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Bob Newhart dead at 94

Bob Newhart has died at age 94. The comic, whose TV series “The Bob Newhart Show” and “Newhart” were hits in the 1970s and ’80s, died Thursday.

His longtime publicist Jerry Digney announced on Thursday that he died of “a series of short illnesses,” according to The Wrap.

He was inducted into the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Hall of Fame in 1992.

Born in Oak Park, Illinois, Newhart began his career as a stand up comedian in the 1950s, after a stint in the army (he served from 1952-54). He was known as “the funny guy in the barracks” during the Korean War, he told The Post in 2020.

When he was working in Chicago at an accounting job, he started making humorous phone calls to a friend to pass the time and sending the recordings to radio stations. This got Newhart noticed by James Conkling, the then- president of Warner Bros. Records. Colking booked him in the Houston nightclub, the Tidelands, and recorded his performances.

Bob Newhart on “The Bob Newhart Show.” NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

His career took off when his comedy routine “The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart,” won a Grammy Award as album of the year at the 1961 Grammys – becoming the first comedy album to win that honor.

It sold 750,000 copies at the time. That year, The New York Times  called Newhart, “the first comedian in history to come to prominence through a recording.”

It’s since been added to the Library of Congress for its registry of historically significant sound recordings. 

“I thought [‘The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart’] might sell maybe 5,000 albums. I would’ve been happy with that,” Newhart told The Post in 2020. “I really saw it as an adjunct to stand-up, to maybe get four or five more people to come [to a club] because they’d heard about that album.”

He added, “And then it exploded.”

Bob Newhart and his wife, Ginny Newhart, with three of their four children, Tim Newhart, Jennifer Newhart, and Robert Newhart in 1972. Courtesy Everett Collection
Madeline Kahn, Bob Newhart and Gilda Radner in “First Family” in 1980. ©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection

In one of his jokes, he pretended to be advising Abraham Lincoln on how to improve the Gettysburg Address: “Say 87 years ago instead of fourscore and seven,” he said. 

“There was a change that was going on, of which I was part of,” Newhart told Guy MacPherson of the Comedy Couch blog in 2006. 

“There was Mike and Elaine (Nichols & May), Shelley Berman, Mort Sahl, myself, Johnny Winters and Lenny Bruce. We weren’t doing ‘take my wife, please’ jokes. We weren’t doing ‘jokes’; we were doing little vignettes. So there was a change in comedy. I mean, we didn’t all get together and have a cabal and say let’s change comedy; it was just our way of finding what was funny in the world.”

“There was a change in comedy,” Bob Newhart said. CBS via Getty Images
Bob Newhart has died at 94. Courtesy Everett Collection

“I tend to find humor in the macabre. I would say 85 percent of me is what you see on the show. And the other 15 percent is a very sick man with a very deranged mind,” he told Los Angeles Magazine in 1990.

His Variety show, “The Bob Newhart Show” premiered in 1961, and although it earned Emmy and Peabody awards, it got canceled after one season. 

Newhart’s next series was more successful, as it ran from 1972 to 1978. 

“Bob Newhart Show” was a sitcom following a Chicago psychologist (Newhart) who lived with teacher wife (Suzanne Pleshette) and had kooky patients and neighbors. 

His next show was called “Newhart,” and it was also a hit, lasting for eight seasons on CBS. In it, he played a New York writer who reopens a closed Vermont inn, surrounded by oddball locals.

Bob Newhart in “The Entertainers” in 1991. ©ABC/Courtesy Everett Collection
Jennifer Coolidge and Bob Newhar in “Legally Blonde 2: Red White and Blonde.” MGM/Courtesy Everett Collection

Newhart also had the series  “Bob,” in 1992-93, and “George & Leo,” 1997-98.

His film roles included “In and Out,” “Legally Blonde 2″ and “Elf,” “Horrible Bosses,”  and on the small screen more recently, he was in “The Librarians,” “ER,” (for which he got an Emmy nomination)  “The Big Bang Theory,”  and “Young Sheldon.” 

Newhart had 10 Emmy nominations, and only 1 win, for “The Big Bang Theory.” 

From 1964 until her death in 2023, Newhart was married to Virginia Quinn. 

The couple had four children: Robert, Timothy, Jennifer and Courtney. 

Newhart was also famously friends with fellow comedian Don Rickles, who died in 2017 at 90. 

Bob Newhart won his only Emmy for “The Big Bang Theory.” REUTERS
Bob Newhart in “Elf.” ©New Line Cinema/Courtesy Everett Collection

Judd Apatow made the documentary “Bob and Don: A Love Story” about their friendship. 

About “Elf,” Newhart said in a 2005 interview with PBS, “it was just a delightful experience… I went to see a private screening of it with some of my granddaughters, and they enjoyed it. But my daughters enjoyed it even more.”

When asked if he agreed to do the movie for his grandkids, Newhart said, “The kids had something to do with it. I mean, I liked the story anyway, and I liked playing it.”

Newhart also told PBS, “People more and more come up to me saying thank you for all the laughter. And my reaction is always the same. It was my pleasure. And that’s the truth.”

This post was originally posted by NYPost

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Written by Lauren Sarner

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