Burl Icle Ivanhoe Ives (June 14, 1909 - April 14, 1995) was an American singer and actor of stage, screen, radio and television.
Born near Hunt City, an unincorporated town in Jasper County, Illin...voir plusBurl Icle Ivanhoe Ives (June 14, 1909 - April 14, 1995) was an American singer and actor of stage, screen, radio and television.
Born near Hunt City, an unincorporated town in Jasper County, Illinois, near Newton, Illinois, to Levi “Frank” Ives (1880-1947) and Cordelia “Dellie” (née White) (1882-1954), he attended Eastern Illinois State Teachers College (now Eastern Illinois University) in Charleston, Illinois from 1927 to 1929. One day he was singing in the garden with his mother, and his uncle overheard them. He invited his nephew to sing at the old soldiers’ reunion in Hunt City, where the boy performed a rendition of the folk ballad “Barbara Allen” and impressed both his uncle and the audience.
He began as an itinerant singer and banjoist, and launched his own radio show, The Wayfaring Stranger, which popularized traditional folk songs. In 1942, he appeared in Irving Berlin’s This Is the Army, and then became a major star of CBS radio. In the 1960s, he successfully crossed over into country music, recording hits such as “A Little Bitty Tear” and “Funny Way of Laughing”. A popular film actor through the late 1940s and 1950s, Ives’s best-known roles in that medium included parts in So Dear to My Heart and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, as well as Rufus Hannassey in The Big Country, for which he won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.
Ives is often remembered for his starring role in the 1964 Christmas stop-motion television special Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, which continues to air on CBS every Christmas season, as the voice of “Sam the Snowman”, the special’s host and narrator.
Ives was a lifelong supporter of the Boy Scouts of America.
He was inducted as a laureate of the Lincoln Academy of Illinois and awarded the Order of Lincoln (the state’s highest honor) by the governor of Illinois in 1976 in the area of the performing arts.
He died in 1995 at his home in Anacortes, Washington at the age of 85.voir moins