Biography: Veteran comedic actor Tom Poston, with the bugged-out eyes and vague look of bewilderment, was born in Columbus, Ohio in 1921 and, by age 9, was appearing with an acrobatic troupe. He was attending Bethany College in West Virginia at the time World War II and the Air Corps. interrupted his studies in 1941. He won various medals for his valour, having risen to the rank of Captain. While he never re ... show all Veteran comedic actor Tom Poston, with the bugged-out eyes and vague look of bewilderment, was born in Columbus, Ohio in 1921 and, by age 9, was appearing with an acrobatic troupe. He was attending Bethany College in West Virginia at the time World War II and the Air Corps. interrupted his studies in 1941. He won various medals for his valour, having risen to the rank of Captain. While he never returned to Bethany College, Tom would later receive an honorary doctorate from the institution. Following military duty, he went to New York and studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Art, training with acting guru Sanford Meisner, among others. Making his Broadway debut in 1947 in José Ferrer 's production of "Cyrano de Bergerac", Tom had the serious makings of a dramatic actor, also appearing in such classic plays as "The Barretts of Wimpole Street" and "King Lear", but comedy would be his forte. Hosting the daily TV show "Entertainment" led to his biggest break on Steve Allen 's TV variety series "Steve Allen Show, The" (1956)". He, Louis Nye, Don Knotts and others members of Allen's stock company became famous for drawing laughs in sketch sequences. Tom himself would be best remembered as the "Man on the Street" interviewee who could never remember his name. Winning an Emmy during those four seasons with the Allen show (1956-1960), Tom went on to host another show -- this time a game show -- entitled "Split Personality". From this, he developed a real affinity for parlor games and appeared as a panelist on other quiz shows as well, notably "To Tell the Truth" (1956)". Given a chance to star in his own comedy films by the early 60s, Tom went completely unnoticed in such blah vehicles as Zotz! (1962) and The Old Dark House (1963), which failed to capitalize on his delightfully bungling, eccentric humor. After this, TV again became his primary focus and, again, usually in service to other stars. Alongside such top comedians as Bob Newhart ("Newhart" (1982)") and Robin Williams (_"Mork and Mindy" (1970)_ ), Tom's vacant-eyed, absent-minded "second banana" foils found their niche. He also continued with light comedy theater vehicles such as "Forty Carats", "Come Blow Your Horn", "Plaza Suite" and "Mary, Mary" and even managed a few musicals ("A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum" and "Fiddler on the Roof"). Tom's first wife was film actress Jean Sullivan . Their daughter, Francesca Poston, also became an actress. He had two other children by second wife Kay. They divorced in 1975 but remarried in 1980 and remained together until her death in 1998 from ALS. Kay and Tom had appeared on many telethons to talk about the crippling disease. Three years later, at age 80, he found happiness once again when he married actress Suzanne Pleshette (both of them had worked together on "Bob Newhart Show, The" (1972)"). Still providing glum, baggy-eyed comedy relief on TV as an octogenarian, stalwart Tom Poston may not have nabbed top comic stardom in his heyday, but has certainly enjoyed a long, durable career doing what he does best -- acting goofy and making audiences smile. hide |