On this day, in 1925, John Donald Fiedler was born in Platteville, Wisconsin. When John was five, the family moved across the state to Shorewood. After graduating from Shorewood High School in 1943, he immediately enlisted in the United States Navy and served for the duration of World War II. Following his honorable discharge, John moved to New York City and fulfilled his lifelong dream of becoming an actor when he joined the Neighborhood Playhouse.
John's first big professional role came on the radio comedy
The Aldrich Family as Homer Brown. He became something of a staple in early television, making his small screen debut as Alfie Higgins on
Tom Corbett, Space Cadet and then making guest appearances on nearly every anthology show that existed, including two episodes of both
The Twilight Zone and
Alfred Hitchcock Presents. One of his best known television roles came in the Seventies when John was cast as Mr. Peterson, one of Bob's regular patients on
The Bob Newhart Show. John spent most of his life as an in-demand guest character on shows covering the decades from
Gunsmoke to
The Golden Girls and genres from
Cheers to
Quincy, ME.
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Image copyright Columbia Pictures |
John hit the big screen for the first time in 1957, as nervous little Juror #2 in
Twelve Angry Men with Henry Fonda. He would go on to contribute to such film classics as
The Odd Couple, True Grit, Harper Valley PTA and
The Cannonball Run. A role that he originated on Broadway and reprised in the movies, was that of Karl Lindner in
A Raisin in the Sun. John was so perfect as the seemingly innocuous Improvement Association representative who tries to buy a black family out to keep them from moving into his neighborhood, that he was picked to reprise the role again for a television version in the Eighties.
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Image copyright Disney |
Although John has provided the voice for numerous roles for Disney, most people will think of only one when they hear his voice. When Disney released
Winnie the Pooh and Honey Tree in 1966, they upset fans by not including Piglet (more on that tomorrow). For the next installment two years later,
Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day, they rectified their error and gave John a character he would play for nearly four decades. He gave voice to everyone's favorite little pig in shorts (
Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too), features (
Piglet's Big Movie), television shows (
Winnie the Pooh and Christmas Too) and video games (
Kingdom Hearts). From 1968 until 2005, all the dozens and dozens of things that Piglet made an appearance in, John endearingly stuttered him to life.
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Image copyright Disney |
But Piglet wasn't the only thing John did for Disney, not by a long shot. He also voiced Father Sexton in
Robin Hood, appeared in
The Shaggy D.A. as Howie Clemmings, played Deacon Owl in
The Rescuers, did Porcupine for
The Fox and the Hound, and was the poor guy who threw off the emperor's groove, Rudy, in both
The Emperor's New Groove and
Kronk's New Groove, the sequel being his final film appearance.
After over sixty years of being the classic "I know that guy but I can't think of his name" character actor, John would succumb to cancer on June 25, 2005 at the Lillian Booth Actors Home in Englewood, New Jersey. Interestingly, his good friend and longtime Pooh co-star, Paul Winchell, the voice of Tigger, had passed away the day before. Sadly, neither of them has been declared official Disney Legends as of yet. Looks like Disney has another Pooh snafu they need to fix.
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