Solomon Hersh Frees (June 22, 1920–November 2, 1986), better known as Paul Frees, was an American actor. He is known for his work on Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Walter Lantz, Rankin/Bass and Walt Disney theatrical cartoons during the Golden Age of Animation, and for providing the voice of Boris Badenov in The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show. Frees was sometimes known as "The Man of a Thousand Voices", an appellation more commonly bestowed on Mel Blanc.

Early life

Solomon Hersh Frees was born to a Jewish family in Chicago, on June 22, 1920. He grew up in the Albany Park neighborhood and attended Von Steuben Junior High School.

Career

In the 1930s, Frees first appeared in vaudeville as an impressionist, under the name Buddy Green. He began his career on radio in 1942 and remained active for more than 40 years. During that time, he was involved in more than 250 films, cartoons, and TV appearances; as was the case for many voice actors of the time, his appearances were often uncredited.

Frees's early radio career was cut short when he was drafted into the United States Army during World War II, where he fought at Normandy, France, 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. When his first wife's health failed, he decided to drop out and return to radio work.

He appeared frequently on Hollywood radio series, including Escape, playing lead roles and alternating with William Conrad as the opening announcer. He announced the dramatic signature on Suspense in the late 1940s, and parts on Gunsmoke (filling in for Howard McNear as Doc Adams in the episode "The Cast"), and Crime Classics. One of his few starring roles in this medium was as Jethro Dumont/Green Lama in the 1949 series The Green Lama, as well as a syndicated anthology series The Player, in which Frees narrated and played all the parts. He starred as Larry Mitchell on Crime Correspondent on CBS Radio.

He did dubbing for live-action films including Midway, dubbing Toshiro Mifune's performances as Admiral Yamamoto;[self-published source?] and Some Like It Hot, in which Frees provides much of the falsetto voice for Tony Curtis' female persona Josephine and the voice of funeral director Mozzarella. Frees dubbed the entire role of Eddie in the Disney film The Ugly Dachshund, replacing actor Dick Wessel, who had died of a sudden heart attack after completion of principal photography.[citation needed] Frees also dubbed some of Humphrey Bogart’s lines in his final film The Harder They Fall. Bogart was suffering at the time from what was later diagnosed as esophageal cancer, thus could barely be heard in some takes, hence the need for Frees to dub in his voice.[citation needed]

Frees worked extensively with at least nine of the major animation production companies of the 20th century: Walt Disney Productions, Warner Bros. Cartoons, Walter Lantz Productions, UPA, Hanna-Barbera Productions, Filmation, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, DePatie-Freleng Enterprises, Jay Ward Productions, Rankin/Bass, and Ruby-Spears.

Disney

Some of Frees's most memorable voices were for various Disney projects. Frees voiced Disney's Professor Ludwig Von Drake in 18 episodes of the Disney anthology television series, beginning with the first episode of the newly renamed Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color on September 24, 1961. The character also appeared on many Disneyland Records. Von Drake's introductory cartoon, An Adventure in Color, featured "The Spectrum Song", sung by Frees as Von Drake. A different Frees recording of this song appeared on a children's record, and was later reissued on CD.

In addition to voicing characters, Frees narrated a number of Disney cartoons, including the Disney educational short film Donald in Mathmagic Land. This short originally aired in the same television episode as Von Drake's first appearance.

Frees also provided voices for numerous characters at Disney parks. He voiced the unseen "Ghost Host" at Haunted Mansion Attraction at Disneyland and Walt Disney World. For the Pirates of the Caribbean, Frees recorded the ghost voice saying the iconic "dead men tell no tales" used in the ride, as well as lending his voice to several audio-animatronic characters, including the Auctioneer, Magistrate Carlos, and the "Pooped Pirate" in the ride. Disney eventually issued limited edition compact discs commemorating The Haunted Mansion and Pirates of the Caribbean, featuring some outtakes and unused audio tracks by Frees and others. Frees also provided narration for the Tomorrowland attraction Adventure Thru Inner Space (1967–1985, later replaced by Star Tours) and the original Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln. Audio clips from the attractions in Frees's distinctive voice have been included in fireworks shows at Disneyland.

An animated singing bust in Frees's likeness appeared in the 2003 film The Haunted Mansion as a tribute. Similarly, audio recordings of Frees from the Pirates of the Caribbean attraction can be heard in Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End in an homage to the ride.

Frees also had a small on-camera role for Disney in the 1959 film The Shaggy Dog, playing Dr. Galvin, a police psychiatrist who attempts to understand why Mr. Daniels believes a shaggy dog can uncover a spy ring. He also speaks the film's opening narration.

His other Disney credits, most of them narration for segments of the Disney anthology television series, include:

For his contributions to the Disney legacy, Frees was honored posthumously as a Disney Legend on October 9, 2006.

Jay Ward Productions

Frees was a regular presence in Jay Ward cartoons, providing the voices of Boris Badenov (from The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show), Inspector Fenwick (from Dudley Do-Right, impersonating Eric Blore), Ape (impersonating Ronald Colman), District Commissioner Alistair and Weevil Plumtree in George of the Jungle, Baron Otto Matic in Tom Slick, Fred in Super Chicken, and the Hoppity Hooper narrator, among numerous others.

Rankin/Bass

Frees is well-remembered for providing the voices for many characters in Rankin/Bass cartoons and stop-motion animated TV specials, most notably for a number of holiday-themed specials. In 1968, he appeared as Captain Jones in the Thanksgiving special The Mouse on the Mayflower, and that Christmas he appeared as the father of the Drummer Boy, Ali, and as the three Wise Men in The Little Drummer Boy. He was also Hocus Pocus, the traffic cop, the ticket-taker, and Santa Claus in Frosty the Snowman in 1969 and played the central villain, Burgermeister Meisterburger, and his assistant Grimsley in Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town in 1970. He provided several voices, including Aeon the Terrible, for Rudolph's Shiny New Year in 1976.

Frees also voiced King Haggard's wizard Mabruk and the Cat in The Last Unicorn and provided several voices for the Jackson Five cartoon series between 1971 and 1973. He provided the voices for several J. R. R. Tolkien characters (most notably the dwarf Bombur) in Rankin/Bass animated versions of The Hobbit and The Return of the King.

Rankin/Bass TV specials or films featuring Paul Frees:

George Pal

Frees portrayed the Orson Welles sound-alike radio reporter in George Pal's film The War of the Worlds (1953), where he is seen dictating into a tape recorder as the military prepares the atomic bomb for use against the invading Martians. Memorably, his character says the recording is being made "for future history... if any". Frees also provided the film's dramatic opening narration, prior to Cedric Hardwicke's voice-over tour of the Solar System.

Frees subsequently provided the apocalyptic voice for the "talking rings" in Pal's later film The Time Machine (1960), in which he explains the ultimate fate of humanity from which the time traveler realizes the origin of the Morlocks and Eloi.

Producer Pal later put Frees to work again in his fantasy film Atlantis, the Lost Continent (also 1960) and doing the opening voice-over narration for Pal's Doc Savage (1975) film.

Frees did the narration for the George Pal documentary The Fantasy Film Worlds of George Pal (1985), written, produced, and directed by Arnold Leibovit. Two years later, Frees provided the voice for Arnie the Dinosaur and the Pillsbury Doughboy in The Puppetoon Movie (1987), also produced and directed by Leibovit.

Other voice work

The versatile actor voiced several characters, including three of the main characters in the US versions of Belvision's Hergé's Adventures of Tintin cartoons, based on the books by Hergé.

At the MGM Animation studio, he did work for Hanna-Barbera in their Tom and Jerry shorts. In the 1956 Cinemascope Tom and Jerry cartoon, Blue Cat Blues, he was Jerry's voice who narrated the short; he voiced Jerry's cousin Muscles in Jerry's Cousin five years earlier and the cannibals in His Mouse Friday where he said the lines "Mmmmm, barbecued cat!" and "Mmmmm, barbecued mouse!"

He did multiple voice roles for Tex Avery's short films, notably playing every role in the Butch cartoon Cellbound in 1955. He also voiced Barney Bear in ten cartoons directed by Dick Lundy while Avery was on a sabbatical.

Frees worked with Spike Jones on his 1960 album Omnibust, heard as announcer "Billy Playtex" and several other characters on "The Late Late Late Late Movies, Part I and II".

From October 1961 through September 1962, Paul Frees provided the voice for the shady lawyer named Judge Oliver Wendell Clutch, a weasel on the animated program Calvin and the Colonel starring the voices of Freeman Gosden and Charles Correll. The series was an animated television remake of their radio series Amos 'n Andy.

For the 1962 Christmas special Mister Magoo's Christmas Carol, produced by UPA, Paul Frees voiced several characters, including Fezziwig, the Charity Man, and two of the opportunists who steal from the dead Scrooge (Eyepatch Man and Tall Tophat Man) and Mister Magoo's Broadway theatre director. He subsequently provided numerous voices for the follow up series The Famous Adventures of Mr. Magoo.

Frees provided the voices of both John Lennon and George Harrison in the 1965 The Beatles cartoon series, the narrator, Big D and Fluid Man in the 1966 cartoon series, Frankenstein Jr. and The Impossibles, and The Thing in the 1967 series Fantastic Four, as well as President James Norcross in the 1967 cartoon series Super President. He played several roles–narrator, Chef of State, the judges and the bailiff–in the George Lucas / John Korty animated film, Twice Upon a Time.

Frees provided the voice-over for the trailer to the 1971 Clint Eastwood thriller, Play Misty for Me.

In television commercials, he was the voice of the Pillsbury Doughboy, the 7-Up bird Fresh-Up Freddie, Froot Loops spokesbird Toucan Sam (previously voiced by Mel Blanc, later voiced by Maurice LaMarche), Boo-Berry in the series of monster cereal commercials, and The Farmer who helps The Little Green Sprout, (voiced by Ike Eisenmann), by demonstrating the Jolly Green Giant's sweet and tender vegetables. He also played a British detective in a 1971 non-animated television commercial for Taster's Choice coffee.

Frees narrated many live action films and television series, including Naked City (1958–1963). 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 (fellow voice-artist Marvin Miller), on the dramatic series The Millionaire.

He was the narrator at the beginning of the film The Disorderly Orderly starring Jerry Lewis. He also looped an actor's voice in the film The Ladies Man, also starring Jerry Lewis.

In 1980, Frees was hired by Program Director Hy Lit to be the voice of radio station WKXW (Kicks 101 1/2).

Frees had a wide range of other roles, usually heard but not seen, and frequently without screen credit. The resonance of his natural voice was similar to that of Orson Welles, and he performed a Welles impression several times. Some highlights of his voice work:

  • Narrator for The Manchurian Candidate
  • Narrated 16 episodes of the NBC military television series Steve Canyon, starring Dean Fredericks (1958–1959), and appeared on-screen as an RAF officer attached to a USAF command in the pilot episode, "Operation Towline."
  • Narrated the documentary about J. Robert Oppenheimer, The Day After Trinity (1980)
  • The Peter Lorre voice in the 1947 Spike Jones RCA Victor recording of the song "My Old Flame". When talking softly, the voice sounds much like Lorre. When the character segués into a manic rant for a few lines, the voice anticipates the Ludwig Von Drake characterization. Frees appeared on several other Spike Jones recordings including "Pop Corn Sack" also from 1947 in which he provided the voices of Charles Boyer, Edward G. Robinson, Katharine Hepburn and Al Jolson.
  • Dialog looping for French actor Jacques Roux, among other uncredited voice work, in the 1963 film The List of Adrian Messenger
  • The Orson Welles sound-alike narrator in Stan Freberg Presents The United States of America Vol. 1: The Early Years. When Vol. 2 came out after his death, he was replaced by Corey Burton.
  • The voice of Peter Tishman who purchases Manhattan from the Indians on Stan Freberg Presents the United States of America Volume One: The Early Years (sounding very much like Ludwig Von Drake)
  • Another Orson Welles sound-alike as the voice of the aliens in Earth vs. the Flying Saucers
  • Yet another Orson Welles sound-alike opening the film Burn, Witch, Burn!, the American release of Night of the Eagle (1962), where for over two minutes he talks about witchcraft and invokes a banishing spell over the audience
  • Yet again, as an Orson Welles sound-alike narrator in the 1967 film The St. Valentine's Day Massacre
  • And another Orson Welles sound-alike narrator in the opening narration for the American release of the 1959 British film Jack the Ripper
  • Uncredited voice of a reporter trying to get a quote from General George S. Patton in the 1970 film Patton
  • Screen credit for multiple voices in the 1971 animated television film The Point!
  • Uncredited voice of the sentient supercomputer Colossus in the film Colossus: The Forbin Project
  • Narration for the spoof short film Hardware Wars (1977), which was styled as a mock film trailer specifically parodying Malachi Throne's narration of the original Star Wars trailer
  • Second Voice of KARR in "K.I.T.T. vs. K.A.R.R."–a 3rd-season episode of Knight Rider
  • Voice of "Josephine" (the female persona of Tony Curtis's character Joe) in the Billy Wilder film Some Like It Hot
  • The voice of Dr. Hu in the English-language version of King Kong Escapes
  • The voices of "Antoine" and "Alecto" in the English-language version of Atoll K (aka Utopia)
  • The voice of the hermit crab Crusty in The Incredible Mr. Limpet, a Warner Bros. feature that mixed live action with animation
  • Intro voice for the 1967 sitcom Mister Terrific
  • Intro voice for Bradbury 13, a series of thirteen radio dramas featuring Ray Bradbury short stories, originally produced for National Public Radio by Michael McDonough at Brigham Young University, 1984
  • Credited with singing "Darktown Strutters' Ball" in the 1971 film The Abominable Dr. Phibes (as heard on the film's soundtrack album, along with several other songs performed in character but not used in the film)
  • Voice of the title character in the 1957 film The Cyclops
  • Narrator of extended recap title sequence in early first-season episodes of I Dream of Jeannie in 1965 (and the show's sponsor I.D. announcer during season one)
  • Featured on the 1959 Spike Jones album Spike Jones in Hi-Fi, A Spooktacular in Screaming Sound in recordings "Poisen to Poisen", "My Old Flame", "Everything Happens to Me" and "This is your Death", doing the vocal and voices. "Tammy": vocal by Paul Frees, "Two Heads are Better than One": vocal by George Rock and Paul Frees.
  • The uncredited voice of the radio news announcer in the 1964 musical film Robin and the 7 Hoods
  • The uncredited voice of Levi Calhoun (played by Robert Tessier) in the 1975 Western Breakheart Pass
  • The uncredited English voice of Japanese Admiral Yamamoto in the 1976 film Midway
  • Narrator and Voice of Satan (visualized in the film as a snake) in the 1962 film The World's Greatest Sinner

Other credits

Although Frees was primarily known for his voice work (like Mel Blanc, he was known in the industry as "The Man of a Thousand Voices"), he was also a songwriter and screenwriter. His most notable screenwriting work was the little-seen 1959 film The Beatniks, a screed against the then-rising Beat counterculture in the vein of Reefer Madness. In 1992, the film was mocked on an episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000.

On rare occasions, Frees appeared on-camera, usually in minor roles. In 1954, he appeared in the film noir classic Suddenly starring Frank Sinatra and Sterling Hayden. He played a scientist in The Thing from Another World, a death-row priest in A Place in the Sun, and French fur trader McMasters in The Big Sky. In 1955, he appeared as an irate husband suing his wife (played by Ann Doran) for alimony in an episode of CBS's sitcom The Ray Milland Show; and, in 1957, in an uncredited role as a helicopter pilot in the 1957 science-fiction movie, Beginning of the End.

In Jet Pilot, Frees plays a menacing Soviet officer whose job is to watchdog pilot Janet Leigh, but instead manages to eject himself from a parked jet, enabling Leigh to rescue John Wayne and fly back to the West. He is also credited with narrating the opening of the 1958-1959 series Rescue 8 starring Jim Davis and Lang Jefferies. In the 1970 film Patton, Frees provided the voices of a war correspondent interviewing Patton while Patton rides his horse, and of a member of Patton's staff, as well as voice-overs for several other actors, including the Moroccan official hosting a troop review for Patton. Frees is also heard in Tora! Tora! Tora! as the English-language voice of the Japanese ambassador to the United States. He also does the final narration in Beneath the Planet of the Apes, the first sequel to Planet of the Apes.

Legacy

Since Frees's death, voice actor Corey Burton has often re-recorded dialogue for some Disneyland attractions originally recorded by Frees. In some cases, Frees's original, pre-digital recordings had simply deteriorated over time,[citation needed] and in others the dialogue had been rewritten to reflect plot changes or introduce new characters, such as the "Stuffed Pirate" replacing Frees's "Pooped Pirate" in the Pirates of the Caribbean ride in 1997. Dialogue that was slightly rewritten to reflect newer safety standards is performed by actors Joe Leahy (English) and Fabio Rodriguez (Spanish). In 2001, Burton provided a Paul Frees impression for the new "Ghost Host" of Haunted Mansion Holiday, a seasonal, holiday-themed overlay for the Haunted Mansion attraction. Burton also recorded Frees's Ghost Host lines for Walt Disney Pictures' 2003 film adaptation of the ride.

Personal life

Frees was married five times. His first marriage was to Anelle McCloud, from 1943 until her death in 1945. He then married Kleda June Hansen in 1947, and they divorced in 1950. His third wife was voice actress Joyce Schultz. They married in 1951 and had two children before divorcing. His fourth marriage was to Jeri J. Cole in 1967; they divorced in 1969. Beverly T. Marlow was Frees's fifth wife. They married in 1971 and were estranged at the time of his death fifteen years later.

Death

For the last two years of his life Frees suffered from multiple ailments, including arthritis, diabetes, and loss of vision, and had mentioned to friends that he was in near constant pain. Frees died at his home in Tiburon, California, on November 2, 1986, at the age of 66, from a self-administered overdose of pain medication. His death was considered a suicide; his agent issued a press release stating that he died from heart failure.

His body was cremated and his ashes scattered over the Pacific Ocean.

Filmography

Live-action

Film

List of acting performances in feature films
Film
YearTitleRoleNotes
1949The Adventures of Sir GalahadThe Black Knight (voice)Uncredited
1950Hunt the Man DownPackard 'Packy' Collinsuncredited
1951A Place in the SunReverend Morrison
The Thing from Another WorldDr. Vorhees
His Kind of WomanCorley
1952The StarRichard Stanley
The Las Vegas StoryDistrict AttorneyUncredited
1953The War of the WorldsRadio Reporter / Opening Announcer
1954SuddenlyBenny
1956The Harder They FallPriest
Earth vs. the Flying SaucersAlien (voice)Uncredited
Francis in the Haunted HouseFrancis (voice)
1957The 27th DayWard Mason / Newscaster
Jet PilotLieutenant Tiompkin
The CyclopsCyclops (voice)
Beginning of the EndHelicopter pilotUncredited
1958Space Master X-7Dr. Charles T. Pommer
1959The Shaggy DogNarrator / J. W. GalvinUncredited
Some Like It HotTony Curtis as Josephine
Jack the RipperNarrator (voice)
1960SpartacusCaius (voice)
The BeatniksVarious voices
TormentedFrank Hubbard (voice)
1961The Absent-Minded ProfessorLoudspeaker Voice / Air Force Dispatcher (voices)
Snow White and the Three StoogesNarrator / Magic Mirror (voice)
1962The Magic SwordSir Ulrich of Germany (voice)Uncredited
The World's Greatest SinnerNarrator / The Snake (voices)
The Manchurian CandidateNarrator (voice)Uncredited
1964The Incredible Mr. LimpetCrusty (voice)
Robin and the 7 HoodsRadio News Announcer
The Disorderly OrderlyNarrator (voice)Uncredited
The CarpetbaggersNarrator (voice)
The Brass BottleLawyer Jennings (voice)
Mary PoppinsBarnyard Horse (voice)
1965The Outlaws Is ComingNarrator / The Magic Talking Mirror (voices)
1967In Cold BloodRadio Announcer (voice) / Policeman
King Kong EscapesDr. Hu (voice)Uncredited English dub
The St. Valentine's Day MassacreNarrator (voice)Uncredited
1969Hell in the PacificNarrator (voice)Voiceover for Toshiro Mifune as Captain Tsuruhiko Kuroda
1970Tora! Tora! Tora!Japanese Ambassador Kichisaburō Nomura (voice)Uncredited
Beneath the Planet of the ApesEnding Voiceover (voice)
PattonWar Correspondent / Member of the Staff of Patton / Sheik (voices)
1975Doc Savage: The Man of BronzeNarrator (voice)
1976MidwayAdmiral Isoroku Yamamoto (voice)
The Milpitas MonsterNarrator (voice)top 10 movie
1985The Fantasy Film Worlds of George PalNarrator (voice)Documentary about George Pal

Television

List of acting performances in television shows
Television
YearTitleRoleNotes
1952Dangerous AssignmentDr. FriedrichSeason 1 Episode 5 Episode: "The Manager Story"
1953The Jack Benny ProgramNarrator (voice)Episode: "The Honolulu Trip"
1955Meet Mr. McNutleyHusbandLive Action Episode Episode: "Jury Duty"
1955–1956The Bob Cummings ShowTelevision announcer
1955–1960The MillionaireJohn Beresford Tipton (heard, but always unseen)
1956Jane Wyman PresentsEmceeEpisode: "Ten Percent"
1957The Adventures of Jim BowieEtienneEpisode: "German George"
1958–1960Rescue 8Narrator (voice)
1962–1964Fractured FlickersNarrator / Various26 episodes
1966Get SmartGreenstreet Character / Lorre CharacterEpisode: "Casablanca"
1971, 1972Hawaii Five-OSteve McGarrett Imposter, Goro Shibata (voice)Episodes: "Odd Man In", "The Ninety-Second War: Part I"
1972Alias Smith and JonesHannibal HeyesEpisode: "The Men That Corrupted Hadleyburg"
1975Wonder WomanPrologue Narrator / Franklin D. RooseveltEpisode: "The New Original Wonder Woman"
1984Knight RiderKARR (voice)"K.I.T.T. VS K.A.R.R."

Voice roles

Film

List of voice performances in animated feature films
Film
YearTitleRoleNotes
1950Primitive PlutoPrimoPluto Short
1951Jerry's CousinCousin Muscles, Leader of gang cat's thugs
1951Sleepy-Time TomTom Cat (snoring) / Lightning Cat
1951His Mouse FridayJerry / CannibalsUncredited
1952Magical MaestroButch (singing "Everything I Have is Yours")Uncredited
1952Cruise CatShip's Captain
1952Busybody BearBarney Bear
1953Life with TomRadio Announcer
1953The Missing MouseRadio Announcer
1953Wee Willy WildcatBarney Bear
1953T.V. of TomorrowNarrator
1954Homesteader DroopyNarrator
1954The Farm of TomorrowNarrator
1955CellboundPrisoner / Warden / Little Wife
1956Down Beat BearFirst Radio Announcer
1956Blue Cat BluesJerry Mouse
1957The Snow QueenOl Dreamy / the RavenEnglish Voice Uncredited
1959Donald in Mathmagic LandThe True Spirit of Adventure / Pi creature
1959Noah's ArkNoah / God
1960Loopy De LoopWatchdog"Tale of a Wolf"
1960Goliath IIGoliath I / Mouse
1961One Hundred and One DalmatiansDirty DawsonUncredited
1961Clash and CarryWally WalrusChilly Willy Short
1962–1972The Beary FamilyCharlie Beary / Junior Beary
1962Gay Purr-eeMeowrice / The Unnamed Cat from the Railway Station
1962A Symposium on Popular SongsLudwig Von Drake / Al Jolson
1963Stowaway WoodyCaptainWoody Woodpecker Short
1965Goofy's Freeway TroublesNarratorUncredited Goofy Short
1965Sink PinkTexan Hunter / Native BearerPink Panther Short
1965PinkfingerNarratorPink Panther Short
1965Pink PanzerNeighbor Harry / The DevilPink Panther Short
1966–1967The InspectorThe Commissioner / Weft / Wong / Captain Clamity / Crab Louie / Captain DuMont, aka "X" / Chicken Butler / Sailor / Spider Pierre / Hassan the AssassinFifteen shorts
1966The Man Called FlintstoneGreen Goose / Agent Triple X / Mario / Rock Slag / Ali / Bobo
1968EscalationLyndon B. JohnsonUncredited
1982The Flight of DragonsAntiquityUncredited
1982The Last UnicornMabruk / Cat / Tree
1983Twice Upon a TimeNarrator / Chef of State / Judges in The Pantry of Pomp / Bailiff
1987The Puppetoon MovieArnie the Dinosaur / Pillsbury DoughboyReleased seven months after Frees's death, the movie itself dedicated to him

Television

List of voice performances in television shows
Television
YearTitleRoleNotes
1956Alfred Hitchcock PresentsRadio Announcer (uncredited)Season 1 Episode 39: "Momentum"
1956Alfred Hitchcock PresentsMary's Father (uncredited)Season 2 Episode 2: "Fog Closing In"
1956Alfred Hitchcock PresentsSwanson (uncredited)Season 2 Episode 3: "De Mortuis"
1957Alfred Hitchcock PresentsTrain Station Announcer (uncredited)Season 2 Episode 18: "The Manacled"
1958Alfred Hitchcock PresentsOff-Screen Announcer (uncredited)Season 4 Episode 4: "The Crooked Road"
1957–1968, 1976Walt Disney's Wonderful World of ColorLudwig Von Drake / Narrator / Donald Duck (1episode) / Moby Duck18 episodes
1957–1961The Woody Woodpecker ShowWally Walrus / Charlie / Doc / Various
1958–1959Steve CanyonNarrator34 episodes
1959–1964The Rocky and Bullwinkle ShowBoris Badenov / Inspector Fenwick / Captain Peter "Wrong Way" Peachfuzz / Additional Voices163 episodes / 326 Segments
1960Mister MagooVarious13 episodes
1960–1962The FlintstonesMr. Granite / Rockenschpeel / TV Announcer / Ed BedrockEpisodes: "The Babysitters", "The Happy Household"
1961Top CatTony / Additional voicesEpisodes: "The Maharajah of Pookajee", "All That Jazz", "The $1,000,000 Derby", "The Con Men", "Dibble's Double"
1961The Dick Tracy ShowGo-Go GomezUncredited
1961–1962Calvin and the ColonelJudge Oliver Wendell Clutch
1961–1962The Alvin ShowAdditional voices
1962Mister Magoo's Christmas CarolStage Director / Charity Man / Fezziwig / Old Joe / UndertakerTV special
1963Krazy KatIgnatz Mouse
1964–1965The Famous Adventures of Mr. MagooSherlock Holmes / Various5 episodes
1961, 1963–1967Hoppity HooperNarrator / Additional voices52 episodes / 104 Segments
1965The New Three StoogesSarge / Von Vonce / Bomb MakerEpisode: "That Little Old Bomb Maker"
1965I Dream of JeannieNarratorEpisodes: "My Hero?", "Guess What Happened on the Way to the Moon?"
1965–1966The Atom Ant/Secret Squirrel ShowSquiddly Diddly / Morocco Mole / Double-Q / Yellow Pinkie / Claude Hopper26 episodes
1965–1967The BeatlesJohn Lennon / George Harrison / Brian Epstein / Additional voices
1966The ImpossiblesFluid-Man / Professor Stretch / Captain Kid / Puzzler / Infamous Mr. Instant / Artful Archer / Dr. Futuro26 episodes
1966Laurel and HardyAdditional voices
1966–1967The Super 6Dispatcher "Super Chief" / Brother Matzoriley #1 and #3 / Captain Whammo
1966–1968Space GhostBrago / Zeron20 episodes
1967Cricket on the HearthSea Captain / Caw / OthersTV special
1967–1970George of the JungleApe / Weevil / Baron Otto Matic / Various17 episodes
1967ShazzanVarious6 episodes
1967The Superman/Aquaman Hour of AdventureKobarah / Evil StarEpisodes: "Hawkman: Peril from Pluto", "Green Lantern: Evil Is as Evil Does"
1967–1968Super PresidentJames Norcross / Narrator
1967–1968The Fantastic 4Ben Grimm / The Thing20 episodes
1968The Mouse on the MayflowerCaptain Christopher JonesTV special
1968Arabian KnightsVangore18 episodes
1968The Little Drummer BoyAli / Aaron's Father / The Three Wise Men / Meshaw / Jamilie / Various other Male rolesTV special
1969–1970The Pink Panther ShowMan Talking to the Pink Panther / Texan Hunter / The Pink Panther / The Commissioner (1Episode)
1969The Banana Splits Adventure HourEvil Vangore / Sazoom8 episodes
1969Frosty the SnowmanSanta Claus / Traffic CopTV special
1969–1970The Dudley Do-Right ShowInspector Fenwick / Narrator / Additional Voices26 episodes
1970The Mad, Mad, Mad ComediansW. C. Fields / Zeppo Marx / Harpo Marx / Traffic CopTV special
1970Santa Claus Is Comin' to TownBurgermeister Meisterburger / Newsreel Announcer / Grimsley / Topper / Additional Voices / Ebenezer Scrooge / Ringle, Dingle, Zingle, Tingle, & Wingle / KringleTV special
1971Here Comes Peter CottontailSanta Claus / Man at Thanksgiving Table / Colonel Bunny's assistant / Fireman / Ben the RoosterTV special
1971The Point!Oblio's Father / Pointed Man's Right Head / King / Leaf Man / VillagersTV Animated feature; based on the Harry Nilsson album
1971–1972The Jackson 5iveThe J5's Producer / Additional voices
1972The ABC Saturday Superstar MovieIguana"Willie Mays and the Say-Hey Kid"
1972–1973The OsmondsAdditional voices
1974–1976Run, Joe, RunNarrator26 episodes
1976The First Easter RabbitSanta Claus / Zero / SpatsTV special
1976Frosty's Winter WonderlandJack Frost / Traffic CopTV special
1976Rudolph's Shiny New YearAeon the Terrible / Santa Claus / General Ticker / Humpty DumptyTV special
1976The Pink Panther Laugh-and-a-Half Hour-and-a-Half ShowAdditional voices
1977The HobbitBombur / Troll #1TV movie
1977Nestor, The Long-Eared Christmas DonkeyOlaf / Donkey DealerTV special
1977Fantastic Animation FestivalOpening NarratorTV special Uncredited
1978The Stingiest Man in TownGhost of Christmas Past / Ghost of Christmas PresentTV special
1979Rudolph and Frosty's Christmas in JulyJack Frost / Officer Kelly / Winterbolt / Genie of the Ice Scepter / Keeper of the Cave of Lost RejectionsTV movie
1979Jack FrostFather Winter / Kubla KrausTV special
1980The Return of the KingElrond / Orc / Uruk-hai / GoblinTV movie
1986DTV ValentineLudwig Von Drake / AnnouncerTV movie
1987The Wind in the WillowsWayfarerReleased eight months after Frees's death, although the film was completed in 1983, 3 years before his death.

Theme parks

List of voice performances in theme parks
Theme parks
YearTitleRole
1967Adventure Thru Inner SpaceNarrator
Pirates of the CaribbeanPirate Captain, Bride Auctioneer, Pooped Pirate, Ghostly voices, various pirates
1969The Haunted MansionGhost Host

Radio

List of acting performances in radio series
Radio
Original Air DateProgramRoleEpisode
1945The Lux Radio TheatreMultiple Characters
1945–1947A Man Named JordanDigger Slade
1946Rogue's Gallery
1946The Whistler
1946The Alan Young Show
1946–1952SuspenseAnnouncer / Passerby / Earl White / Frankenstein's Monster / Hubbard
1947Ellery Queen
1947–1948EscapeDoctor Dubosk / Finnie Morner / John Woolfolk / Sanger RainsfordEpisodes: "The Fourth Man", "Snake Doctor", "Wild Oranges", "The Most Dangerous Game"
1948Your Movietown Radio TheatreMultiple Characters
1948The First Nighter ProgramAdditional voices
1949The Adventures of Philip Marlowe
1949The Green LamaJethro Dumont / Green Lama
1949Rocky Jordan
1949Four Star Playhouse
1951The Silent Men
1951Mr. AladdinRobert Aladdin
1951Broadway Is My Beat
1951The Thing from Another WorldDr. Voorhees
1952–1953GunsmokeSut Grider / Gallagher / Doc Charles Adams (1episode)Episodes: "Heat Spell", "The Soldier", "The Cast"
1953Crime ClassicsCharles McManus / Charley Ford / Charles Drew Sr. / Pub ManEpisodes: "The Axe and the Droot Family–How They Fared" "The Death of a Picture Hanger" "The Shrapnelled Body of Charles Drew, Sr."
1953Mr. PresidentAdditional voices
1953On StageChauffeurEpisode: "Skin Deep"
1954Fibber McGee and Molly
1956Yours Truly, Johnny DollarBert ParkerEpisode: "The Jolly Roger Fraud" (Part 1)
1957The CBS Radio WorkshopCaptain Vesey / Ogden the MessengerEpisode: "Sweet Cherries in Charleston"
1984Bradbury 13Narrator

Commercials

List of voice performances in television commercials
Television
YearTitleRoleNotes
1957–19867-UpFresh-Up Freddie
1965–1986The Pillsbury CompanyPillsbury Doughboy
1970–1986Froot LoopsToucan Sam
1972–1978Green GiantFarmer
1973-1986Monster cerealsBoo-Berry

Crew work

YearTitlePositionNotes
1955The Donald O'Connor ShowWriterWriter (1 episode) Special material (4 episodes)
1960The BeatniksDirector, executive producer, screenwriterUncredited

Further reading

  • Frees, Paul, The Writings of Paul Frees (2004) (Albany: BearManor Media) ISBN1-59393-011-9
  • Frees, Paul, You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To: The Letters of Paul "Buddy" Frees and Annelle Frees (2011) (Albany: BearManor Media) ISBN1-59393-646-X.
  • Ohmart, Ben, Welcome... Foolish Mortals–The Life & Voices of Paul Frees (2004) (Albany: BearManor Media) ISBN1-59393-004-6
  • Young, Jordan R. (2005) Spike Jones Off the Record: The Man Who Murdered Music (3rd edition) (2005) (Albany: BearManor Media) ISBN1-59393-012-7

External links