Larry Storch net worth is $1 Million. Also know about Larry Storch bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship and more …
Larry Storch Wiki Biography
Lawrence Samuel Storch was born on the 8th January 1923, in New York City, USA, and is a comedian and actor probably best known to the world as the voice of Mr. Whoopee in the animated series “Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales” (1963-1965), and as Cpl. Randolph Agarn in the TV series “F Troop” (1965-1967), among many other accomplishments.
Have you ever wondered how rich Larry Storch is, as of early 2017? According to authoritative sources, it has been estimated that Storch’s net worth is as high as $1 million, an amount earned through his successful career in the entertainment industry, during which he has made more than 230 film and TV appearances. He has also featured in numerous variety shows, and recorded several comedy albums, which have also improved his wealth.
Larry is the son of Alfred Storch who was a realtor and his wife, Sally, who worked as a telephone operator. He had a brother Jay Storch, who also worked in the entertainment industry under the name Jay Lawrence. Larry went to DeWitt Clinton High School in the Bronx in the same class as Don Adams, with whom he remained friends until Adams’ death in 2005. Larry never graduated from high school, because of the Great Depression, as he was forced to find a job in order to support his family.
He worked as a comedian on $12 per week for Al Donahue in Sheepshead Bay, then during World War II Larry was in the US Navy on the submarine tender USS Proteus.
On discharge from the Navy, Larry started pursuing a career as a comedian, which eventually led to his appearance on “The Ed Sullivan Show” in 1949, and until 1952 featured a couple more times. He continued to feature in variety shows in the early ‘50s, such as “Your Show of Shows” (1952), “Cavalcade of Stars” (1950-1952), and in 1953 had his own “The Larry Storch Show”. In 1959 he appeared for the first time on the “The Jack Paar Tonight Show”, then appeared nine times overall by 1962. From 1962 until 1972 he featured 16 times in the highly popular “The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson”, among many other shows, which only increased his net worth and popularity.
Larry also launched an acting and voice acting career; he made his debut in the film “The Prince Who Was a Thief” (1951), and since then has made more than 230 film and TV appearances. In 1959 he had the role in the war drama directed by Arthur Dreifuss “The Last Blitzkrieg”, and then in 1960 appeared in George Sydney’s Golden Globe Award- nominated romantic comedy “Who Was That Lady”, starring Tony Curtis, Dean Martin and Janet Leigh.
During the early ’60 he gave voice to Koko the Clown in 100 episodes, which certainly helped him increase his net worth and popularity as well.
In 1963 he was selected as the voice of Phineas J. Whoopee in the animated TV series “Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales” (1963-1967). Two years later, Larry was chosen for the role of Cpl. Randolph Agarn in the TV series “F Troop” (1965-1967), and then in 1969 played Charles Duffy in 13 episodes of the TV series “The Queen and I”, adding steadily to his net worth.
His next notable ‘appearance’ was as the voice of the Magistrate Fang in the Charles Dickens’ novel adaption “Oliver Twist”, directed by Hal Sutherland, and the next year appeared as Glenn Purcell in the Golden Globe Award- nominated thriller “Airport 1975”. Through the ‘80s he didn’t have any notable roles, but still featured in such films as the Golden Globe Award- nominated “S.O.B” (1981), and “Sweet 16” (1983). From the end of the decade, his appearances became fewer – in 1992 he appeared in the romantic comedy “I Don’t Buy Kisses Anymore”, then in 1995 guest starred in the TV series “Married with Children”, and then had the a role in the drama “Bittersweet Place”, while in 2005 he appeared in an episode of the comedy TV series “Medium Rare” (2010), which was his last credited role.
Larry also had success on stage, appearing in such productions as “Porgy and Bess”, “Arsenic and Old Lace”, and “Annie Get Your Gun”. Most recently he toured with Richard Dreyfuss and Irwin Corey, in the play “Sly Fox” in 2004, and “Love Letters” in 2012.
Regarding his personal life, Larry was married to Norma from 1961 until her passing in 2003; they have three children.
IMDB Wikipedia $1 million 1923 1923-1-8 5′ 8″ (1.73 m) Actor Alfred Storch Arthur Dreifuss Candace Herman Capricorn Charles Dickens Comedian Dean Martin DeWitt Clinton High School Don Adams F Troop (1965) George Sydney’s Janet Leigh January 8 Jay Lawrence Larry Storch Larry Storch Net Worth New York New York City Norma Catherine Greve Norma Storch m. 1961–2003 Richard Dreyfuss Sally Storch Soundtrack Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales (1963) The Flight of Dragons (1982) The Great Race (1965) Tony Curtis U.S.
Larry Storch Quick Info
Full Name | Larry Storch |
Net Worth | $1 Million |
Date Of Birth | January 8, 1923 |
Place Of Birth | New York City, New York, U.S. |
Height | 5′ 8″ (1.73 m) |
Profession | Comedian |
Education | DeWitt Clinton High School |
Nationality | American |
Spouse | Norma Storch (m. 1961–2003) |
Children | Candace Herman |
Parents | Sally Storch, Alfred Storch |
Siblings | Jay Lawrence |
MySpace | https://myspace.com/thelarrystorch |
IMDB | http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0832415/ |
Nominations | Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series |
Movies | The Great Race, Sex and the Single Girl, Who Was That Lady?, 40 Pounds of Trouble, Without Warning, Wild and Wonderful, Airport 1975, That Funny Feeling, S.O.B., Captain Newman, M.D., The Last Blitzkrieg, A Very Special Favor, The Monitors, Bus Riley’s Back in Town, The Woman Hunter, Funny Valentine… |
TV Shows | F Troop, The Ghost Busters, Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales, The Brady Kids, The Pink Panther Show, Groovie Goolies, The Batman/Superman Hour, The Jackie Gleason Show, Underdog, Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo, Sabrina the Teenage Witch, The Larry Storch Show, The Looney Tunes Show, Out of the Inkwell, Ca… |
Larry Storch Quotes
- [about the running gag on F Troop (1965), in which Cpl. Agarn’s cousins from various parts of the world kept showing up] If you tell a joke, if you can do it in dialect, you’re way ahead of the game. I had cousins who came from Moscow, Mexico, Montreal.
- The most money I ever made was on a McDonald’s hamburger commercial.
- Sometimes, I walk out on stage, and you can hear from the balcony, “Hey, Agarn!” It still tickles me after 40 years. They don’t make them like F Troop (1965) anymore!
- I’ll never forget what Edward Everett Horton said to me: “Promise me, Larry, you will never grow old”. I’ve tried my best to use that advice.
Larry Storch Important Facts
- $750
- He kept his classmates at DeWitt Clinton High School in the Bronx in stitches with his impressions of such famed actors as Claude Rains and Basil Rathbone and “The Wizart of Oz” himself, Frank Morgan. “That’s why I never graduated,” he quipped, “I was invited never to come back. My mother wanted me to stay in high school and get a diploma. The principal told her my record was so bad, let him go out and learn what he’s going to be in life.” So at the age of 17 Storch made his professional debut doing impressions at a strip joint in Albany, NY. The audience wasn’t quite as receptive as his schoolmates. “When the boss found out that all I did was impressions and nothing on the dirty side, he took me aside and said, ‘Larry, you are a nice kid, and I like you, but I’m afraid I’ve got to fire you.’ I was fired opening night on my very first job in show business”.
- His best known role remains that of Cpl. Randolph Agarn, the bumbling sidekick of the double-dealing Sgt. Morgan O’Rourke (Forrest Tucker) on the 1965-67 sitcom F Troop (1965). On Thursday night, September 11, 2014, 91-year=old Storch made his final L.A. stand-up performance at the Comedy Store on the Sunset Strip. Five days later he received his star on the Palm Springs Walk of Fame. The Comedy Store show, “Larry Storch Live: At Ease, Boys and Girls!” featured appearances by Bernie Kopell, Hank Garrett, Bob Burns, Ken Berry–who starred with him as the hapless Capt. Wilton Parmenter on “F Troop”–and Marion Ross. Berry, who introduced Storch to the Comedy Club audience, had been a longtime fan of his comedy and impressions even before “F Troop.” Berry said, “He used to do things like ‘The Ed Sullivan Show.’ I never saw anyone work like that before. Working with Larry and some of those other guys was great–it was like recess every day.” Hank Garrett, who performed some of his own stand-up material, worked with Storch when the comedian guest starred in the 1961-63 NBC sitcom Car 54, Where Are You? (1961) (Garrett played Officer Ed Nicholson on the comedy series). I learned so much watching Larry,” said Garrett, who, like Berry, has remained close with Storch. “I call him all the time. He’s an amazing guy–and at 91 he does yoga head-stands.” The Comedy Store played an important part in Storch’s early career. Then known as the famed Ciro’s nightclub, it was where Storch made his first professional comedy appearance there serving in the U.S. Navy on the submarine USS Proteus during World War II (one of his fellow crew members was Tony Curtis). “I wanted to hitchhike across the country [to New York City] in my sailor’s uniform because nobody would refuse a sailor,” said Storch. As fate would have it, bandleader Phil Harris picked him up in Los Angeles. “Phil Harris said, ‘Get in sailor,’ after Storch told Phil he was heading to New York City. Harris said, ‘Your first stop will be Palm Springs.’ On the way to the desert, Storch told Harris about his comedy background and did his impressions. “When we got to Palm Springs, he turned the car around and said we’re going back to Hollywood,” said Storch. “He takes me to Ciro’s nightclub, and sitting in an empty room was Lucille Ball listening to her husband Desi Arnaz rehearse the band for tomorrow evening’s opening. I did Frank Morgan and various other notable actors. Lucille Ball said lose the sailor suit, get into a blue suit and be here tomorrow at 8 p.m. You will lead off, and Des will follow you onstage. That’s the way it worked out”.
- His Hollywood Hills residence was located in Nichols Canyon. He would stand on his back deck and practice blowing his horns. Entertainer and tenor John Castello built a hill-top enclave at the top of Nichols Canyon on Solar Drive. Entertaining guests for dinner, the sounds of a sax and a trumpet would break the night silence of the hill-top wind! Guests would ask, “Who’s playing the horn?” Nonchalantly, Castello would reply, “Oh, that’s only Larry !”.
- As of January 2010, was living in the Upper West Side of New York City.
- According to the liner notes of the Columbia/Sony CD of the original cast album of “Flower Drum Song,” Storch was signed for the role of Sammy Fong. He was replaced during the play’s out-of-town tryouts by Larry Blyden (ironically, Jack Soo, who had a small part in the original, ended up playing the role of Sammy Fong in the film adaptation).
- Inadvertently set in motion the Cary Grant line, “Judy, Judy, Judy . . . ” during one of his nightclub acts. Legend has it that Storch was in the middle of a Grant impersonation when Judy Garland walked in. Apparently, this is how he addressed the star. Even though the line was never said in any of Grant’s movies, Storch’s impression inexplicably stuck and was often used by other impressionists.
- Attended the 2007 Twilight Zone Convention at the Hilton Hasbrouck Heights, Hasbrouck Heights, NJ, August 4-5, 2007.
- Older brother of actor Jay Lawrence.
- During WWII he served on a submarine tender, the USS Proteus, with Tony Curtis. They became lifelong friends. Storch and Curtis have appeared in eight movies together, and, in 2003 both were in the (theatrical) musical version of Some Like It Hot (1959) that toured across the country.
- Started out as an M.C. in burlesque houses in New York. When television came along, many clubs closed because patrons were staying home to watch the new invention, so Storch started working in the new medium.
- Stepfather of June Cross and Lynda Gravatt.
- A staunch New Yorker, he likes to play his sax in Riverside Park.
Larry Storch Filmography
Title | Year | Status | Character | Role |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mean Moe Gets the Bird | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Mean Moe the Great | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Mean Moe the Star | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Moe Moves In | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Rocket Ranger | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Sold on Manhattan | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
The Cliff Hanger | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
The Fan Letter | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
You Are Here | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
The Alfred Hitchcock Hour | 1963 | TV Series | Oscar | Actor |
A Dog Gone Snooper | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Arabian Daze | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Comic Book Capers | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Enchanted Prince | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Extra Special Delivery | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Footloose Fox | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Make Room for Moe | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Plane Stupid | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Pony Express | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Sing Along with Moe | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Station Breaks | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Strictly from Lumber | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
The Invisible One | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
The River Robbers | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Car 54, Where Are You? | 1962-1963 | TV Series | Charlie / Charlie the Drunk / Pinky | Actor |
Irving the Indian Nut | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Mad Scientist Gets Madder | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Mean Moe Rain Maker | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Medicine Man | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
No Soap | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
On with the Show | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Rodeo | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
So Long Ceylon | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Wild West Story | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
40 Pounds of Trouble | 1962 | Floyd | Actor | |
A Fishy Story | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
A-Haunting We Will Go | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
A Queen for a Day | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Bluebeard’s Treasure | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Comic Strip | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Fastest Popgun in the West | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Gigantical | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
In the Army | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Koko Meets Robin Hood | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Koko Roams in Rome | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Mean Moe’s Money Mad | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Mean Moe Takes Over | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Moving Madness | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Mummy’s the Word | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Reflection Land | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Success Story | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
That’s Show Biz | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
The Big Bank Robbery | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
TV or Not TV | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Whale of a Story | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Which Witch Is Which? | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Baby Face | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Flying Saucery | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Knight Work | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Kokonut, Private Eye | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Love in Bloom | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Mean Moe Means Well | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Now You See It Now You Don’t | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Polar Bear Facts | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Pow-wow-wow! | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
The Egg and Me | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
The Mystery Guest | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
The Refriger-raider | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Charley Angelo | 1962 | TV Movie | Dan “The Devil” Devin | Actor |
Balloon Blues | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Koko Gottum Injun Trouble | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Koko Meets Boobnik | 1962 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Out of the Inkwell | 1962 | TV Series | Koko the Clown / Mean Moe | Actor |
Who Was That Lady? | 1960 | Orenov | Actor | |
Hennesey | 1959 | TV Series | Sylvester | Actor |
The Last Blitzkrieg | 1959 | Ennis | Actor | |
The Phil Silvers Show | 1958-1959 | TV Series | Bopster / The Crying Sailor | Actor |
Gun Fever | 1958 | Amigo | Actor | |
Shower of Stars | 1955 | TV Series | Actor | |
The Arthur Murray Party | 1953 | TV Series | Himelf | Actor |
The Prince Who Was a Thief | 1951 | Actor | ||
Medium Rare | 2010 | TV Series | Willie | Actor |
Bittersweet Place | 2005 | Ira Tatz | Actor | |
Funny Valentine | 2005 | Dennis | Actor | |
The Funkhousers | 2002 | TV Movie | Grandpa | Actor |
Land’s End | 1996 | TV Series | Bobby Forrest | Actor |
Married with Children | 1995 | TV Series | Larry Storch | Actor |
The Silence of the Hams | 1994 | Sergeant | Actor | |
I Don’t Buy Kisses Anymore | 1992 | Giora | Actor | |
Beetle Bailey | 1989 | TV Movie | General Halftrack (voice) | Actor |
Garfield and Friends | 1988 | TV Series | Herbert Finagle / Mr. Mendelbaum | Actor |
Out of This World | 1988 | TV Series | Sergel | Actor |
Adventures Beyond Belief | 1987 | TV Series | Actor | |
Medium Rare | 1987 | Actor | ||
Foofur | 1987 | TV Series | Actor | |
A Fine Mess | 1986 | Leopold Klop | Actor | |
The Perils of P.K. | 1986 | Actor | ||
Knight Rider | 1985 | TV Series | Pascal | Actor |
The Fall Guy | 1984 | TV Series | Theo | Actor |
Small & Frye | 1983 | TV Series | Waldo | Actor |
Sweet 16 | 1983 | Earl | Actor | |
Fake-Out | 1982 | Ted | Actor | |
Mork & Mindy/Laverne & Shirley/Fonz Hour | 1982 | TV Series | Additional Voices | Actor |
The Flight of Dragons | 1982 | Video | Pawnbroker (voice) | Actor |
Trapper John, M.D. | 1982 | TV Series | Getzloft | Actor |
Harper Valley P.T.A. | 1982 | TV Series | Leslie Duprey | Actor |
Fantasy Island | 1979-1982 | TV Series | Harry Hawkins / Hal Ripley / Alain Leblanc | Actor |
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn | 1981 | TV Movie | Dauphin | Actor |
S.O.B. | 1981 | The Guru | Actor | |
Aloha Paradise | 1981 | TV Series | Actor | |
Without Warning | 1980 | Scoutmaster | Actor | |
CHiPs | 1979-1980 | TV Series | Franco / Chub | Actor |
Phyl & Mikhy | 1980 | TV Series | Ivan | Actor |
Jack Frost | 1979 | TV Movie | Papa (voice) | Actor |
The Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo | 1979 | TV Series | Pappy Beauregard | Actor |
Better Late Than Never | 1979 | TV Movie | Sheriff | Actor |
Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo | 1979 | TV Series | Additional Voices (voice) | Actor |
The Love Boat | 1978 | TV Series | Tony Santini / Elwood / Elwood Riggs | Actor |
The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Show | 1978 | TV Series | Various Characters (1978) (voice) | Actor |
Record City | 1978 | Deaf Man | Actor | |
Incredible Rocky Mountain Race | 1977 | TV Movie | Eagle Feather | Actor |
The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries | 1977 | TV Series | Jesse Miller | Actor |
The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams | 1977 | TV Series | Actor | |
Sabrina, Super Witch | 1977 | TV Series voice | Actor | |
Rosetti and Ryan | 1977 | TV Series | Sam the Speller | Actor |
The Happy Hooker Goes to Washington | 1977 | Robby Boggs | Actor | |
CPO Sharkey | 1977 | TV Series | The Wino | Actor |
Phyllis | 1976 | TV Series | Bum | Actor |
The Pink Panther Laugh and a Half Hour and a Half Show | 1976 | TV Series voice | Actor | |
Switch | 1976 | TV Series | Benny Shore | Actor |
The Ghost Busters | 1975 | TV Series | Eddie Spenser / Big Al | Actor |
McCloud | 1975 | TV Series | Parkes | Actor |
Police Story | 1974 | TV Series | Willy | Actor |
Airport 1975 | 1974 | Glenn Purcell | Actor | |
Columbo | 1974 | TV Series | Mr. Weekly | Actor |
Kolchak: The Night Stalker | 1974 | TV Series | Swede | Actor |
Mannix | 1968-1974 | TV Series | Wing Dobson / Bernie Farmer | Actor |
Oliver Twist | 1974 | Magistrate Fang (voice) | Actor | |
Love, American Style | 1969-1974 | TV Series | Earl (segment “Love and Mr. Bunny”) / Jerome (segment “Love and the Woman in White”) / Morey- The Burglar (segment “Love and the Dream Burglar”) / … | Actor |
Treasure Island | 1973 | Captain Smollett (voice) | Actor | |
Emergency! | 1972-1973 | TV Series | Frank the Escape Artist / Ben Wesley | Actor |
Tenafly | 1973 | TV Series | Frank Sherman | Actor |
The Brady Kids | 1972-1973 | TV Series | Chuck White Marlon Mop Top … |
Actor |
The New Temperatures Rising Show | 1972-1973 | TV Series | Norman Frye / Norman | Actor |
All in the Family | 1973 | TV Series | Bill Mulheron | Actor |
The ABC Saturday Superstar Movie | 1972 | TV Series | Count Tom Dracula The Phantom Marlon … |
Actor |
The New Scooby-Doo Movies | 1972 | TV Series | The Joker | Actor |
Journey Back to Oz | 1972 | Amos (voice) | Actor | |
The Couple Takes a Wife | 1972 | TV Movie | David | Actor |
The Woman Hunter | 1972 | TV Movie | Raconteur | Actor |
Alias Smith and Jones | 1972 | TV Series | Mugs McGeehu | Actor |
The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour | 1972 | TV Series | Julius Caesar | Actor |
Why We Have Elections, or The Kings of Snark | 1972 | Short voice, uncredited | Actor | |
The Persuaders! | 1971 | TV Series | Angie | Actor |
Aesop’s Fables | 1971 | TV Movie | Hare (voice) | Actor |
The Doris Day Show | 1970-1971 | TV Series | Duke Farentino | Actor |
Sabrina, the Teenage Witch | 1971 | TV Series | Actor | |
Sabrina and the Groovie Goolies | 1970 | TV Series | Drac / Ratso / Ghoulihand | Actor |
Hunters Are for Killing | 1970 | TV Movie | Rudy LeRoy | Actor |
The Name of the Game | 1968-1969 | TV Series | Norman Turley / James Kelso | Actor |
The Flying Nun | 1969 | TV Series | Joe Barnes | Actor |
The Monitors | 1969 | P.A. Stutz | Actor | |
Injun Trouble | 1969 | Short | Cool Cat (voice) | Actor |
The Great Bank Robbery | 1969 | Juan | Actor | |
The Pink Panther Show | 1969 | TV Series | The Painter | Actor |
Bugged by a Bee | 1969 | Short | Cool Cat (voice) | Actor |
Shamrock and Roll | 1969 | Short | Merlin the Magic Mouse / Second Banana / O’Reilly the Chief Leprechaun (voice) | Actor |
The Queen and I | 1969 | TV Series | Charles Duffy | Actor |
Fistic Mystic | 1969 | Short voice | Actor | |
The Batman/Superman Hour | 1968-1969 | TV Series | Joker | Actor |
Gomer Pyle: USMC | 1967-1968 | TV Series | Manuel Cortez | Actor |
That Girl | 1968 | TV Series | John McKenzie | Actor |
Flying Circus | 1968 | Short | Ace / Fritz Von Wienerschnitzel (voice) | Actor |
3 Ring Wing-Ding | 1968 | Short voice | Actor | |
Feud with a Dude | 1968 | Short voice | Actor | |
Hippydrome Tiger | 1968 | Short | Cool Cat (voice) | Actor |
He & She | 1968 | TV Series | Bart / Burt | Actor |
Big Game Haunt | 1968 | Short | Cool Cat (voice) | Actor |
Get Smart | 1968 | TV Series | Groovy Guru | Actor |
Hocus Pocus Powwow | 1968 | Short voice | Actor | |
Garrison’s Gorillas | 1967 | TV Series | Clarence Dorn | Actor |
The Mothers-In-Law | 1967 | TV Series | Ralph | Actor |
Cool Cat | 1967 | Short | Cool Cat / Colonel Rimfire (voice) | Actor |
I Dream of Jeannie | 1967 | TV Series | Sam | Actor |
F Troop | 1965-1967 | TV Series | Cpl. Randolph Agarn Cpl. Agarn Dmitri Agarnoff … |
Actor |
Vacation Playhouse | 1966 | TV Series | Commodore | Actor |
Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales | 1963-1966 | TV Series | Phineas J. Whoopee / Rocky Maninoff / Red Beard / … | Actor |
Napoleon Blown-Aparte | 1966 | Short | Commissioner (voice) | Actor |
The Great De Gaulle Stone Operation | 1965 | Short | Commissioner / Surgeon (voice) | Actor |
An Ounce of Pink | 1965 | Short | Talking Weight Machine / Shopkeeper / Man in Street (voice) | Actor |
That Funny Feeling | 1965 | Luther | Actor | |
A Very Special Favor | 1965 | Harry the Taxi Driver | Actor | |
The Great Race | 1965 | Texas Jack | Actor | |
Shocking Pink | 1965 | Short | English Narrator (voice) | Actor |
Bus Riley’s Back in Town | 1965 | Howie | Actor | |
Gilligan’s Island | 1965 | TV Series | Jackson Farrell | Actor |
Sex and the Single Girl | 1964 | Motorcycle Cop | Actor | |
The Baileys of Balboa | 1964 | TV Series | Shorty McAllister | Actor |
Kraft Suspense Theatre | 1964 | TV Series | Perry Shields | Actor |
Underdog | 1964 | TV Series | Phineas J. Whoopie (voice) | Actor |
Wild and Wonderful | 1964 | Rufus Gibbs | Actor | |
The Greatest Show on Earth | 1964 | TV Series | Bob Eagle | Actor |
Captain Newman, M.D. | 1963 | Cpl. Gavoni | Actor | |
Down to Earth | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Mayor Mean Moe | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Mean Moe’s Side Show | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Mean Moe Cools Off | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Speak for Yourself Mean Moe | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Achilles Is a Heel | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
A Lot of Bull | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Bomb-y Weather | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Fearless Female | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Funnyland | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Gone Hollywood | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Having a Hex of a Time | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Jungle Bungle | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Let George Do It | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Mean Moe’s Fairy Tale | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Mean Moe Day | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Mean Moe Tells William Tell | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Mean Moe the Lion Tamer | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Musketeer Moe | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Romance Machine Made | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Sahara Today Gone Tomorrow | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
The Hillbillies | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
The Sleeping Beauty | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
The Unwashables | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Tic Tac Moe | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Who’s Napoleon? | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Arty Party | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Blunder Down Under | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Growing Pains | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Koko in a London Fog | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Koko Meets Barney Beatnik | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
Mean Moe and Cleopatra | 1963 | TV Short | Koko the Clown (voice) | Actor |
The Ghost Busters | 1975 | TV Series performer – 1 episode | Soundtrack | |
Gomer Pyle: USMC | 1967 | TV Series performer – 1 episode | Soundtrack | |
F Troop | 1966 | TV Series performer – 1 episode | Soundtrack | |
Goolians | 2006 | Video documentary short special thanks | Thanks | |
Tennessee Tuxedo Will Not Fail! | 2011 | Documentary short | Himself | Self |
TV Land Confidential | 2005 | TV Series documentary | Himself | Self |
The Aristocrats | 2005 | Documentary | Himself | Self |
Frontline | 1996 | TV Series documentary | Himself | Self |
Musical Comedy Tonight II | 1981 | TV Movie | Himself | Self |
The 6th People’s Choice Awards | 1980 | TV Special | Himself – Performer | Self |
Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade | 1979 | TV Special | Himself | Self |
When the West Was Fun: A Western Reunion | 1979 | TV Movie documentary | Himself | Self |
Dinah! | 1975-1977 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Mike Douglas Show | 1962-1976 | TV Series | Himself – Comedian / Himself | Self |
Joys | 1976 | TV Special | Himself | Self |
The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour | 1973 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Alan King Looks Back in Anger: A Review of 1972 | 1973 | TV Movie | Himself – Comedian | Self |
The Wonderful World of Aggravation | 1972 | TV Movie | Himself | Self |
The Jerry Reed When You’re Hot You’re Hot Hour | 1972 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson | 1962-1972 | TV Series | Himself – Guest / Himself | Self |
The David Frost Show | 1972 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Golddiggers | 1971 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Movie Game | 1971 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Candid Camera | 1971 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour | 1971 | TV Series | Himself – Guest Performer | Self |
Playboy After Dark | 1970 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Ann-Margret: From Hollywood with Love | 1969 | TV Special | Himself | Self |
Operation: Entertainment | 1968 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Joey Bishop Show | 1967-1968 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Laugh-In | 1968 | TV Series | Himself – Guest Performer | Self |
First Annual All-Star Celebrity Baseball Game | 1967 | TV Special | Himself – Celebrity | Self |
The Hollywood Squares | 1967 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Everybody’s Talking | 1967 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Andy Williams Show | 1966 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Milton Berle Show | 1966 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Hollywood Palace | 1965 | TV Series | Himself – Comedian | Self |
That Regis Philbin Show | 1965 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
That Was the Week That Was | 1964 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Jackie Gleason: American Scene Magazine | 1963 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Merv Griffin Show | 1962 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Jack Paar Tonight Show | 1959-1962 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Tonight Show | 1962 | TV Series | Himself – Comedian | Self |
The Ed Sullivan Show | 1949-1962 | TV Series | Himself – Comedian / Himself / Comedian | Self |
Playboy’s Penthouse | 1959 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Big Record | 1957 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Steve Allen Plymouth Show | 1957 | TV Series | Himself – Comedian | Self |
The Arthur Murray Party | 1957 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Stage Show | 1956 | TV Series | Himself – Guest Comedian | Self |
The NBC Comedy Hour | 1956 | TV Series | Himself – Comedian | Self |
The Colgate Comedy Hour | 1954 | TV Series | Himself – Comedian | Self |
The Larry Storch Show | 1953 | TV Series | Himself – Host | Self |
I’ve Got a Secret | 1953 | TV Series | Himself – Guest | Self |
Cavalcade of Stars | 1950-1952 | TV Series | Himself – Host / Himself – Guest Host / Himself | Self |
Your Show of Shows | 1952 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Saturday Night Revue with Jack Carter | 1950 | TV Series | Himself – Comedian | Self |
Freakazoid! | 1995 | TV Series | Cpl. Randolph Agarn | Archive Footage |
The Switch | 1976 | Angie | Archive Footage |
Larry Storch Awards
Year | Award | Ceremony | Nomination | Movie | Category |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1967 | Primetime Emmy | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Continued Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Comedy Series | F Troop (1965) | Won |
1967 | Primetime Emmy | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Continued Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Comedy Series | F Troop (1965) | Nominated |