Janos Prohaska
Janos Prohaska (October 10, 1919, Budapest, Hungary – March 13, 1974, Inyo County, California, United States) was a U.S.-based Hungarian actor and stunt performer on American television from the 1960s. He usually played the roles of animals or monsters.
He is best remembered for his recurring comic role as The Cookie Bear in the The Andy Williams Show from 1969 to 1971. Prohaska also appeared more than once in such TV series as The Outer Limits, Bewitched, I Dream of Jeannie, Lost in Space, and a few episodes of Gilligan's Island, where he plays a gorilla and his only credited role appears in the episode “Our Vines Have Tender Apes”. In 1967, he also appeared as a white gorilla in the fourth season of the sci-fi TV show Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea in the episode "Fatal Cargo" and Star Trek, although his turns as the Horta in Star Trek's "The Devil in the Dark", and the Mugato in "A Private Little War" are the best known of these. He made an appearance as himself on an episode of What's My Line? in 1969, where he wore a monkey costume that he created.
He and his son Robert were killed along with 34 others on March 13, 1974 at 8:28 p.m. in the crash of a chartered Sierra Airlines Convair CV-440 aircraft near Bishop, California while filming the ABC/Wolper Productions television series Primal Man.[1] The plane flew into a mountain ridge in darkness, but the exact cause of the crash was never determined.[2]
During the late 1980s revamp of the DC Comics character Blackhawk by Howard Chaykin, the leader of the eponymous group of World War II fighters was revealed to be named Janos Prohaska, in tribute to the actor.
References
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19740313-0
External links
- Janos Prohaska at Memory Alpha (a Star Trek wiki)
- Janos Prohaska at the Internet Movie Database
- Robert Prohaska at the Internet Movie Database
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- 1919 births
- 1974 deaths
- American people of Hungarian descent
- Hungarian male television actors
- Male actors from Budapest
- Victims of aviation accidents or incidents in the United States
- Burials at Woodlawn Memorial Cemetery, Santa Monica
- 20th-century Hungarian male actors
- Hungarian people stubs
- European television biography stubs