Sneha Girap (Editor)

Wayland Flowers

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Role
  
Puppeteer

Name
  
Wayland Flowers

Years active
  
1960–1988

Nationality
  
American


Wayland Flowers Wayland Flowers amp Madame On The Rag Mag

Full Name
  
Wayland Parrott Flowers, Jr.

Born
  
November 26, 1939 (
1939-11-26
)

Occupation
  
Actor, Comedian, and Puppeteer

Died
  
October 11, 1988, Dawson, Georgia, United States

Books
  
Madame: My Misbegotten Memoirs

Movies and TV shows
  
Madame's Place, Solid Gold, Norman Is That You?

Cause of death
  
AIDS-related cancer

Wayland flowers madame 1981 waterbed warehouse commercial


Wayland Parrott Flowers Jr. (November 26, 1939 – October 11, 1988) was an American actor, comedian and puppeteer. Flowers was best known for the comedy act he created with his puppet Madame. His performances as "Wayland Flowers and Madame" were a major national success on stage and on screen in the 1970s and 1980s.

Contents

Wayland Flowers Wayland Flowers39 Madame puppet with fainting couch Lot 723

Madame in manhattan with wayland flowers


Career

Wayland Flowers wwwsitcomsonlinecomphotopostdata1721madamewa

Born and raised in Dawson, Georgia, Flowers created Madame in the mid-1960s. Flowers' first big break was an appearance on The Andy Williams Show. The character of Madame is an "outrageous old broad" who entertains with double entendres and witty comebacks. Bedecked in fabulous evening wear and "summer diamonds" ("Some are diamonds; some are not"), Madame's look is based on movie stars such as Gloria Swanson. Madame is rumored to be based on a Washington, DC gay icon, waitress and restaurant hostess Margo MacGregor.

Madame's many TV appearances included Laugh-In; a long run on the game show Hollywood Squares (replacing Paul Lynde in The Center Square); a recurring comedy skit on Solid Gold; a regular on ABC's short-lived summer replacement show called Keep on Truckin', TV guest spots; and as the star of her own syndicated 1982 sitcom, Madame's Place.

Wayland Flowers httpssmediacacheak0pinimgcom736x96b3c1

Flowers and Madame were in the center square on the final NBC episode of Hollywood Squares in June 1980; host Peter Marshall asked Madame the final game question of the daytime series, which was "Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert and Strauss lived in the same place. Where did they all live?" Madame's "comic" answer: "At the YMCA!" Then her "serious" answer: Germany. (The correct answer: Austria.)

Flowers' other puppets included Crazy Mary (an escapee from Bellevue mental hospital), Jiffy (a Harlem harlot with a heart of brass), Macklehoney (a crotchety, retired vaudeville comedian). His puppet Smedley worked with Marlo Thomas on Free to Be… You and Me.

Personal life

Flowers was one of the first mainstream entertainers who was openly gay.

Death

During his stint on Solid Gold, Flowers was diagnosed with HIV and eventually developed Kaposi's sarcoma, an AIDS-related cancer. Despite his illness, Flowers continued to perform. On September 2, 1988, he collapsed onstage while performing at Harrah's in Lake Tahoe. After a brief hospitalization, he visited his family in Dawson, Georgia, before returning to his home in Los Angeles. He then began hospice care at Hughes House. Flowers died there on October 11, 1988 at the age of 48, His remains were cremated at Grand View Memorial Park & Crematory in Glendale, California, and interred at Cedar Hills Cemetery in Flowers's hometown of Dawson, Georgia.

Flowers's estate was left to Wayland's then-manager, Marlena Shell.

Legacy

Ten years after Flowers's death, Madame returned to the stage with entertainer Rick Skye. After appearances on several television shows, performances of "It's Madame with an E" began November 15, 2008 at Resorts Atlantic City. During 2010, the show also toured the US.

References

Wayland Flowers Wikipedia