
Red Buttons
Multiple people share this name — showing the most well-known match (Acting).
Acting · Born 1919-02-05 · age 87 at death · New York City, New York, USA
Although Red Buttons is best known as a stand-up comic, he is also a successful songwriter, an Academy Award-winning actor (and has been nominated for two Golden Globe awards) and an accomplished singer. Born Aaron Chwatt on February 5, 1919 (Aquarius) in New York City's Lower East Side, stood at a height of 5' 6" (1.68 m). Buttons (who got his name from a uniform he wore while working as a singing bellhop), also known as Cpl. Red Buttons, started his show-business career singing on street corners as a child. At 16 he got a job as part of a comedy act playing the famed Catskills resort area in upstate New York (his partner was future actor Robert Alda). Buttons worked the burlesque circuit as a comic and even landed a role in a Broadway play, "Vicki", in 1942. He soon joined the U.S. Marine Corps, and in 1943 was picked for a role in Moss Hart's service play "Winged Victory" on Broadway, and soon afterwards journeyed to Hollywood to make the film version. After his discharge from the service he returned to Broadway, both in plays and as a comic with several big-band orchestras. He was successful enough that he got his own TV series, The Red Buttons Show (1952), on CBS. It lasted three years and won Buttons an Emmy for Best Comedian. He worked steadily for the next several years, and in 1957 got his big film break in the drama Sayonara (1957) with Marlon Brando, in which he played an American soldier stationed in Japan who struggled against the societal and racist pressures of both American and Japanese cultures because of his love for a Japanese woman. His performance garnered him an Academy Award, and more film roles followed. He played a paratrooper in The Longest Day (1962), was nominated for a Golden Globe for Harlow (1965) and again for They Shoot Horses, Don't They? (1969). He had a part in the TV series The Double Life of Henry Phyfe (1966) and has done pretty much every kind of TV show there is, from variety to comedy to soap operas. He gained further renown in the 1970s for his appearances on the "Dean Martin Celebrity Roast" where he performed his "Never Got a Dinner" act to great acclaim. He has played Las Vegas for years, has a star on Hollywood Boulevard (corner of Hollywood and Vine) and has appeared in numerous telethons and charitable events, for which he has been honored by such organizations as the Friars Club and the City of Hope Hospital. He died July 13, 2006 at the age of 87 in Century City, California, USA from vascular disease.
Titles

The Longest Day

The Poseidon Adventure

Little House on the Prairie

It Could Happen to You

ER

Pete's Dragon

The Cosby Show

Wonder Woman

One, Two, Three

Roseanne

The Story of Us

They Shoot Horses, Don't They?

Hatari!

The Love Boat

Early Edition

Sayonara

Fantasy Island

The Ambulance

18 Again!

When Time Ran Out...

Rudolph and Frosty's Christmas in July

Gay Purr-ee

Stagecoach

Knots Landing

227

Alice in Wonderland

Five Weeks in a Balloon

Cosby

Vega$

Love, American Style

Movie Movie

C.H.O.M.P.S.

The Dean Martin Show

It's Garry Shandling's Show

Harlow

Viva Knievel!

The Big Circus

Ben Casey

Studio One

Family Law

Suspense

Your Cheatin' Heart

Password
Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre

A Ticklish Affair

Gable and Lombard

Who Killed Mary Whats'ername?

The Jackie Gleason Show

Philly

General Electric Theater

The United States Steel Hour

Presidio Med

Imitation General

Telethon

Reunion at Fairborough

Startime

Frontier Circus

Up from the Beach

The Double Life of Henry Phyfe

The Eleventh Hour