Houston Chronicle

Comedian turned ‘very interestin­g’ line into an art form

- By Daniel E. Slotnik

Arte Johnson, a comic actor who won an Emmy for playing a diverse troupe of characters on the groundbrea­king comedy show “Rowan & Martin’s LaughIn,” died on Wednesday in Los Angeles. He was 90.

His death was announced by a spokesman, Harlan Boll, who said Johnson had bladder and prostate cancer.

A diminutive, bespectacl­ed man with sandy hair, Johnson summoned everything from manic energy to an old man’s tired shuffle in films and television shows of the 1950s and ’60s. But he was largely unknown until he became part of a cast that included Goldie Hawn, Lily Tomlin, Ruth Buzzi and Alan Sues on “Laugh-In.”

Johnson was a one-man ensemble, delivering lines that might otherwise fall flat in more accents than a United Nations meeting. His characters included Tyrone Horneigh, a lascivious old man who accosted a woman played by Buzzi with amorous one-liners; Rosmenko, a Russian with tortured syntax; and Rabbi Shankar, a blissed-out guru.

But his most popular character was probably Wolfgang Busch, a helmeted German soldier (named after his brotherin-law) who would peer through bushes at the end of a sketch before slowly uttering, “Very interestin­g,” often followed by a qualifier such as “but stupid” or “but not very funny.” The phrase was so popular that Johnson recorded a song, “Very Interestin­g,” with Buzzi.

Johnson said he was not sure where the phrase came from but thought it was from a World War II film in which Allied soldiers had to cross Germany after their plane is downed. He said he had used it as an interjecti­on at a party and George Schlatter, the executive producer and creator of “Laugh-In,” overheard and decided to incorporat­e it into the show.

In an interview for this obituary in 2013, Johnson said he had developed his aptitude for accents while taking public transporta­tion in Chicago as a young man.

Arthur Stanton Eric Johnson was born on Jan. 20, 1929, in Benton Harbor, Mich.

He worked in public relations in Chicago for a time before moving to New York. His performing career began, he said, when he was walking back to a dull entry-level job at Viking Press after lunch and stumbled on an open audition for the Broadway musical “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.” He auditioned on a whim and won a small, uncredited part.

“It was a total gift. It was prepostero­us,” Johnson said. “I went in having no idea what I was doing, but there I was. I was in showbiz.”

He developed his characters at resorts in the Pocono Mountains and appeared off-Broadway in “The Shoestring Revue” and on television shows including “The Jack Benny Program,” on which he leapt onstage and loudly corrected Benny as he told a joke, and “The Twilight Zone,” on which he played an unhappy car salesman, before his break on “Laugh-In.”

Johnson parted ways with “Laugh-In” before the show’s last season — a decision he said he came to regret. “It wasn’t the brightest move of my life,” he said. “If I had to do it over again I wouldn’t have left.”

His success on “Laugh-In” led to a half-hour special in 1971; stints hosting other programs, including the short-lived game show “Knockout”; and repeat appearance­s on series like “The Love Boat” and “General Hospital.” He voiced a character named Tyrone on the cartoon series “Baggypants and the Nitwits,” which also featured the voice of Ruth Buzzi, in 1977, and played Renfield in the vampire movie comedy “Love at First Bite,” with George Hamilton as Count Dracula, in 1979.

Johnson kept acting into the 2000s and also recorded books on tape, including Gary Shteyngart’s “Absurdista­n,” for which he used his mastery of accents to great advantage. He did voiceover work on cartoon shows like “Justice League Unlimited,” on which he reused his Teutonic timbre, and “Animaniacs.”

He married Gisela Busch in 1968. She survives him, as does his brother, Coslough, a comedy writer who won an Emmy for his work on “Laugh-In.”

Johnson said he never got tired of saying “Very interestin­g,” even though he had repeated the phrase for years.

“It was really so important to my career,” he said. “I had no problem with it.”

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? Arte Johnson’s most popular “Laugh-In” character was Wolfgang Busch, a German soldier who would peer through bushes at the end of a sketch before slowly uttering, “Very interestin­g.”
Associated Press file photo Arte Johnson’s most popular “Laugh-In” character was Wolfgang Busch, a German soldier who would peer through bushes at the end of a sketch before slowly uttering, “Very interestin­g.”
 ?? NBC ??
NBC

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