New York Daily News

Squiggy, of ‘Laverne & Shirley,’ dies

- BY STORM GIFFORD

David Lander, the comic actor best known for his over-the-top portrayal of 1950s greaser Squiggy on “Laverne & Shirley,” has died at the age of 73.

Lander passed away Friday from complicati­ons from multiple sclerosis at a Los Angeles hospital, his wife, Kathy, told TMZ.

Kathy Lander noted that she and daughter, Natalie, were at Lander’s bedside when he died.

Born in Brooklyn in 1947, Lander graduated from Manhattan’s High School of Performing Arts before attending Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. It was there that he met classmate Michael McKean, and where they created the characters of Lenny & Squiggy .

Penny Marshall, who played Laverne, knew Lander and McKean and suggested them for the show, she said in a 2016 Television Academy interview with Cindy Williams, who played Shirley.

“I almost bit a hole in my tongue trying not to laugh” at Lander and McKean, Williams said in the same interview.

On Saturday, McKean posted an undated black-and-white photo on Twitter of Lander and himself.

Both actors appeared in the 1979 Steven Spielberg World War II film “1941” and in the Kurt Russsell comedy ”Used Cars” the following year.

One year after “Laverne & Shirley” ended its eight-season run in 1983, Lander (photo) was diagnosed with the neurologic­al disease. Before publicly revealing his diagnosis in 1999, he made notable guest appearance­s on “Married ... with Children,” “Simon & Simon” and “Father Dowling Mysteries,” according to IMDb.

He also had an uncredited role as a baseball announcer in the 1992 film “A League of Their Own,” directed by Marshall.

In addition to recurring roles on several series in the 1990s, Lander performed in numerous voiceover projects well into the 2000s, including “SpongeBob SquarePant­s,” “The Garfield Show” and “Oswald.”

He also helped raise awareness of multiple sclerosis.

“I don’t think we’re ever going to find a cure,” he said in a 2015 “Entertainm­ent Tonight” interview with his co-stars. “It’s just basically becoming aware that you can live with it.”

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