Everything about Freddie Prinze totally explained
Freddie Prinze (
June 22,
1954 –
January 29,
1977) was an
American actor and
stand-up comedian. In his short career, he was best known as the star of
Chico and the Man. He was the father of actor
Freddie Prinze, Jr.
Biography
Early life
Prinze was born
Frederick Karl Pruetzel at St. Clair's Hospital in
New York City, the son of Maria and Karl Pruetzel. His mother was
Puerto Rican, and his father, a Hungarian of
Lutheran and
Jewish background, immigrated to the U.S. from Germany in 1934.
Prinze was raised in a Hispanic section in
Washington Heights,
New York City. He began his education at a private
Lutheran school, in a religious compromise by his parents (though his mother took him to
Catholic mass on Sundays). When Prinze was a small child, his mother enrolled him in ballet classes to deal with his weight problem. Without telling his parents, Prinze successfully auditioned for the
Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Performing Arts, where he was introduced to drama and continued ballet — and where he discovered his gift for comedy while entertaining crowds in the boys restroom. He dropped out of school in his senior year to become a stand-up comedian.
Career
Prinze worked at several
comedy clubs in
New York City, including
The Improv and
Catch a Rising Star where he introduced himself to audiences as a "Hungarican" (part Hungarian, part Puerto Rican). For the sake of his budding comedic
career, he changed his surname to "Prinze", which he chose because, according to his friend
David Brenner, he originally wanted to be known as the
King of comedy, but
Alan King already had that last name, so he'd be the
Prince of comedy instead.
In 1973, he made his first television appearance on one of the last episodes of
The Jack Paar Show. In December 1973, his biggest break came with an appearance on
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. Prinze was the first young comedian to be asked to have a sit-down chat with Carson on his first appearance. (Prinze appeared on and guest hosted
The Tonight Show on several other occasions). From 1974 to 1977, Prinze starred as Francisco "Chico" Rodriguez in the
NBC TV series
Chico and the Man with
Jack Albertson. The show was an instant hit.
Prinze made several appearances on the
Dean Martin Celebrity Roasts, most notably at the roasts for
Sammy Davis Jr. and
Muhammad Ali. In 1975, he released a comedy album that was taped live at Mr. Kelly's in
Chicago titled
Looking Good — his catch phrase from
Chico and the Man. In 1976, he starred in a
made-for-TV movie,
The Million Dollar Rip-Off.
Prinze had a little-known talent for singing, examples of which could be heard in the background of the title song of the
Tony Orlando and Dawn album
To Be With You, in his appearances on their variety show, and on rare occasions on his own
sitcom.
About four months prior to his death, Prinze had signed a multi-year deal with
NBC worth $US 6 million dollars over five years. In the months before he died, he'd a strong fixation on how
John F. Kennedy was assassinated. He also developed an obsession with the film
Taxi Driver, viewing it repeatedly.
Upon becoming wealthy, Prinze took martial arts lessons from
Robert Wall, a student of
Bruce Lee who appeared in
Enter the Dragon and
Return of the Dragon. Soon after, Wall became godfather to Prinze's newborn son
Freddie Prinze, Jr.
Personal life
Prinze dated actresses
Lisa Farringer and
Pam Grier, among others. He was romantically involved with
Kitty Bruce, daughter of the late
Lenny Bruce, whom Prinze admired. He and Kitty were once reported to be engaged to be married, but the rumor was never substantiated.
He married Katherine Cochran in October 1975, with whom he'd one son, future actor
Freddie Prinze, Jr. The son's middle name was in honor of
James Komack, producer of
Chico and the Man. In 1976, after his arrest for
driving under the influence of
quaaludes, his wife filed for
divorce on the grounds that his escalating drug dependence was endangering her and their son.
Death
During the early morning hours of
January 28,
1977, after receiving a
restraining order from his ex-wife the previous evening, Prinze, who occasionally told friends that "life isn't worth living", made a series of farewell phone calls to family, friends and management from his hotel room at the
Beverly Comstock Hotel. His business manager, Marvin "Dusty" Snyder, was alarmed after receiving one of the calls and rushed over to Prinze's room. When Snyder arrived, Prinze continued his rueful phone calls, telling his mother "Mom, I love you very much, but I can't go on. I need to find peace." Snyder called Prinze's
psychologist from the next room about what was happening, but the psychologist insisted that Prinze was in no actual danger. Snyder returned to Prinze, who supposedly called his ex-wife and said "I love you, Kathy. I love the baby, but I need to find peace. I can't go on." After the call, Prinze pulled out a gun from the sofa. Snyder tried to intervene, but Prinze shot himself in the head, and was rushed to the
UCLA Medical Center to be placed on
life support following emergency surgery. Prinze's family removed him from life support, and he died at 1:00 pm on
January 29 at the age of 22.
Legacy
The death, initially ruled a
suicide, was years later re-ruled an "accidental shooting due to the influence of
Quaaludes". His mother, Maria, led the effort to have the
cause of death reworded. Prinze had a history of playing with guns, faking suicide attempts to frighten his friends for his amusement. He had left a note stating that the decision to take his life was his alone, but because he pulled the trigger in the presence of a witness -- something suicides rarely do -- it gave enough weight to the argument that he really wasn't planning to take his own life that night.
Prinze's mother wrote a book about her son,
The Freddie Prinze Story, which was published in 1978. In September 1979, the TV movie
Can You Hear the Laughter? The Story of Freddie Prinze premiered.
In 2001,
TV Land began showing
reruns of
Chico and the Man.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Freddie Prinze'.
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