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He continued to work as a voice performer in the 1970s cartoon series Here Comes the Grump, as the title character, and in the second edition of The Addams Family cartoon series in 1992, as the voice of Uncle Fester.
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He appeared in two 1968 episodes of The Monkees as well as having a cameo in their 1969 special 33 + 1⁄ 3 Revolutions per Monkee. In the 1970s he won Las Vegas Entertainer of the Year three times. He was the opener for Eleanor Powell's dance-focused revue, and would go on to warm up audiences for headliners " Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr., Ann-Margret, Debbie Reynolds, Frankie Laine, Judy Garland and The Kingston Trio".
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Taylor became somewhat of a fixture in Las Vegas. They said, 'Get the guy that went crazy!'" "I knocked over his desk, walked up the aisle, went to Sardi's and said, 'Well, that's the end of my television career.' I went home that night. The jokes were dumb, and I tore the five by eight cards, threw them up in the air and it became confetti," he recalled. "I did props and I was 'The Prop Comedian.' I was dying like hell on Merv Griffin's show. Taylor's signature confetti tossing gag came from an appearance in the 1960s The Merv Griffin Show where he was bombing as a stand-up comedian. In addition to the Ed Sullivan Show, Taylor appeared on The Jackie Gleason Show in several guest appearances during the 1963–1964 season as "the crying comedian". Sullivan would forget his name, saying "Get me the crying comedian." Television and film He first appeared on the show in 1961 and made about twenty appearances. Taylor would spend a week's salary on champagne to get the audience boisterous. A booking agent from The Ed Sullivan Show attended his show one night. Taylor was also a mainstay in the summer playground of the wealthy in the Catskills Mountains. His bookings started to get more upscale and he played all over Miami Beach, Florida, which had become a winter destination for the wealthy. He found he could get a bigger response that way. Although much of his material included jokes stolen from acts he saw in USO shows, his first signature piece would be to pretend to cry while begging the audience for laughs. His mainstay material was " pantomiming records, his favorites were Yiddish folk songs and Spike Jones tunes." He said that ended one day when the record player broke, "I haven't shut up since." In the mid-1950s he worked the strip clubs all along the Eastern coast of the U.S. After his military service, and back in the U.S., he focused on a nightclub career. Army, where he started performing stand-up in clubs and restaurants abroad while also performing for the troops. Taylor's career in show business began when he joined the U.S. Although assigned to the Corps, he was sent to Special Services, the entertainment wing of the military, where he performed for the troops in Tokyo and Korea. Taylor worked as a congressional page before serving in the Korean War he was in the U.S. As a teenager he attended Capitol Page School. As described in his 2010 one-man show It Ain't All Confetti, Taylor had a tough childhood, which included being molested while in foster care and having to deal with bullies in school. His father died when he was two years old. was born in Washington, D.C., on January 13, 1931, the son of Elizabeth Sue Evans (1911–2000), a waitress and former government clerk, and Charles Elmer Taylor (died 1933), a musician.
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