Tuesday, March 1, 2022

Conrad Janis obit

Conrad Janis, Trombonist and ‘Mork & Mindy’ Actor, Dies at 94

He starred on Broadway as a teenager and appeared in a Philip Marlowe movie at Fox when he was 19.

 

He was not on the list.


Conrad Janis, the Dixieland trombonist and actor best known for playing the father of Pam Dawber’s character on the Robin Williams sitcom Mork & Mindy, has died. He was 94.

Janis died March 1 of organ failure at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, his business manager Dean Avedon told The Hollywood Reporter.

Though just a youngster, Janis already was a Broadway veteran when he appeared in the 20th Century Fox film noir The Brasher Doubloon (1947) opposite George Montgomery (then-husband of Dinah Shore) in the Philip Marlowe movie.

On Frasier, Janis portrayed a character named Albert who lives in the same condo building as Frasier Crane (Kelsey Grammer) and his dad (John Mahoney). He also was a KAOS agent on Get Smart and a space station resident on Quark (Buck Henry had a hand in both of those series).

Janis played trombone in several appearances on The Tonight Show and at Carnegie Hall, and he recorded several albums with his group, the Tailgate Five. He also performed with actor George Segal on banjo in the Beverly Hills Unlisted Jazz Band.

Janis had a recurring role as Mindy’s dad, Fred McConnell — the owner of a music store, in a nice touch — on all four seasons (1978-82) of ABC’s Mork & Mindy. The bald-headed actor often was on the receiving end of Mork’s (Williams) barbs.

He was born in Manhattan on Feb. 11, 1928. His mother, Harriet, was a writer who co-authored the 1950 book They All Played Ragtime, and his father, Sidney, was an art dealer who in 1967 donated his private collection of 103 works, then valued at $2 million and including a Picasso, to New York’s Museum of Modern Art.

Janis made his Broadway debut when he was 13 in Junior Miss and stuck with the comedy through its lengthy New York run and then on a tour until he was 16. “I wanted to get out of school all my life,” he told film historian Alan K. Rode in 2012. “I never went to high school. It worked out perfectly.”

He came to California to make his movie debut, starring as a 16-year-old who enters the U.S. Army in Snafu (1945).

After co-starring with Jeanne Crain in Margie (1946), he landed a contract at Fox for $750 a week; most everyone got $75 a week to start, but he commanded the much higher salary because he had been on Broadway, he noted.

He then appeared in Warner Bros.’ That Hagen Girl (1947) in a much-derided drama that featured Ronald Reagan and Shirley Temple. (Spoiler alert: Those two presumably get married at the end of the movie.)

Fox didn’t give him much to do, and he was eventually replaced on the lot by Robert Wagner, he said. Janis then worked a great deal in television, appearing on such programs as Suspense, Starlight Theatre and Studio One in Hollywood.

“It was an exciting time because everything was live,” he said in 2015. “You had to memorize the entire show for the night of broadcast. We’d do one-hour shows six or seven nights a week, with very little time for rehearsal. If people forgot their lines or a prop gun didn’t fire, you just had to ad-lib your way out of it.”

He also kept busy on Broadway, appearing in The Brass Ring, Time Out for Ginger and Sunday in New York, among other productions.

Later, Janis showed up on The Untouchables and My Favorite Martian and in such films as Airport ’75 (1974), The Happy Hooker (1975), The Duchess and the Dirtwater Fox (1976),The Buddy Holly Story (1978), Oh, God! Book II (1980), Brewster’s Millions (1985), Sonny Boy (1989), Mr. Saturday Night (1992) and The Cable Guy (1996).

He also produced, directed and starred opposite Piper Laurie in Bad Blood (2012), written by his third wife, actress Maria Grimm.

Survivors include his children, Christopher and Carin, and two grandchildren.

In the late 1940s, Janis said he spent endless hours listening to famed trombonist Kid Ory and his New Orleans jazz band at the Beverly Cavern nightclub in L.A.

“In the course of going eight or nine months and listening to him every night, I inadvertently memorized every one of his solos,” he told Rode. “When I finally got hold of a trombone [some time later], I started playing and could play — very badly and stumbling — but I had it in my ear.”

Filmography

Year       Title       Role       Notes

1945      Snafu     Ronald Stevens Alternative title: Welcome Home

1946      Margie Johnny 'Johnikins' Green              

1947      The Brasher Doubloon   Leslie Murdock Alternative title: The High Window

That Hagen Girl                 Dewey Koons    

1948      Beyond Glory     Raymond Denmore, Jr.

1958      Let's Rock            Charlie Alternative title: Keep It Cool

1965      Get Smart            Victor    (Season 1, Episode 12)

1966      My Favorite Martian       Chad Foster        TV or Not TV (Season 3, Episode 19)

1972      Banacek               Video Technician              Let’s Hear it for a Living Legend (Season 1 Episode 1)

1974      Airport 1975       Arnie    

Cannon                 Larry Warshaw Daddy's Little Girl

1975      The Happy Hooker           Fred      

1976      Happy Days         Mr. Kendall         (Season 4, Episode 7)

The Duchess and the Dirtwater Fox          Gladstone          

Maude Lyle Bellamy (Game Show Host)                 (Season 5, Episode 8)

1977      Roseland              George

Quark    Otto Bob Palindrome     

1978-1982          Mork & Mindy   Fred McConnell                 53 episodes

1978      The Buddy Holly Story    Ross Turner       

1980      Oh, God! Book II               Charles Benson

1985      V: The Series      Dr. David Atkins                Episode: "War of Illusions"

1985      Brewster's Millions          Businessman in Car        

1986      Nothing in Common        Conrad Janis and the Unlisted Jazz Band                

1987      The Golden Girls               Dance Marathon Emcee                (Season 3, Episode 2)

1989      Caddie Woodlawn           Rev. Tanner       

Sonny Boy           Doc Bender        

1992      Mr. Saturday Night          Director               

1995      The Feminine Touch        Frank Donaldsonn            Also director; alternative title: The November Conspiracy

1996      The Cable Guy   Father 'Double Trouble'                

1997      Frasier Albert   

2002      Frasier Albert   

2009      Maneater            Doc Gramm       

2012      Bad Blood            Lawrence

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