security of a floating crap game. But this can be said of our Mr. Bevis: without him, without his warmth, without his kindness, the world would be a considerably poorer place, albeit perhaps a little saner...Should it not be obvious by now, James B. W. Bevis is a fixture in his own private, optimistic, hopeful little world, a world which has long ceased being surprised by him. James B. W. Bevis, on whom Dame Fortune will shortly turn her back, but not before she gives him a paste in the mouth. Mr. James B. W. Bevis, just one block away from The Twilight Zone.”
I have another memory about Orson Bean, the one time I saw him in person. And as usual, I don’t come off very well in this….
When I used to live in Manhattan on the Upper West Side, I went to the Symphony Space to see a mime performance. As I used to do, even though I lived just around the corner, I got there way too early and so I was waiting outside for two of my friends – Ken and the late, great puppeteer/actor Brad Williams.
I kept staring at him though and I noticed that he had a slight tic – a very small jerk of the head, barely noticeable. When Ken finally showed up, I pointed it out to him. And we both continued to stare.
Eventually we went inside and took our seats. Ken didn’t notice, but Mr. Bean and his party occupied the seats behind us. And then Brad showed up to join us just before the show was about to start.
So there we were, I was in the middle between them. And in those last seconds before the show started, Ken leaned past me and said to Brad: “We saw Orson Bean outside!” There was a pause, and then he added, “AND HE’S GOT A TWITCH!”
Mr. Bean and his party got up and moved to other seats.
Perhaps the most embarrassing encounter I ever had with a celebrity.
I’m going to miss Orson Bean, even with many of his performances readily available out there with DVDs, YouTube, syndicated reruns, streaming services. It’s just not the same as knowing that he is still out there among us.
Thank you, Orson Bean. Not just for all of your performances, but for being the anchor to my favorite memory of being with my Dad….
And sorry about the twitch bit.
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