Bill Daily, Major Healey in ‘I Dream of Jeannie,’ Dies at 91
He was number 190 on the list.
Bill Daily, the affable TV actor who starred as Major Roger
Healey in “I Dream of Jeannie” as well as on “The Bob Newhart Show,” died Sept.
4 in Santa Fe, New Mexico, his son J. Patrick Daily confirmed. He was 91.
“He loved every sunset, he loved every meal — he just
decided to be happy about everything,” said his son.
The longtime New Mexico resident was a staple on series of
the 1960s through 1980s, notably as Bob Newhart’s daffy neighbor, airline pilot
Howard Borden, on CBS’ “The Bob Newhart Show” sitcom from 1972 to 1978. In the
1980s, he appeared as psychiatrist Dr. Larry Dykstra on NBC’s “ALF.”
Newhart remembered his co-star from their early days in the
Chicago comedy scene in the 1950s.
“I called him our bullpen man. Whenever we were having
trouble with a script on the show, we’d have Bill make an appearance,” Newhart
said. “In recent years we had hoped to have Bill be a part of ‘The Bob Newhart
Show’ tributes at the TV Academy but by then he was no longer traveling. He was
one of the most positive people I ever knew and we’ll dearly miss him.”
On “I Dream of Jeannie,” he co-starred with Larry Hagman and
Barbara Eden on all five seasons of the NBC sitcom as U.S. Army Captain and
then Major Healey, the best friend and fellow astronaut to Hagman, who at one
point summons Jeannie by mistake and briefly becomes her new master.
Barbara Eden tweeted, “Our favorite zany astronaut has
passed.”
In 1980, Daily briefly had his own TV series, “Small &
Frye,” but it lasted only three months. A longtime magic fan, he hosted several
magic specials.
His other TV appearances included “Bewitched,” “Love Boat,”
“The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” and “Love, American Style,” as well as recurring
roles in the 1980s on “Aloha Paradise” and “Starting from Scratch.” He played a navigator in the Disney film "The Barefoot Executive."
He returned for several “I Dream of Jeannie” and “The Bob
Newhart Show” reunion specials in the 1980s and ’90s. Daily also served as
director of the New Mexico Film Commission in the late 1980s.
Born in Des Moines, Iowa, Daily was raised in Chicago and
started out doing stand-up and announcing at a Chicago TV station, when he
first met Newhart.
He is survived by his son J. Patrick Daily, a key grip for
motion pictures.
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