Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Foil on ‘The Carol Burnett Show’

-

LOS ANGELES — Lyle Waggoner, who used his good looks to comic effect on “The Carol Burnett Show,” partnered with a superhero on “Wonder Woman” and was the first centerfold for Playgirl magazine, died Tuesday. He was 84.

Mr. Waggoner, who was battling cancer, died peacefully Tuesday at his Los Angeles-area home with his wife of 60 years, Sharon, at his side, according to a family statement.

A household name in the 1970s, Mr. Waggoner went on to become a successful entreprene­ur. He built a behind-the-scenes business that provides custom trailers that keep stars comfortabl­e during production breaks. Playing on his surname, he called it Star Waggons.

In the mid-1960s, the Kansas-born Mr. Waggoner was appearing in run-of-the-mill movies such as “Swamp Country” and “The Catalina Caper” and was a finalist to play “Batman” in the campy TV series that eventually starred Adam West. Then he was called to audition for Ms. Burnett’s variety show.

The actress-comedian recalled that she wanted an announcer for the show who could do more than introduce the commercial­s. He had to also be good-looking, so she could do her uglyduckli­ng, romance-besotted character with him, and funny, so he could contribute laughs.

“In walked Lyle Waggoner,” she recalled in her 2010 book, “This Time Together.” “Gorgeous? Yes. But so much more. He was incredibly funny. He had a sly, tongue-in-cheek delivery that told you he was putting himself on and not taking himself seriously.”

As the series evolved, she said, he showed such great comic instincts that he got roles in sketches and became a full member of the cast. He stayed with the show from its beginning in 1967 to 1974. (It ran on CBS another four years.)

Along the way, he made history of sorts in 1973 when the fledgling Playgirl magazine chose him as his first centerfold, calling him “the stuff of which sexual fantasies are made, a 6-foot-4 hunk of gorgeous beefcake.” The Chicago Tribune studied his unclothed but discreet pose behind a desk, and reported he looked “slightly embarrasse­d at having it widely known that he sits at his desk in the nude.”

In 1976 Mr. Waggoner was picked to star in “Wonder Woman,” based on the venerable comic book heroine. Lynda Carter was Wonder Woman, who came from a lost island where she was one of a band of Amazon women with superpower­s. Maj. Steve

Trevor (Mr. Waggoner), crashed onto the island during World War II. Wonder Woman joined him on his return to the United States, where she mostly fought Nazi agents with her secret powers while posing as Steve’s secretary.

In 1977 “Wonder Woman” moved from ABC to CBS as “The New Adventures of Wonder Woman” and from the ’40s to contempora­ry times, with Ms. Carter still the superhero and Mr. Waggoner as Steve Trevor Jr., his previous character’s son. The series ended in 1979 and Mr. Waggoner focused on his rental company, with acting jobs on the side.

He got the idea while working on “Wonder Woman,” when he was assigned a motor home rented from an individual. When Mr. Waggoner asked the studio if they would rent a motor home from him, he bought one and started charging for it. That gave rise to Star Waggons, which were up to 40 feet long, cost as much as $100,000 and included carpeting, leather easy chairs and satellite television. He eventually had hundreds of them, customized to meet special requests.

Mr. Waggoner, who was born in April 1935, is survived by his wife; their two sons, Jason and Beau; and four grandchild­ren. Services were pending for Los Angeles and Wyoming, the family said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States