Paul Frees
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Image:TR-PaulFrees.jpg Paul Frees (June 22, 1920 - November 2, 1986) was an American voice actor.
Born Solomon Hersh Frees in Chicago, he began his acting career in 1942, and remained active for over forty years. During this time, he was involved in more than 250 films, cartoons, and TV appearances; like many voice actors, his appearances were often uncredited.
Frees' early radio career was cut short when he was drafted into World War II where he was at Normandy on D-Day. He was wounded in action and was returned to the United States for a year of recuperation. He attended the Chouinard Art Institute under the G.I. Bill. His first wife's failing health forced him to drop out and return to radio work. He appeared frequently on such Hollywood radio series, including Escape, playing lead roles and alternating with William Conrad as the opening voice, Suspense as the opening announcer in the late 1940s, and parts on Gunsmoke and Crime Classics. One of his few starring roles in this medium was as Jethro Dumont in the 1949 series The Green Lama, as well as a syndicated mystery series The Player' (1948), in which Frees narrated and played all of the parts.
Frees was often called upon in the 1950s and 1960s to "re-loop" the dialogue of other actors, often to correct for foreign accents, lack of English proficiency, or poor line readings by non-professionals. These dubs extended from a few lines to entire roles. This can be noticed rather clearly in the film Midway where Frees reads for Toshiro Mifune's performance as Admiral Yamamoto.
Some of his most memorable voices were those of Disney's Professor Ludwig Von Drake, the narrator in The Haunted Mansion and several pirates in Pirates of the Caribbean (both rides at Disney parks), and many characters in Rankin-Bass stop-motion animated TV specials such as the Burgermeister Meisterburger in Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town (1970). He also voiced all characters, except the lead role in the US versions of Belvision's Tintin cartoons, based on the books by Hergé.
He was a regular presence in Jay Ward cartoons, providing the voices of Boris Badenov, Inspector Fenwick (from Dudley Do-Right), and the Hoppity Hooper narrator, among numerous others. While most voice actors settled down with one major studio for their career, he spent major parts of his career working with at least 9 of the major animation production companies of the 20th century: Walt Disney Studios, Walter Lantz Studios, UPA, Hanna-Barbera, Filmation, MGM Studios, DePatie-Freleng Enterprises, and the aforementioned Jay Ward Productions and Rankin-Bass Productions.
He provided the voices of both John Lennon and George Harrison in the 1964 cartoon series based on The Beatles, and of The Thing in the 1967 series based on the Fantastic Four.
In TV commercials, he was the voice of the Pillsbury Doughboy, the 7-Up "Undeer," and the elf who called out to the Jolly Green Giant, "Hey, Green Giant, what's new besides ho-ho-ho?" Frees also provided the voice of the eccentric billionaire John Beresford Tipton, always seated in his chair with his back to the viewer while talking to his employee Michael Anthony (Marvin Miller), on the live-action dramatic series The Millionaire.
Although Frees is primarily known for his voice work (he was known in the industry as "The Man of a Thousand Voices"), he was also a songwriter and screenwriter, his major work being the little-seen 1960 film The Beatniks, a Reefer Madness-esque screed against the then-rising Beatnik counterculture.
Frees was active right up until his sudden death at 66 from heart failure on November 2, 1986. He was living in Tiburon, California at the time of his passing.
A few other odds and ends of Frees' voice work:
- The Peter Lorre voice in the Spike Jones version of the song "My Old Flame".
- The Orson Welles soundalike radio reporter in The War of the Worlds, where he is seen dictating into a tape recorder as the military prepares the atomic bomb for use against the invading Martians. Memorably, in one of Frees' lines, he says that the recording is being made for "future history (if any):" "Future History" crops up in the unofficial War of the Worlds sequel The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension (1984) as the title of a fictitious book by Banzai and his mentor.
- The Orson Welles soundalike narrator in Stan Freberg's History of America Part 1.
- The shrouded figure of "Death" in the Woody Allen movie Love and Death.
- In his natural voice, as the narrator in the Disney educational short film Donald Duck in Math Magic Land.
- The voice-over in the original advance teaser trailer for Star Wars (1977), and the narration for the spoof short film Hardware Wars (1977), which was itself styled as a mock movie trailer.
- Multiple voices in Rankin-Bass' Santa Claus is Coming to Town, including the central villain Burgermeister Meisterburger and his assistant Grimsby.