Tag Archives: Happy Days

Henry Winkler dreams of a Tony, stars in new NBC reality series

During an hour-long chat at his Los Angeles home, Henry Winkler does impressions of George Foreman, Terry Bradshaw and William Shatner (his co-stars in the new NBC reality series Better Late Than Never), walks like a ninja who suddenly sports jazz hands, and improvises a scene as the intolerant acting coach he plays in a new HBO comedy.

The 70-year-old entertainer is visibly animated as he discusses his career, which spans four decades and counting. But the overriding vibe from the former Fonz is one of gratitude. It’s not long before he launches into how thankful he is for the opportunities and success he continues to enjoy.

“I live by tenacity and gratitude,” he said. “I am grateful for every inch of earth that I tread on in my life.”

Acting remains a passion. Winkler is also a successful author of children’s books (his 32nd was just published) and travels the country as a motivational speaker. And he’s a doting grandfather of four, including 4 1/2-year-old Ace, a redheaded sprite who calls him “Papa” and stays close to him during this interview.

(Ace just started requesting Winkler’s Here’s Hank books as bedtime stories. “I think I’m about to faint,” Winkler said.)

His next television endeavor is Better Late Than Never.

The four-episode reality series follows Winkler, Foreman, Bradshaw, Shatner and comedian Jeff Dye on various cultural and culinary adventures in Asia.

As an executive producer, Winkler helped assemble the quintet, who barely knew one another before embarking on the 35-day trip through Japan, Korea, Hong Kong and Thailand. But talk about your bonding experiences: Together, they appeared on a Japanese game show, studied with samurai warriors, danced in a K-pop video and befriended elephants at an animal sanctuary.

Now “it’s friends for life,” Winkler said. “It might have been the trip of a lifetime.”

He’s so confident about the show — “to the point that I will come to your house and do the dishes” — if each episode isn’t better than the last.

“The reason that it gets better and better is — if you feel us being a tight unit in the first (episode) — it gets tighter and tighter and we get looser and looser and more outrageous with each other,” he said.

Winkler is also embracing the outrageous in scripted form with Barry, a new HBO series that starts production in January. Saturday Night Live alum Bill Hader stars as a middling hit man who finds unexpected community among a group of theater hopefuls in Los Angeles. Winkler is their cantankerous acting coach.

Rather than describe the role, he breaks into character.

Winkler studied drama at Yale and has pursued the craft with vigor since he graduated. He only started writing children’s books when he had difficulty shedding the Fonz persona after Happy Days ended its 10-year run. But he’s never stopped looking for the next great part. Even now, he still goes out on auditions and dreams big.

“It makes me so happy,” he said. “And now that I’m getting better, that I’m more relaxed, that I’m more in touch with what I’m doing, it’s like I step into nirvana.

“My favorite role is the next role I do,” he continued. “I love going to work.”

Winkler’s joy and gratitude is palpable. He knocks on the wooden table when he mentions his hopes and blessings. He’s kept every single script from Happy Days (and every other show and film he’s done) and had them bound in hardback leather like a treasured collection of encyclopedias.

“You cannot take for granted one single second,” he said.

Though he is still yearning for one particular piece of hardware.

“Here’s my bucket list,” Winkler said. “I would like to see my grandchildren thrive. I would like to work until I absolutely cannot anymore. I would like to win a Tony. I watch the Tony Awards and cry every year. I love it. That is my dream. That is my dream. Whatever it is, that is my dream: to win a Tony.”

His thank-you speech may already be written.

Garry Marshall dies at 81

Director, producer and writer Garry Marshall, who was responsible for creating sitcom hits such as “The Odd Couple,” “Happy Days,” “Laverne & Shirley” and directed hit movies “Pretty Woman” and “The Princess Diaries,” died on July 19.

He was 81.

Marshall died at 5 p.m. local time in Burbank, California, from complications of pneumonia after a stroke, his representative Michelle Bega told USA Today.

“The Odd Couple,” a hit sitcom created and produced by Marshall, began a five-year run on ABC in 1970. The show, starring Jack Klugman and Tony Randall, received Emmy nominations and wins for the comedy series based on Neil Simon’s play about two divorced men with different lifestyles who are forced to share an apartment.

Marshall’s “Happy Days” debuted as a television series on ABC in 1974, starting a 10-year run that saw Henry Winkler’s “the Fonz” become what Variety described as a cultural touchstone.

“Garry Marshall Rest In Peace. Thank you for my professional life. Thank you for your loyalty, friendship and generosity,” Winkler said on Twitter.

Marshall was the older brother of Penny Marshall, who played the unrefined but lovable Laverne DeFazio on “Laverne & Shirley,” a “Happy Days” sequel he co-created that ran on the ABC network from 1976 to 1983. It followed the lives of two single women and their nutty friends in 1950s and ’60s Milwaukee.

He also directed “Pretty Woman,” a big screen blockbuster in 1990 starring Julia Roberts and Richard Gere that grossed $463 million worldwide. Roberts earned an Oscar nomination for best actress and the film was nominated for a Golden Globe for best comedy/musical.

“The Princess Diaries,” “Beaches” and “The Flamingo Kid,” were among other popular films Marshall had a hand in putting on the big screen.

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W2ZXjY5rTHg

Kenosha native Al Molinaro, best known for role in ‘Happy Days,’ dead at 96

Kenosha native Al Molinaro, best known for his roles as Murray the cop on The Odd Couple and malt shop owner Al Delvecchio on Happy Days, died Friday at age 96.

Molinaro, who retired from acting in the 1990s, died of complications of gallstone problems, his son Michael said. He was 96.

In its obituary for Molinaro, the Kenosha News noted that the actor’s family was well known in Wisconsin. Al Molinaro was the youngest of 10 siblings of an Italian-American family. Two of his older brothers were former Wisconsin Assembly Speaker George Molinaro and longtime Kenosha County District Attorney Joseph Molinaro.

Molinaro grew up during the 1930s in an Italian enclave in Kenosha’s Columbus Park neighborhood. The portion of 53rd Street where he grew up is unofficially and affectionately called Al Molinaro Street.

Childhood friend Frank Misureli told Kenosha News that he remembers Molinaro working at the Vincent McCall factory at 22nd Avenue and 56th Street. Misureli said he and Molinaro kept in frequent contact, with Molinaro always wanting to talk Old Kenosha.

“He loved Kenosha,” said Misureli, a longtime Kenosha News advertising director and current publisher of the Zion-Benton News.

Molinaro was a journeyman performer well into middle age when a comedy improv class led to his breakthrough. Producer Garry Marshall heard about Molinaro and hired him for the part of police Officer Murray Greshler on The Odd Couple, the TV version of Neil Simon’s play about feuding roommates. It starred Tony Randall as photographer Felix Unger and Jack Klugman as sports writer Oscar Madison and featured Molinaro as one of their buddies, a simpleminded policemen who at times seemed as much a threat to his friends as he did to any crooks.

The Odd Couple ran from 1970–75. In one defining scene, Murray attempts to enter his friends’ apartment, but the door is locked. Murray instead sticks his famously monstrous nose through a peephole.

“Oh, hi Murray,” Oscar calls out.

His son Michael said Molinaro “was good friends till the end with all of the group of people involved in The Odd Couple.”

His next long-running role was that of Al Delvecchio in Happy Days, the 1974–1984 nostalgic sitcom set in Milwaukee about 1950s life. The show starred Ron Howard and Henry Winkler. Molinaro joined the cast in 1976, replacing Pat Morita as the owner of Arnold’s Drive-In, and remained until 1982.

In ABC’s 1992 Happy Days’ Reunion Special, Molinaro defended the show from criticism that it sentimentalized the 1950s.

“In the industry, they used to consider us like a bubble-gum show,” he said. “But I think they overlooked one thing. To the public in America, Happy Days was an important show, and I think it was and I think it still is.”

Molinaro built on his Happy Days success for years after he left the show. He brought the character of Al to Joanie Loves Chachi, a short-lived Happy Days spinoff that aired from 1982-83. In 1987, he and Anson Williams, who played Potsie on Happy Days, started Big Al’s, a Midwestern diner chain.

He brought Al back for a brief appearance in Buddy Holly, a 1995 music video for the group Weezer that was directed by Spike Jonze.

Molinaro played a grandfather in The Family Man sitcom that aired from 1990-1991, and continued to make guest appearances on other series through the early ’90s. He also filmed commercials, notably for On-Cor frozen dinners.

Molinaro came to acting late in life. He had a brief teenage stint as a clarinet player with a band, then worked at a variety of jobs after graduating high school. He moved to California in the early 1950s on casual advice from a friend who suggested he pursue acting.

“I said, ‘I’ll do that,'” Molinaro told the Kenosha News in a 2004 interview. “I get on the Greyhound bus and I’m in Hollywood.”

His first TV job was in production, when he talked an independent TV station manager into hiring him. Then it was on to TV commercials and ads, including a Los Angeles billboard that featured him in a chef’s cap. The producers of “Get Smart” spotted it and hired Molinaro to play Agent 44 for a few episodes in 1969. That was followed by guest roles in such sitcoms as Green Acres, That Girl and Bewitched.

“I spent 20 years here before I got anything going, and from that I got lucky,” he said.

His son Michael, from his first marriage, survives Molinaro. He and his second wife, Betty Farrell, married in 1981.