Charles Nelson
Reilly, the Tony award winner who later became known for
his ribald appearances on The Tonight Show and various game shows, has died. He
was 76.
Reilly died
Friday in Los Angeles of complications from pneumonia, his
partner, Patrick Hughes, told The New York
Times.
Reilly began his
career in New York City, taking acting classes at a
studio with Steve McQueen, Geraldine Page, and Hal Holbrook.
In 1962, he appeared on Broadway as Bud Frump in the
original Broadway production of How to Succeed in
Business Without Really Trying. The role won
Reilly a Tony award.
He was nominated
for a Tony again for playing Cornelius in Hello,
Dolly! In 1997 he received another nomination for
directing Julie Harris and Charles Durning in a revival of
The Gin Game.
After moving to
Hollywood in the 1960s he appeared as the nervous
Claymore Gregg on TV's The Ghost and Mrs. Muir
and as a featured guest on The Dean Martin
Show.
He gained fame by
becoming what he described as a ''game show fixture''
in the 1970s and '80s. He was a regular on programs like
Match Game and Hollywood Squares,
often wearing giant glasses and colorful suits with ascots.
His
larger-than-life persona and affinity for double-entendres
also landed him on The Tonight Show with Johnny
Carson more than 95 times.
Reilly ruefully
admitted his wild game-show appearances adversely
affected his acting career. ''You can't do anything else
once you do game shows,'' he told The Advocate
in 2001. ''You have no career.''
His final work
was an autobiographical one-man show, Save It for the
Stage: The Life of Reilly, about his family
life growing up in the Bronx. The title grew out of the fact
that when he would act out as a child, his mother would
often admonish him to ''save it for the stage.''
The stage show
was made into the 2006 feature film called The Life of
Reilly.
Reilly's openly
gay television persona was ahead of its time--and
sometimes stood in his way. He recalled a network executive
telling him that ''they don't let queers on
television.''
Hughes, his only
immediate survivor, said Reilly had been ill for more
than a year.
No memorial plans
have been announced. (AP)