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Joe E. Brown

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Joe E. Brown Famous memorial

Original Name
Joseph Evans
Birth
Holgate, Henry County, Ohio, USA
Death
6 Jul 1973 (aged 81)
Brentwood, Los Angeles County, California, USA
Burial
Glendale, Los Angeles County, California, USA GPS-Latitude: 34.1219406, Longitude: -118.247818
Plot
Sunrise Slope section (SouthWest portion), Map #01, Distinguished Memorial – Sarcophagus 1 (“Hallowed Hours” statue); ornate marble statue/display towards the far south-west end of the section.
Memorial ID
View Source
Actor, Comedian. Born in Holgate, Ohio, he exhibited natural athletic ability as a boy, and joined a tumbling act which toured and appeared with circuses and at area vaudeville theaters. After spending a number of years as a youth touring and performing, he returned to Toledo, Ohio, at age fourteen. He played on many Toledo amateur baseball teams as a teenager, and had a brief semiprofessional stint with Needham's All-Stars until a broken leg slowed his sports career. Offered a contract with the New York Yankees, he declined in deference to his budding career in show business (he would go on to portray a baseball player in many of his movies). To meet financial ends, he left the entertainment world and worked in business in the Toledo area, but soon decided to try show business again—this time in burlesque comedy. A Broadway producer noticed him, and he landed a part in the successful show "Listen Lester." He later performed in the show "Jim Jam Jems," which made him a star, and the "Greenwich Village Follies," followed by an appearance in the revived show "Captain Jinks" (voted best musical 1925 to 1926). His last stage show, "Twinkle Twinkle," would be his finale, as he moved to Hollywood, California, seeking a movie career. Signed to a contract by Warner Brothers Studio in 1929, he included a strange clause; it stipulated that he was to be supplied with a baseball team, which became "Joe Brown's All Stars." Many of his most notable motion pictures were those where he was permitted to use his athletic abilities, such as "Fireman, Save My Child," "Elmer the Great," and "Alibi Ike." He ended his contract with Warner Brothers in 1936, and signed with an independent producer. His career after that consisted of a series of low-budget comedies and films in the "B" category. During World War II, he put his movie career on hold to provided entertainment for United States troops. He suffered the loss of his son, a United States Army Captain who was killed in a stateside airplane crash. In the postwar era, Brown worked mainly with stage productions for the road companies of "Harvey" and "Show Boat," then added television appearances in the 1950s and 1960s. He was awarded a special Tony Award for the touring production of "Harvey," and Bowling Green State University named a theatre after him where he appeared in a production of that musical. His most well-known post-World War II role was that of Osgood Fielding III in the 1959 comedy "Some Like It Hot." He wrote his biography "Laughter is a Wonderful Thing" with collaborator Ralph Hancock, which was published in 1956, and the work, "Joe E. Brown: Film Comedian and Baseball Buffoon," by Wes D. Gehring was published in 2006. His son, Joe L. Brown, served as General Manager of the Pittsburgh Pirates baseball team from 1955 to 1976.
Actor, Comedian. Born in Holgate, Ohio, he exhibited natural athletic ability as a boy, and joined a tumbling act which toured and appeared with circuses and at area vaudeville theaters. After spending a number of years as a youth touring and performing, he returned to Toledo, Ohio, at age fourteen. He played on many Toledo amateur baseball teams as a teenager, and had a brief semiprofessional stint with Needham's All-Stars until a broken leg slowed his sports career. Offered a contract with the New York Yankees, he declined in deference to his budding career in show business (he would go on to portray a baseball player in many of his movies). To meet financial ends, he left the entertainment world and worked in business in the Toledo area, but soon decided to try show business again—this time in burlesque comedy. A Broadway producer noticed him, and he landed a part in the successful show "Listen Lester." He later performed in the show "Jim Jam Jems," which made him a star, and the "Greenwich Village Follies," followed by an appearance in the revived show "Captain Jinks" (voted best musical 1925 to 1926). His last stage show, "Twinkle Twinkle," would be his finale, as he moved to Hollywood, California, seeking a movie career. Signed to a contract by Warner Brothers Studio in 1929, he included a strange clause; it stipulated that he was to be supplied with a baseball team, which became "Joe Brown's All Stars." Many of his most notable motion pictures were those where he was permitted to use his athletic abilities, such as "Fireman, Save My Child," "Elmer the Great," and "Alibi Ike." He ended his contract with Warner Brothers in 1936, and signed with an independent producer. His career after that consisted of a series of low-budget comedies and films in the "B" category. During World War II, he put his movie career on hold to provided entertainment for United States troops. He suffered the loss of his son, a United States Army Captain who was killed in a stateside airplane crash. In the postwar era, Brown worked mainly with stage productions for the road companies of "Harvey" and "Show Boat," then added television appearances in the 1950s and 1960s. He was awarded a special Tony Award for the touring production of "Harvey," and Bowling Green State University named a theatre after him where he appeared in a production of that musical. His most well-known post-World War II role was that of Osgood Fielding III in the 1959 comedy "Some Like It Hot." He wrote his biography "Laughter is a Wonderful Thing" with collaborator Ralph Hancock, which was published in 1956, and the work, "Joe E. Brown: Film Comedian and Baseball Buffoon," by Wes D. Gehring was published in 2006. His son, Joe L. Brown, served as General Manager of the Pittsburgh Pirates baseball team from 1955 to 1976.

Bio by: Donald Greyfield


Inscription

Joe E. Brown
1891-1973
Beloved Husband, Understanding
Father and Cherished Friend
His courage in the face of trouble.
His modesty in the rewards of triumph
won the love and esteem of people
all over the world. His personal
integrity and devotion to all people.
Reflected the love of the saviour
into whose hands his life is given.



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Added: Jun 11, 1998
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/3054/joe_e-brown: accessed ), memorial page for Joe E. Brown (28 Jul 1891–6 Jul 1973), Find a Grave Memorial ID 3054, citing Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale, Los Angeles County, California, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.