Bob Newhart, who burst onto the comedy scene in 1960 working a stammering Everyman character not unlike himself, then rode essentially that same character through a long, busy career that included two of television’s most memorable sitcoms, died on Thursday at his home in Los Angeles.
Mr. Newhart wasn’t merely unknown a few months before his emergence as a full-fledged star; he was barely in the business, though he had aspirations.
In 1959, some comic tapes he had made to amuse himself while working as an accountant in Chicago caught the ear of an executive at Warner Bros. Records, which in 1960 released the comedy album “The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart.”The record shot to No.
1 on the charts, and at the 1961 Grammy Awards it improbably captured the top prize, album of the year.
Among the nominees Mr. Newhart bested: Nat King Cole, Harry Belafonte and Frank Sinatra.
Persons:
Bob Newhart, Jerry Digney, Newhart wasn’t, improbably, Newhart, Nat King Cole, Harry Belafonte, Frank Sinatra
Organizations:
Warner Bros . Records
Locations:
Los Angeles, Chicago