Eugene Twombly | |
---|---|
Born | Eugene Tracy Twombly April 27, 1914
California, United States |
Died | October 17, 1968
Los Angeles, California, United States | (aged 54)
Other names | Gene Twombly |
Occupation | Sound effects technician |
Years active | 1950s–1968 |
Spouse |
Eugene Tracy Twombly (April 27, 1914 – October 17, 1968) was a sound effects technician in radio and motion pictures. [1]
Eugene Twombly was born in California in 1914 to Ralph H. and Marie L. Twombly (née Tracy; 1892–1958). [2] [3] He was the eldest of two children with a younger brother, Ralph Jr. (born 1922), and of partial Canadian ancestry from his paternal grandmother. [2]
He is best known for his sound work on The Jack Benny Program, [4] where his wife, actress Bea Benaderet, played telephone operator Gertrude Gearshift. Other works included Arch Oboler's Lights Out, [5] The Stan Freberg Show, [6] The Gene Autry Show, The Whistler, and When the West Was Young, [7] and a collaboration with Bill Cosby and Frank Buxton on The Bill Cosby Radio Program, which aired 145 episodes from January to July 1968. [8] [9]
The Jack Benny Program included occasional references to "Twombly, the sound-effects man," and Mel Blanc voiced a character called "George Twombly" who often interrupted Benny and his cast with impromptu sound effects. [10] In the 1962 first season of The Beverly Hillbillies (where Benaderet had a recurring role as Cousin Pearl Bodine), two consecutive episodes, "The Clampetts Get Psychoanalyzed" and "The Psychiatrist Gets Clampetted," featured a psychiatrist named "Dr. Eugene Twombly" who was played by Herbert Rudley. [11]
Gene Twombly was Bea Benaderet's second husband and the stepfather of actor Jack Bannon, and they resided in Calabasas, California. He died of a heart attack at age 54 on October 17, 1968, four days after her death from pneumonia and lung cancer and one day after her funeral. [12] They are interred together at Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery in North Hollywood.
Eugene Twombly | |
---|---|
Born | Eugene Tracy Twombly April 27, 1914
California, United States |
Died | October 17, 1968
Los Angeles, California, United States | (aged 54)
Other names | Gene Twombly |
Occupation | Sound effects technician |
Years active | 1950s–1968 |
Spouse |
Eugene Tracy Twombly (April 27, 1914 – October 17, 1968) was a sound effects technician in radio and motion pictures. [1]
Eugene Twombly was born in California in 1914 to Ralph H. and Marie L. Twombly (née Tracy; 1892–1958). [2] [3] He was the eldest of two children with a younger brother, Ralph Jr. (born 1922), and of partial Canadian ancestry from his paternal grandmother. [2]
He is best known for his sound work on The Jack Benny Program, [4] where his wife, actress Bea Benaderet, played telephone operator Gertrude Gearshift. Other works included Arch Oboler's Lights Out, [5] The Stan Freberg Show, [6] The Gene Autry Show, The Whistler, and When the West Was Young, [7] and a collaboration with Bill Cosby and Frank Buxton on The Bill Cosby Radio Program, which aired 145 episodes from January to July 1968. [8] [9]
The Jack Benny Program included occasional references to "Twombly, the sound-effects man," and Mel Blanc voiced a character called "George Twombly" who often interrupted Benny and his cast with impromptu sound effects. [10] In the 1962 first season of The Beverly Hillbillies (where Benaderet had a recurring role as Cousin Pearl Bodine), two consecutive episodes, "The Clampetts Get Psychoanalyzed" and "The Psychiatrist Gets Clampetted," featured a psychiatrist named "Dr. Eugene Twombly" who was played by Herbert Rudley. [11]
Gene Twombly was Bea Benaderet's second husband and the stepfather of actor Jack Bannon, and they resided in Calabasas, California. He died of a heart attack at age 54 on October 17, 1968, four days after her death from pneumonia and lung cancer and one day after her funeral. [12] They are interred together at Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery in North Hollywood.