- Was a New York City policeman for 20 years before going into acting.
- Served as a navigator in the US Air Force during World War II.
- Got into the comic angle of show business as a cop while adding jokes to various speeches he made for deputy commissioners.
- Discovered for films by Mel Brooks, who cast him in The Producers (1967).
- Once served as a stand-in for the equally hefty Jackie Gleason.
- The father of a son and a daughter. His daughter died of cancer in 2002.
- Originated the role of Amos Hart in the 1975 Broadway musical Chicago (2002).
- He was of Irish descent.
- Appeared in a 1970's television commercial for Post Raisin Bran.
- Appeared in many musicals including South Pacific, The Fantasticks, How Now Dow Jones, and his best known part, in Chicago where he introduced the "Mister Cellophane" number. *
- Member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Actors Branch)
- Was on leave from the NYPD in the fall of 1957 when he appeared as challenger Jack Bothwell #2 on TV's To Tell the Truth (1956). He was also the associate producer of Treasure Hunt (1956), a TV show starring Jan Murray, at this time.
- Wrote for the Name That Tune (1953) game show and for The Steve Allen Plymouth Show (1956) in the 1950s.
- Upon his death, he was cremated by the Nautlius Society and his ashes returned to his family in Studio City, California.
- Lived in Rhinebeck, New York.
- He was a lifelong liberal Democrat.
- Survived by his wife, his son, Donald, two grandsons and two great grand-sons.
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