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Arnold Stang (born September 28, 1925 in Chelsea, Massachusetts) is a comic actor who plays a small and bespectacled, yet brash and knowing big-city type. Never known as a solo performer (despite the existence of an unsold television pilot called The Arnold Stang Show), he works best in, and prefers, an ensemble cast in which he plays only one of a diverse group of comic characters.
A show-stopping comic for decades, actor Arnold Stang started out as a youngster on radio. Born in 1925 in Chelsea, Massachusetts, just north of Boston, the scrawny youngster auditioned at age nine for radio's "Horn and Hardart's Children's Hour" and won a part, which set off a two-decade stint as one of radio's most amusing personalities. Moving to New York, his squawky, unmistakable voice was featured on the kiddie program "Let's Pretend" and the beloved Gertrude Berg classic "The Goldbergs". As a feisty, talented second banana, he traded quips with the best of them: Eddie Cantor; Jack Benny; Fred Allen (I); Fanny Brice; Milton Berle, you name it. He performed his first legitimate play on Broadway at age 12 with "All In Favour". Arnold subsequently moved with Milton Berle to TV in the late 1940s and found a very comfortable comedy niche. On the satirical "Henry Morgan's Great Talent Hunt" (1951), he was a regular member of the stock company as a nerdy teen named Gerard. Plucky, bespectacled geeks who usually had sand kicked in their face became his specialty. While on radio in the 1940s, Arnold also started lending his talents to cartoon voiceovers, beginning with Popeye the Sailor's pal Shorty, later moving into a lengthy hitch as "Hoiman" the mouse in Paramount's "Herman and Katnip" series. His best known Brooklynesque animal character, of course, was in the Joseph Barbera - William Hanna (I) 1961 classic cartoon series "Top Cat" (1961), playing the slick, smart-alecky title role that was very reminiscent of Phil Silvers' Sgt. Bilko character from "Phil Silvers Show, The" (1955). Film work would be very sporadic over the years providing stalwart support in such escapism as Seven Days' Leave (1942), My Sister Eileen (1942), Two Gals and a Guy (1951) and the all-star epic It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World (1963). His best featured part was a rare dramatic role opposite Frank Sinatra in the then-daring topical movie about drug addiction entitled Man with the Golden Arm, The (1955) wherein he played Frank Sinatra's seedy but loyal pal Sparrow, a role that easily could have influenced Dustin Hoffman when he created his Ratso Rizzo character a decade and a half later in Midnight Cowboy (1969). During the 1950s, Arnold was the TV spokesman for Chunky candy ("Chunky...what a chunk o' chocolate!"). The owlish comedian with the trademark black, horn-rimmed glasses continued acting into the 90s with small roles in such movies as Dennis the Menace (1993).





