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  eminovitz  

  Research Guru / Moderator
eminovitz

 Posted:
  Jan 28, 2006, 4:28 PM
BCDB Supporter

Cartoon, Kraft voice Len Carlson dead at 68 You Must Register Before You Can Post

Canadian voice actor Len Carlson, the narrator of the 1967-69 cartoon series Rocket Robin Hood and the TV commercial pitchman for Kraft Jet-Puffed Marshmallows and Miracle Whip, died Thursday of a heart attack at 68.

The soothing salesman for Kraft foods in the 1970s and 1980s, Carlson was one of the most prolific voice actors in Canada. In fact, he substituted for the title character of Rocket Robin Hood in 1968-69.

In Spider-Man, though uncredited, he voiced such characters as nemesis The Green Goblin, as well as Parafino, Bolton, Jan Caldwell, Captain Ned Stacy and Vegio.

He voiced such other Marvel characters as Captain America. Carlson was the voice of Bert Raccoon (as well as Pig Two, Pig Three and Mr. Knox) in the Atkinson Film-Arts series The Raccoons, broadcast on CBC.

"He was very physically active, so his death was a shock," agent Richard Menich told the Toronto Sun.

Carlson first worked as a pro athlete, according to Menich. He was a running back for the Saskatchewan Roughriders and a pitcher for the minor-league Seattle Pilots. After his sports career was sidelined by injuries, he became an actor.

Carlson was a Minimus PU in Breakthrough Films' Atomic Betty and portrayed Buzz in Nelvana Limited's Cyberchase. The two series are still in production, and are broadcast by Canadian youth channel YTV.

Other series in which he had voice roles included Jayce and the Wheeled Warriors (Herc Stormsailer and Terror Tank), Popples (Putter), Hello Kitty's Furry Tale Theater (Papa Kitty), Dinosaucers (Quackpot and Allo), ALF: The Animated Series (Sargent Staff and Cantfayl), Police Academy (Captain Harris), C.O.P.S. (Brandon "Big Boss" Babel and Sgt. Colt "Mace" Howard), The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! (Ganon and Moblins), Captain N & the Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3 (Ganondorf "Ganon" Dragmire), Swamp Thing (Swamp Thing), Space Strikers (Dacar), The NeverEnding Story (Vermin), Monster by Mistake (Gorgool), Donkey Kong Country (Gen. Klump), Birdz (Mr. Pip), Pippi Longstocking (Thunderkarlson), Flying Rhino Junior High (Principal Mulligan), Rolie Polie Olie (Pappy), Pecola (Officer Kumada), Medabots (Doctor Meta-Evil, Hobson and Samurai) and Beyblade (Gideon).

He was also in the voice casts of Beetlejuice and Captain N: The Game Master (both 1989), Hammerman (1991) and Mischief City (2005), and guested as Senator Robert Kelly in several X-Men episodes.

In the 1990 Lacewood Productions animated feature film The Nutcracker Prince, he had several roles, including that of the King. He had a voice role in the 1996 National Film Board of Canada short Shyness, which won a Gold Apple from the National Educational Media Network.

Len Carlson is survived by wife Judy and daughter Corrine. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at Marshall Funeral Home in Richmond Hill, Ontario.




Bert Raccoon in The Raccoons... one of Len Carlson's many voice roles.

(This post was edited by eminovitz on Jan 28, 2006, 10:21 PM)

 
Cartoon Forum
  D.T.D  

  Inbetweener

 Posted:
  Jan 28, 2006, 10:46 PM

Re: Cartoon, Kraft voice Len Carlson dead at 68 [In reply to] You Must Register Before You Can Post

I think I remember him in a Museum of Television & Radio seminar on AFTRA (http://www.aftra.org/aftra/aftra.htm), from 1988 on a panel that included such dignitaries as Jackson Beck and Ken Roberts. I could swear Carlson was older than 68.

-------------------------

Timmy Turner: "Every time something cool happens in my life, EVERY TIME, Vicky ruins it! Well, I'm not gonna let her ruin anything else!"

 
Cartoon Forum
  damfine  

  Director / Contributor
damfine

 Posted:
  Jan 29, 2006, 6:58 AM
BCDB Supporter

Re: Cartoon, Kraft voice Len Carlson dead at 68 [In reply to] You Must Register Before You Can Post


In Reply To
Canadian voice actor Len Carlson, the narrator of the 1967-69 cartoon series Rocket Robin Hood and the TV commercial pitchman for Kraft Jet-Puffed Marshmallows and Miracle Whip, died Thursday of a heart attack at 68.

I thought Bernard Cowan was the narrator on Rocket Robin Hood.

-------------------------

http://www.dailymotion.com/...elhighres_shortfilms
 
Cartoon Forum
  STARFOX  

  Directing Animator

 Posted:
  Jan 29, 2006, 2:45 PM

Re: Cartoon, Kraft voice Len Carlson dead at 68 [In reply to] You Must Register Before You Can Post

Your right DF, Bernard Cowan was the narrator and other voices on on the 1966 cartoon Rocket Robin Hood!



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ToonRadio! Dog City-Editer:TV.Com! Big Cartoon DataBase!
 
Cartoon Forum
  eminovitz  

  Research Guru / Moderator
eminovitz

 Posted:
  Jan 29, 2006, 3:22 PM
BCDB Supporter

Re: Cartoon, Kraft voice Len Carlson dead at 68 [In reply to] You Must Register Before You Can Post

While the Internet Movie Database credits Bernard Cowan with being the narrator, the Toronto Sun's obituary said that Len Carlson did the job -- I assume that this information came from Carlson's agent, who was quoted. Too bad we can't ask Cowan, who passed on in 1990.

A lot of cast/crew members were not credited in the series -- including directors Ralph Bakshi and Grant Simmons! Even when they were credited, if memory serves me right, their roles often weren't placed next to their names, hence the confusion over who voiced whom.

Ed McNamara usually did the title voice in Rocket Robin Hood. Carlson subbed for him for a while.

One thing I can say comparing Kraft and RRH: they're pretty much equally cheesy. Hrumph!

I have strong recollections of Carlson's voice in the Kraft commercials. Kraft used to sponsor the CBC programs Wonderful World of Disney and high-school quiz program Reach for the Top. I was a competitor on the latter show; although Kraft ended its sponsorship of RFTT before I was there in the late 1970s, I do remember the ads.

Carlson was probably the only person who could made Kraft Dinner sound appetizing. For decades, "KD" (Americans know it as "Kraft Macaroni & Cheese") has been a staple of starving and impoverished college students.
 
Cartoon Forum
  zavkram  

  Directing Animator
zavkram

 Posted:
  Jan 30, 2006, 9:30 AM

Re: Cartoon, Kraft voice Len Carlson dead at 68 [In reply to] You Must Register Before You Can Post


In Reply To

One thing I can say comparing Kraft and RRH: they're pretty much equally cheesy. Hrumph!

Well done, Ethan!

-------------------------

"I'd like to cover you with furs and automobiles!"
 
Cartoon Forum
  artytoons  

  Directing Animator / Contributor
artytoons

 Posted:
  Jan 30, 2006, 9:46 AM
BCDB Supporter

Re: Cartoon, Kraft voice Len Carlson dead at 68 [In reply to] You Must Register Before You Can Post

Len Carlson...a familiar name in 80s-era tv cartoons along with John Stocker, Dan Hennessy, Marvin Goldhar, and others. DIC Studios used Canadian voice talent a lot in their productions.

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"Don't chew gum on camera. Don't whistle. You may kiss Bob Barker but please don't kill him." -announcer Johnny Olson briefing the audience of potential contestants for "The Price is Right"

(This post was edited by artytoons on Jan 30, 2006, 9:47 AM)
 
Cartoon Forum
  zavkram  

  Directing Animator
zavkram

 Posted:
  Jan 31, 2006, 7:32 AM

Re: Cartoon, Kraft voice Len Carlson dead at 68 [In reply to] You Must Register Before You Can Post

Ethan, do you have a B&W or color headshot of Carlson for this thread?

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"I'd like to cover you with furs and automobiles!"
 
Cartoon Forum
  eminovitz  

  Research Guru / Moderator
eminovitz

 Posted:
  Jan 31, 2006, 11:55 AM
BCDB Supporter

Re: Cartoon, Kraft voice Len Carlson dead at 68 [In reply to] You Must Register Before You Can Post

I looked hard, but couldn't find anything. Len Carlson's voice, not his face, was well-known.

Carlson appeared in very few live-action productions. The movies he was in were generally obscure, and he had very small roles. One exception was the 1998 thriller Motel, in which he played Grafton.
 
Cartoon Forum
  AdamJed  

  Member
AdamJed

 Posted:
  Feb 1, 2006, 10:51 PM

Re: Cartoon, Kraft voice Len Carlson dead at 68 [In reply to] You Must Register Before You Can Post

(re-hosted at Imageshack, not hot-linked)
(Source: http://www.voicechasers.com/...a22eacc4f36e1fa92266)




View online condolences, and/or leave one of your own, at: http://www.marshallfuneralhome.com/...;op=tribute.obituary




Obituary (from http://www.marshallfuneralhome.com/)

CARLSON, Len – Suddenly departed us on Thursday, January 26, 2006. Loving husband of Judy. Father of Corrina and husband Joe. Dear Grandfather of Selena and Sabrina. Will be sadly missed by all of his extended family and friends. Will be fondly remembered as the voice of the Green Giant and Bert Raccoon as well as many other characters. Friends may call at the MARSHALL FUNERAL HOME, 10366 Yonge St., Richmond Hill (4th traffic light north of Major Mackenzie Dr.) on Tuesday, January 31 at 1:30 pm with a service to follow at 3:00 pm. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Children’s Wish Foundation, Ontario Chapter, Unit 7, 725 Westney Road South, Ajax, ON, L1S 7J7.
 
Cartoon Forum
  ToonFan  

  Inbetweener

 Posted:
  Feb 2, 2006, 5:18 AM

Re: Cartoon, Kraft voice Len Carlson dead at 68 [In reply to] You Must Register Before You Can Post

Only one of these posts mentions Len Carlson as the voice of the Jolly Green Giant. I would think that was his most famous voiceover credit. Was there another actor onnected to the Jolly Green Giant voice?

Sorry. I just answered my own question. I found in my
collection of obituaries that Elmer "Len" Dressler was the
original voice of the Jolly Green Giant. He died last year
at the age of 80.


(This post was edited by ToonFan on Feb 2, 2006, 5:24 AM)
 
Cartoon Forum
  AdamJed  

  Member
AdamJed

 Posted:
  May 24, 2006, 7:34 AM

Re: Cartoon, Kraft voice Len Carlson dead at 68 [In reply to] You Must Register Before You Can Post

Eulogy given by Kevin Gillis

(Source: http://www.gilsinan.com/raccoons/actors/carlson.shtml )
Thanks to Stephane Dumas for finding the link and sharing it!



Eulogy given by Kevin Gillis

Friends and Family of Len Carlson,

I’m Kevin Gillis and I’ve had the honour of knowing Len Carlson for over 26 years, and as I look about this room, I see a wide cross-section of the many people that Len touched in his life – Actors, Producers, Studio Owners, Engineers, Musicians, Writers, Directors, Friends and, most of all, his Family.

My wife reminded me over the weekend that in a business that has its fair share of conflicts, I can’t recall anyone ever saying a bad word about Len. In fact, the corollary is the more poignant truth. Not once, in the 26 years I knew Len, did he have a bad word to say about anyone. He was honest and he was happy. He was the consummate professional. He came to work always on time and well prepared. Voice Directors like Merle Ann Ridley would joke that if he was late, you’d know that his agent must’ve screwed up the recording call. (Apologies to all agents here!).

Len always looked great too. We would always look forward to the colourful one-of-a kind Robin Hood shirts, complete with open neck and puffy sleeves or short sleeved shirts intended to maximize his buff chest and arms. His cowboy boots – he must’ve had a 100 pairs (no 2 alike!). His perfect tan and, of course, his perfectly coiffed hair. Len was always meticulous about how he looked and how others perceived him. His daughter, Corina, told me that one time, Len was in the hospital for a serious surgery and was adamant that no one know about it. So every time a call came in on his cell, Len would instruct Corina to call out in the background, “Len Carlson to the studio, Mr. Carlson to the studio.”

Contrary to the widely held popular belief (perpetuated by Len Carlson) Len was not an American. He was born in Edmonton, but of U.S. parents. Len’s parents wanted a girl and dressed Len accordingly (this might explain the shirts). Finally, when they did have a girl, Len was sent to be raised by his grandparents on Vancouver Island. It was here that Len started off on his life long love for dogs.

Len was a proficient athlete growing up. In the 50s, Len pitched for the San Francisco Giants farm team in Savanagh until an injury foreshortened his promising baseball career. He was always interested in acting and entertaining others with his voices and went to work in radio and television. And it was there, in Calgary in 1964, that he met Judy – his “HUNAH”. As fate would have it, Judy and Len shared an office where Judy was receptionist and librarian for CFCN. Len, knowing a good thing when he saw one, put on, as Judy recalls, his “Mr. Romance moves”.

Len was a household name in Calgary for his “Colonel Loonar” characters on CFCN TV (he did all 10 different voices and puppeteering for the characters -- a sure sign of things to come). As a TV star for kids’ shows in those days, Len would receive merchandise from the various companies wanting their products promoted. Mattel gave Len a new Barbie which he quickly incorporated into the show and renamed Little Miss Judy. That sealed it. From Calgary, Len went onto do TV stints in Vancouver, Seattle and finally, in 1965, he and Judy came to Toronto where he landed a job at CKFM under the wing of Herb May.

Len and Judy had many interests together; boating, stock car racing, dogs and restaurants. Len was known by the lockmasters throughout the Trent Severn system as the guy in the Chris Craft with the blonde lady’s wig (another leftover from his childhood no doubt!). Len loved to cook, so much so that he decided they had to open a restaurant, Café Au Passant was Len’s passion – for 6 months. Then it was Lenny’s on the marina and finally Judy C’s.

Then Corina came along, the apple of her father’s eye. As she recalls it, life was like a movie and Dad wrote the script. She never had books read to her because Len would tell her a story every night which he made up and played all the parts. Usually, there was a Princess Corina as a heroine. Not many kids had that. Corina also remembers that Dad would never raise his voice at Mom. IF they had a disagreement, he would just change into another character voice and that usually ended it. As Corina grew, got married and had 2 children of her own, Sabrina and Selena, Grandpa would entertain them with his gift of love and fun. As in his career as a restauranteur, Len was a perfectionist. When Corina took up figure skating, Len would buy and secret away books on “How to Coach Figure Skating”. “No guts, no glory,” he would say, “No guts, no glory.”

Len worked hard at his craft. He had an intense interest in characters and comedy. He came to the sessions well prepared, with suggestions on how to improve upon the lines and the character. Normally, producers and directors would cringe at this (Believe me). But not with Len. Many a time, he would start with a one shot character voice, which he would develop so strongly that the producers and writers had no choice but to expand. Then one day, we’d turn around and that character would be one of the stars of the show. Oh, and did I tell you that he could also be conniving?

I remember in the early 80s, after we had done Christmas Raccoons and Raccoons on Ice together (Len was Bert Raccoon), I told Len we were planning a series for the Raccoons and wrote up a small part for 3 pigs. We auditioned many people for the 3 roles and we filled the role of Pig #1 and Len as Pig #2. During a read-through, Len filled in for Pig #3 as the part was yet to be filled (Not for long – Len got it!). This is how he worked; he would help you out with suggestions. If he didn’t get the part, that was OK with him, he was always happy to help. Len always wanted what was best for the show. Most of the time though, he nailed it. It didn’t matter if the part was male or female, or whether he had to play against another part he had. Len had the gift to know what you wanted.

Len didn’t just do voices; he played many principal roles for film and television dramas including Call of the Wild, The Judge, Race For the Bomb, The Henry Ford Story and The Dejay, a Hallmark Showcase production for which he received an Emmy nomination. As a voice actor, Len appeared in thousands of animated cartoon episodes, juggling as may as 8 to 10 voices per show.

I’d like to share some of the highlights:
  • Len was the voice of Kraft for years and years. He was also the real Jolly Green Giant, and spoke for Canadian Tire and Kellogg’s, among the thousands
  • The Tooth Brush Family on Captain Kangaroo – where he played all the parts and did the puppets too!
  • Under hush-hush conditions, I understand he even stood in for Mel Blanc as Porky Pig.
  • He was the original Rocket Robin Hood and Spiderman!
  • The underwater adventures of Captain Nemo (in the 70s) (They designed the character to look just like him!)
  • Beetlejuice – where he created and played the monster across the street
  • On the Raccoons, he was Bert Raccoon, the star, as well as 2 of the little pigs, Lloyd and Floyd, Mr. Knox and countless others.
  • He was Pappy in Rolie Polie Olie. A part Jesse Thomson, his director, says he did as if his teeth kept falling out. On purpose – rest assured.
  • He played numerous characters in Mr. Men’s Fun House, Donky Kong, Carebears.
  • He played 18-20 characters in Atomic Betty, from Minimus to Spindly Tam, to the little old lady. (Len could always be counted on to play a great lady!)
  • He starred in both Roboroach and Berenstein Bears.

His shows have been seen in over 180 countries on all of the top networks (Disney, BBC, CBC, Teletoon, YTV, ABC, CBS, and on and on). And because of the timelessness of both his craft and animation, I have no doubt they will be enjoyed for years and years to come. By future generations of young children the world over.

I’d like to share with you a montage of show clips that many of Len’s colleagues contributed to. [Reel is shown...]

Len was a joy to his peers. He was always happy. He never let anything interfere with his work. Colin Fox, his co-star on Atomic Betty, was recalling to me how on the 1st recording session, he wondered who this guy was opposite him. You have to appreciate that Colin is a classical actor and here he is facing a well-tanned man in sunglasses, a Robin Hood shirt and cowboy boots – playing multiple personalities. Well, the 2 of them hit if off like no tomorrow! From the control room – it was like the Odd Couple Incarnate. And that’s part of what made Len so special –he made you feel like an old friend from the moment you met.

With the younger actors, Len was always generous. He had patience and experience which he would share with the young talent starting out in their careers. I remember one time, years ago, Len was working with a young actor who was having problems with his lines. Len asked that we turn the studio microphone off and we could see him gently speaking to the young man in private. After a few minutes, Len signaled us and we resumed the session without a hitch. I never knew what Len said, but it worked.

In his own work, Len had the amazing ability to recall voices that he had done sometimes 1 or 2 seasons prior, always in character, as it if was just 5 minutes earlier. If you had a character and you wanted to age it up or down, Len would ask, “How much? 1, 2 or 5 years” – and deliver right on the mark.

When I met with Judy and Corina to discuss the arrangements, I was taken aback but not totally surprised to hear that Len had very little of the work he had contributed to over the years. No tapes and no up to date photos. In some ways, that was the kind of guy he was. He didn’t make a fuss. He came to work to have fun and see you next time.

Len was a husband of 40 years, a father, a brother, a grandfather, a teacher, a dreamer, a prankster, a friend, an actor, a character. He made his mark on our lives and our work like no one else could.

We will miss him dearly, but he will always be there entertaining us. I am sure he’s looking down on us now asking – So, was it a good take?, or Let me try another.

Thank You, Len – The writers wrote the lines, but you created the characters.

And by the way – in case we never said it enough... [starts to clap]

[Everyone applauded and gave Len a standing ovation.]



(Note to moderators: You may wish to move this to the "In Memoriam" forum.)

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