
JULY 21

Don Knotts
Born July 21,1924 in Morgantown, West Virginia.
Died February 24, 2006 at the UCLA Medical Center
in Los Angeles, California
Actor
Don Knotts
Popular Name - Jesse Donald Knotts
Actor and comedian. Born July 21, 1924, in
Morgantown, West Virginia. Before he entered high
school, Knotts began performing as a
ventriloquist and comedian at various church and
school functions. He traveled to New York City to
try and make his way as a comedian, but returned
home to attend West Virginia University when his
career failed to take off. After his freshman
year, Knotts joined the Army, and during World
War II he toured the Pacific Islands as a
comedian in a G.I. variety show called
"Stars and Gripes."
After graduating from college in 1948, Knotts
again moved to New York, where he quickly became
a regular on several television and radio
programs. In 1955, he made his debut on Broadway
in the hit comedy, No Time For Sergeants, which
marked his first collaboration with Andy
Griffith. Knotts appeared as a regular member of
the ensemble cast on NBC's The Steve Allen Show,
from 1956 to 1960; he moved to Hollywood when the
show relocated in 1959. He also reprised his No
Time for Sergeants role in the 1958 film version,
alongside Griffith, a fellow regular on The Steve
Allen Show.
In 1960, Knotts joined Griffith on a new sitcom,
The Andy Griffith Show, playing Deputy Sheriff
Barney Fife to Griffith's Sheriff Andy Taylor.
Knotts stayed with the tremendously successful
show for five seasons, during which he won three
Emmy Awards for Outstanding Performance in a
Supporting Role in a Series. Though he left The
Andy Griffith Show in 1965 to pursue a film
career, his periodic returns in 1966 and 1967
earned him two more Emmys.
His first leading role in a film came in 1964,
with The Incredible Mr. Limpet. The film began a
string of appearances in low-budget family films
for Knotts, including The Ghost and Mr. Chicken
(1966), The Reluctant Astronaut (1967), and The
Shakiest Gun in the West (1968), that won him
widespread recognition as a film actor. By 1970,
however, Knotts' clean-cut humor seemed somewhat
out of place in a more sophisticated film
industry, and he began to appear in a series of
somewhat more juvenile films, beginning with the
Disney comedy-Western, The Apple Dumpling Gang,
in 1975, co-starring the comedian Tim Conway, who
became a frequent collaborator.
In 1979, Knotts returned to his successful TV
roots, joining the risque hit comedy, Three's
Company, as the eccentric, leisure suit-clad
landlord Mr. Furley. He remained on the show
until it went off the air in 1984. In 1986, he
joined his Andy Griffith Show co-stars, including
Griffith and Ron Howard, on a wildly popular TV
movie special, Return to Mayberry. Teaming with
Griffith once more, Knotts played a pesky
neighbor in a recurring role on Griffith's
courtroom drama series, Matlock, from 1988 to
1992.
Knotts, who at various times in his career
struggled with severe hypochondria and a
degenerative eye disease, had somewhat of a
career resurgence in the late 1990s. In 1998, he
played a key role in the acclaimed movie
Pleasantville, as a mysterious TV repairman who
ushers two 1990s youngsters into the
black-and-white world of 1950s television. In
1999, the notoriously shy and private Knotts
published his autobiography, Barney Fife and
Other Characters I Have Known.
Knotts and his college sweetheart, Kathryn Metz,
married in 1947 and divorced in 1964. He was
married to his second wife, Loralee Czuchna, from
1974 to 1983, and was later involved with Francey
Yarborough, an actress. Knotts died on February
24, 2006. He is survived by his two children,
Karen and Thomas, from his first marriage.
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