Red Skelton

Red Skelton obituary, Anza, CA

Red Skelton

Red Skelton Obituary

Published by Legacy Remembers on Sep. 17, 1997.
Red Skelton was just 10 years old when he met his destiny as a bumbling, affable comic in a chance meeting with Ed Wynn. For six decades afterward, he delighted millions with a repertoire of helter-skelter pantomime and skits about simple ordinary lives seen through a clown's extraordinary prism. Already a leading film comic when his buffoonish characters began entrancing TV audiences in 1951, Skelton made household names of Clem Kadiddlehopper, Freddie the Freeloader and the Mean Widdle Kid, whose favorite expression was "I dood it!" The auburn-haired comedian died Wednesday at Eisenhower Medical Center in Rancho Mirage, 90 miles east of Los Angeles, after a long, undisclosed illness. He was 84. The son of a grocer who had worked as a circus clown, Skelton always signed off from his TV shows with his standard line: "Good night, and may God bless." "Red ended his shows with a sincere `God bless,' but, in truth, we were the ones blessed by this extraordinary talented man. He created an unforgettable cast of characters, particularly during the quarter-century when he was a genuine TV superstar," said actress Carol Channing. Unlike some of today's comedians, Skelton was never vulgar. "Today's comics use four-letter words as a shortcut to thinking," Skelton told The Associated Press in 1987. "They're shooting for that big laugh and it becomes a panic thing, using four-letter words to shock people." It was Wynn, whose comedy career also stretched from vaudeville to TV, who got Skelton interested in show business when he befriended him when touring in Skelton's Indiana hometown. "In 1923, he came to Vincennes to do a show," Skelton said in 1986. "I was selling newspapers in the street when this man came up and asked me if I wanted to see the show." Wynn ended up buying all of Skelton's newspapers and giving him a ticket to the show, Skelton recalled. "He took me back, introduced me to everyone, showed me the footlights," Skelton said. "I looked out through the peephole at the audience coming in and fell in love with show business." A soggy doughnut left his audiences falling apart in laughter when Skelton got hold of it. He once ducked into a Montreal coffee shop and watched as a tipsy patron tried to dunk his doughnut into a cup of coffee. Skelton parodied the scene in the 1938 film "Having Wonderful Time" and the routine became one of his trademark bits. "He gave comedy a good name," said Bob Hope. "Dolores and I have lost a dear friend and our favorite clown." "The world has lost a gem, an icon, an original," fellow TV comic Milton Berle said. Who could forget the lovable characters Clem Kadiddlehopper, a slow-witted hayseed; Freddie the Freeloader, a silent tramp; punch-drunk boxer Cauliflower McPugg; the inebriated Willie Lump-Lump; henpecked husband George Appleby; and the cross-eyed seagulls Gertrude and Heathcliffe? Skelton was inspired by an early friendship with silent film star Buster Keaton, but his physical comedy style _ with every pratfall he flashed a cock-eyed grin _ was honed more from the big top than Hollywood. Skelton was featured in more than 30 movies, a few of them, such as "Watch the Birdie," loosely based on Keaton comedies and featuring Keaton gags. Skelton films included "Whistling in Dixie" in 1942, "The Clown" in 1953 and the 1965 film "Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines." In the 1946 variety show "Ziegfeld Follies," he starred in the uproarious "Guzzler's Gin" sequence. "Red's audience had no age limits; he was the consummate family entertainer _ a winsome clown, a storyteller without peer, a superb mime, a singer and a dancer," CBS, his network for 17 years, said in a statement. Comedian Steve Allen saw "something about Red that was partly the little boy," a quality that made him "a great clown and remarkably funny even in his later years." Skelton's longtime friend Jerry Lewis called him "a brilliant comedian." Richard Bernard Skelton was born in rural Vincennes on July 18, 1913, two months after the death of his father, Joseph, a one-time clown with the Hagenbeck and Wallace Circus. Young Red later was hired by the same circus. Widowed with four boys, Ida Skelton worked as a cleaning woman and elevator operator and taught her children to appreciate art. She sparked Skelton's interest in comedy by providing tickets to vaudeville shows on her meager salary. After the meeting with Wynn, Skelton joined a medicine show traveling through the South and Midwest. "Mom used to say I didn't run away from home _ my destiny just caught up with me at an early age," Skelton said. Skelton joined the vaudeville circuit at age 15. Working at the Gaiety Theater in Kansas City in 1930, he met usher Edna Marie Stilwell and married her a year later. She became his vaudeville partner, writer and manager. When they divorced, she continued to manage his career. In 1945, he married Georgia Davis and they had a daughter, Valentina, and a son, Richard, who died of leukemia at age 9. That marriage ended in divorce in 1973 and Skelton married his third wife, Lothian, later that year. Arthur Marx, author of an unauthorized biography of Skelton published in 1979, said he expected to tell a "nice little tale about a comedian who said `God bless'" at the end of his show." Instead, he heard stories of a sad and lonely man who trusted no one and felt he had been cheated by some of his associates. He once said in an interview that if a person hurt him and his wife twice, he was forgiven, but "the third time, we light a candle, and he is, for us, dead." Skelton's television career began on NBC in 1951. He moved to CBS in 1953, then returned to NBC in 1970. Clowns remained his fortune, even after NBC canceled his show for good in 1971. His paintings of clown faces fetched $80,000 and more, and he once estimated he earned $2.5 million a year from lithographs. He also wrote and recorded scores of songs. "I don't want to be called `the greatest' or `one of the greatest'; let other guys claim to be the best," Skelton once said. "I just want to be known as a clown because to me that's the height of my profession. It means you can do everything _ sing, dance, and above all, make people laugh." He is survived by wife, Lothian, and daughter, Valentina.

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July 27, 2025

Morgan Lammert posted to the memorial.

June 23, 2025

John Sanders posted to the memorial.

May 22, 2025

Sal Gamez posted to the memorial.

Morgan Lammert

July 27, 2025

I was just a child when we were introduced. You left a lasting impression on me. I’m 65 now, always wondered we’re did your comedy go

John Sanders

June 23, 2025

Even today, in the year twenty twenty five past, they'll smile.Just looking at his face and remembering some of his antics

Sal Gamez

May 22, 2025

We miss you Red

David Franklin

May 2, 2025

May GOD our Father in HEAVEN bless for all the great comedy that you gave me and others in the “50’s&60’s when I was a young and loved you so much as my favorite comedian!

Don West

April 15, 2025

One of my favorite entertainers. I used to see tapings of his CBS TV show in Hollywood from time to time. An exhibition of his clown paintings was on display in San Francisco one afternoon. A pleasure to see them in person.

Linwood Mixon

May 4, 2024

May God bless you and your family in this time of sorrow.

Linwood Mixon

May 4, 2024

I always remember you and love you Red Skelton from Linwood I'll always love you and remember you Red Skelton from Linwood

Marilyn Kopecky

March 27, 2024

best ever...

Carl Buck

September 3, 2022

Ingenious!

Dan

June 25, 2022

The best ever comedian and clown!

Paula Boyett

June 20, 2021

I grew up watching him on television. I absolutely loved him. When he recited the The Pledge of Allegiance, it was wonderful and so inspiring. Thank you for the memories.

Frank Abernathy

March 27, 2021

He has a funny smile

Jim Morgan

March 27, 2021

Several years ago my wife and I toured an Addis Gallery in Los Vegas. As we were touring observing Reds paintings we noticed 2 watches 1 of Reds clown face and the other was of Reds natural face. On both watches his birth year and his death date on the back.My wife purchased the watch of Reds natural face and the next year she purchased drink coasters featuring his portraits encased in shadow boxes and gave them asan anniversary present. I am proud to own the shadow boxes and a Red Skelton watch!

March 22, 2021

A true comedian. One who could bring a smile to your face by being himself. Sad we seldom see that anymore.

Patricia Hancock

March 6, 2021

I am so sorry to the family of Mr. Skelton. He will ALWAYS be remembered as a man of God in everything he did. This nation owes a huge amount of gratitude for everything Red Skelton gave to everyone, his sincerity in making people happy. There will never be another Red Skelton and will be truly missed. He completed his purpose on this earth, to make this world a better place. We love and miss him. May God Bless...

TERI MOORE

July 21, 2020

RED was always my favorite to watch.

Pat P.

January 7, 2019

He made the world laugh and forget their problems for a while. He was a funny man and I will truly miss HIM.

Robert Barnaby

December 24, 2018

I remember Red on tv shows especially Jackie Gleason shows,he played SO many parts,Clemcaddel hopper,Freddie free loader,ect.he ALWAYS brought laughter to our family as well as millions of others with his comical laughter,I later met a good friend of his Lorain Payne,were he had his arm around her in the picture she so PROUDLY DISPLAYED IN HER LIVING ROOM,the same time I met his wonderful nephew&nephew's wife,Luke & Susan Skelton,at the SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH ON CAMELBACK rd.in PHOENIX,ARIZONA,in 2001were I was rebatized in2003by paster CHARLES WHITE,were I've been a member since,I only wish I could have met MR.RICHARD RED SKELTON,who I SO Admired.

Robert Barnaby

December 24, 2018

I know Red's nephew Luke skelton A SEVENTHDAY ADVENTIST MEMBER,FINE FRIENDS,& people......

Roger Mitchell

November 22, 2018

Tuesday nights were the best nights,never missed his show cried with him on the loss of your son. He was a great man and still miss him.He was a great model for me growing up and I'm sorry I didn't write this sooner.

Lily Blosser

February 28, 2018

He was a wonderful man.

Karen Albright

December 26, 2017

My father was in a boys home in California and he told me that Red Skelton came and gave so much of himself. My father told me that Red Skelton considered the children at the home, "his children". He even had a party for my dad and the other the children. My father was a fan of Mr. Skelton for his entire life. Red Skelton changed my father's inner self and I will always love him for this. He was my father's hero and he is mine too! I thank God that He brought Red Skelton to us.

anna roth

December 24, 2016

Wonderfully talented ...thank you
For all the joy you have brought to do many homes.....always loved...❤my favorite entertainer as a child ...

Maurice H Bank

May 29, 2016

Wonderful and generous man who had a terrible loss but kept on making others laugh! G-d Bless You Red.

tim gormley

August 20, 2010

evey time i think of the Red Skelton i have to smile . He brought a lot of smiles to a lot of pepole. and may god bless his sloe.

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July 27, 2025

Morgan Lammert posted to the memorial.

June 23, 2025

John Sanders posted to the memorial.

May 22, 2025

Sal Gamez posted to the memorial.