Los Angeles Times

TV’s ‘Jose Jimenez’

- associated press A Times staff writer contribute­d to this report.

Comedy writer and performer Bill Dana, who won stardom but stoked anger with his broken-English-spewing character Jose Jimenez, has died.

Dana died at his home in Nashville at age 92, according to Emerson College, his alma mater.

Early in his career, Dana wrote jokes for Don Adams and Steve Allen, serving as head writer of Allen’s show and a member of the performing troupe.

Dana was born William Szathmary, a Massachuse­tts native of HungarianJ­ewish descent. He first appeared as Mexican immigrant Jimenez in a 1959 episode of “The Steve Allen Show.” It was for one of the show’s “Man on the Street” interviews conducted by fellow cast member Pat Harrington Jr.

Introducin­g himself in mangled English, Jose Jimenez cracked up the studio audience and convinced Dana that he had a hit on his hands.

He did. “My name ... Jose ... Jimenez” was soon a national catchphras­e.

Though he defended the character as “a perfect example of a person that wanted to be assimilate­d into American culture, learn the language, always looked spiffy,” he retired the role in 1970 when he decided it was playing into racial stereotype­s and embraced by people he thought were intolerant.

“It was people I met in this country who would tell me, ‘Boy, shore love it when you play the dumb Mexican’ that made me want to drop the character,” Dana told The Times in a 1970 interview.

He later declared the character “officially dead” and wrote an obituary for Jose Jimenez, which he read at a Latino civil rights meeting in Los Angeles.

But for years, the character was a frequent guest in America’s living rooms. On Garry Moore’s variety program, Dana appeared as Jose the Astronaut when the space race was heating up. Being interviewe­d for his planned mission, Jose, understand­ably wary, was asked what he planned to do while in space.

Wearing a fretful look, he replied, “I plan to cry a lot.”

In another exchange, Jose’s interviewe­r noted that he was all suited up for the voyage. “And what is that called, the crash helmet?” Jose: “Oh, I hope not.” Adopted by the original seven Mercury astronauts, Dana and his alter ego became part of U.S space history May 5, 1961, thanks to the first words spoken after Alan Shepard’s liftoff from fellow Mercury astronaut Deke Slayton on the ground: “OK, Jose, you’re on your way.”

The character soon won Dana his own sitcom, “The Bill Dana Show,” which aired on NBC from 1963 to ’65. A good-hearted naif, Jose was a bellhop at a New York hotel. (Don Adams played the house detective, a role that paved the way for his 1965-70 spy sitcom, “Get Smart.”)

Dana recorded eight bestsellin­g comedy albums and made many TV appearance­s while continuing behind the scenes as a comedy writer. (He wrote the classic “Sammy’s Visit” episode of “All in the Family,” which featured Sammy Davis Jr. kissing bigoted Archie Bunker on the cheek.)

Dana also ran a talent management company and an advertisin­g agency.

In a 1998 interview with the Associated Press, Dana said, “America was so uptight sexually you couldn’t show a close-up of the stork on ‘Zoo Parade.’ We were blessed with having to get our laughs out of pure comedy, pure in the sense of universali­ty.”

Then he was asked to share a favorite joke. From Dana: “Steve Allen is questionin­g Jose Jimenez and says, ‘I understand you own a ranch.’

“‘Yes, the name of my ranch is the Bar Nine Circle Z Rocking O Flying W Lazy O Crazy Two Happy Seven Bar 17 Parallelog­ram Four Octagon Nine Trapezoid Six Ranch.’

“‘Well, do you have many cattle?’

“‘No. Not many survive the branding.’”

Dana, who died June 15, is survived by his wife, Evelyn Shular.

 ?? Television Academy ?? HIS TICKET TO STARDOM Bill Dana first appeared as Mexican immigrant Jose Jimenez in a 1959 episode of “The Steve Allen Show.” He was convinced he had a hit on his hands. “My name ... Jose ... Jimenez” was soon a national catchphras­e.
Television Academy HIS TICKET TO STARDOM Bill Dana first appeared as Mexican immigrant Jose Jimenez in a 1959 episode of “The Steve Allen Show.” He was convinced he had a hit on his hands. “My name ... Jose ... Jimenez” was soon a national catchphras­e.
 ?? Kevork Djansezian Associated Press ?? MISGIVINGS Dana, shown in 1990, regretted the success of his Jose Jimenez character and retired the role in 1970.
Kevork Djansezian Associated Press MISGIVINGS Dana, shown in 1990, regretted the success of his Jose Jimenez character and retired the role in 1970.

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