Jerry Van Dyke, ‘Coach’ Actor and Foil for His Brother, Dick, Dies at 86
He was not on the list.
Jerry Van Dyke, who after decades in show business finally
emerged from the shadow of his older brother, Dick, with an Emmy-nominated role
in the long-running ABC sitcom “Coach,” died on Friday at his ranch in
Arkansas. He was 86.
Jerry’s wife, Shirley Ann Jones, who confirmed the death,
said his health had deteriorated since a traffic accident in 2015.
From the beginning, Mr. Van Dyke’s television career was
intertwined with his brother’s. One of his earliest TV appearances was in 1962
in a two-part episode of “The Dick Van Dyke Show,” as Stacey Petrie, the
would-be comedian brother of Dick’s character, Rob Petrie.
A boisterous performer who supported himself with a
banjo-and-comedy stage act when television or film roles were scant, Mr. Van
Dyke was a ham to his brother’s more dignified persona. But while Dick had
runaway success early on, with the Broadway show and film “Bye Bye Birdie,” the
Disney musical “Mary Poppins” and “The Dick Van Dyke Show,” his brother’s
career was long defined by a string of short-lived projects, like “The Judy
Garland Show” and the game show “Picture This.”
Mr. Van Dyke was frank but good-humored about his failures.
“If I had it all to do over again, I definitely would have turned things down,”
he told The Associated Press in 1994. “Almost everything I did!”
The worst of those projects was the sitcom “My Mother the
Car,” which ran for one notorious season on NBC beginning in September 1965.
He played a man who buys a car that contains the spirit of
his deceased mother, voiced by Ann Sothern. The plot revolved around Mr. Van
Dyke’s attempts to conceal the car’s consciousness from his family and to keep
an unscrupulous automobile collector, played by Avery Schreiber, from acquiring
it.
The premise seems far-fetched, if not bizarre, but
fantastical sitcoms like “I Dream of Jeannie” and “Bewitched” became popular
around the same time. “My Mother the Car” never caught on and was savaged by
critics.
“When people talk about bad television, ‘My Mother the Car’
is the show that pops to mind,” Mr. Van Dyke told The A.P. in 1990.
He went on to have prominent roles in other series that did
not last long, like “Accidental Family,” “Headmaster” and “13 Queens
Boulevard,” and largely supported himself with his stage show. His brother,
meanwhile, enjoyed more success, including a lead role in the 1968 film “Chitty
Chitty Bang Bang,” a musical about a flying car.
But in 1989 Jerry Van Dyke landed the role of Luther Van
Dam, the assistant coach to Craig T. Nelson’s head football coach, Hayden Fox,
on “Coach.” They worked together to lead the fictional Minnesota State
University Screaming Eagles, often with guest appearances by professional
football figures like Troy Aikman, Dick Butkus and Jerry Jones, as well as
actors like Lucy Liu, Drew Carey and Mary Hart.
Van Dam, a bumbling, subservient second banana who had
occasional moments of pathos, was a reliable source of laughs on the show,
which ran until 1997.
Mr. Van Dyke was invited on talk shows, like “Late Show With
David Letterman,” and was nominated for four Emmys for supporting actor for
playing Van Dam, but he never won any.
He told USA Today in 1990 that he was thrilled to get some
recognition after his meandering career.
“Everybody talks about me making a comeback,” he said. “I
say: ‘Comeback from what? This is as good as it’s ever been.’”
Jerry McCord Van Dyke was born on July 27, 1931, in
Danville, Ill., to Loren Van Dyke, a traveling salesman, and the former Hazel
McCord, a homemaker. He was a little more than five years younger than Dick,
and like his brother started a comedy act as a teenager, honing his skills at
nightclubs and strip clubs.
“I couldn’t do
anything else,” he joked to USA Today in 1990. “I decided to be a comedian at 8
years old and didn’t tend to my studies in school. Had I known how to do
anything else, I would have quit. Many times.”
He performed at bases around the world during a stint in the
Air Force in the mid-1950s. He appeared as a guest on “The Ed Sullivan Show,”
had walk-on roles on “Perry Mason” and “The Andy Griffith Show” and appeared in
the John Wayne and Maureen O’Hara Western “McLintock!” (1963), one of a handful
of movies that he acted in.
By the end of the 1960s, Mr. Van Dyke’s television career
had tapered off. He supported himself with his stage act at Playboy Clubs, in
Las Vegas and on cruise ships. He also appeared on shows like “Love, American
Style,” “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” and, not surprisingly, “The New Dick Van
Dyke Show.”
Mr. Van Dyke married Carol Johnson in the mid-1950s; they
divorced in the mid-1970s. Besides his wife, Ms. Jones, and his brother,
survivors include a daughter, Jerri Lynne, and a son, Ronald, both from his
first marriage; and two grandchildren. Another daughter, Kelly Jean Van
Dyke-Nance, died in 1991.
After “Coach,” he appeared in sitcoms like “My Name Is Earl”
and “Raising Hope.” The Van Dyke brothers kept playing siblings together into
old age, including on the ABC sitcom “The Middle” in 2015.
In 1993, just over three decades after his first guest
appearance on “The Dick Van Dyke Show,” Mr. Van Dyke returned his brother’s
favor when Dick had a nonspeaking, walk-on part in a Christmas episode of
“Coach.”
“I’m getting sick of Dick riding on my coattails,” Mr. Van
Dyke joked to The Toronto Star in 1994. “I just can’t prop up his career
forever.”
At the time, Dick had a show of his own, “Diagnosis Murder,”
on CBS. He played the lead, a doctor who solved crimes. Jerry appeared on the
show in 1999.
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