Log in

View Full Version : Calvert DeForest, dead at 85...


Jesse Joe
03-22-2007, 07:36 AM
http://www.canadaeast.com/storyImages/CEExport146603_65877.jpg

This photo of character actor Calvert DeForest was taken in New York in August of 1993. DeForrest, who appeared as Larry 'Bud' Melman on NBC's Late Night with David Letterman and under his own name when Letterman brought the show to CBS, died Monday. He was 85.


Letterman regular dead at 85

The balding, bespectacled nebbish who gained cult status as the oddball Larry (Bud) Melman on David Letterman's late-night television shows has died after a long illness.

The Brooklyn, N.Y.-born Calvert DeForest, who was 85, died Monday at a hospital on Long Island, the Letterman show announced yesterday.

He made dozens of appearances on Letterman's shows from 1982 through 2002, handling a variety of twisted duties: a duet with Sonny Bono on "I Got You, Babe," doing a Mary Tyler Moore impression during a visit to Minneapolis where that television show was set, handing out hot towels to arrivals at New York's Port Authority Bus Terminal.

"Everyone always wondered if Calvert was an actor playing a character but in reality he was just himself - a genuine, modest and nice man," Letterman said in a statement.

"To our staff and to our viewers, he was a beloved and valued part of our show and we will miss him."

The gnomish DeForest was the first face to greet viewers when Letterman's NBC show debuted Feb. 1, 1982, offering a parody of the prologue to the Boris Karloff film "Frankenstein."

"It was the greatest thing that had happened in my life," he once said of his first Letterman appearance.

DeForest, given the nom de tube of Melman, became a program regular. The collaboration continued when the talk show host launched "Late Show with David Letterman" on CBS in 1994.

Cue cards were often DeForest's television kryptonite and his character inevitably appeared in an ill-fitting black suit behind thick black-rimmed glasses.

The Melman character opened Letterman's first CBS show, too - but used his real name because of a dispute with NBC over "intellectual property."

DeForest, positioned inside the network's familiar eye logo, announced: "This is CBS!"

His last appearance on "Late Show" came in 2002, celebrating his 81st birthday.

DeForest also appeared in an assortment of other television shows and films, including "Nothing Lasts Forever" with Bill Murray and Dan Aykroyd.

[ March 22, 2007, 17:05: Message edited by: Jesse-Joe ]

Borderstone
03-22-2007, 08:21 PM
You might want to add Jess that Calvert (Larry Bud Melman)Deforrest was the very first person seen on "Late Night With David Letterman."

On Feb. 1st of 1982,the camera fades in Larry B. approaches the camera and introduces the first show as if he were warning viewers that wathcing could be dangerous for their health.

"Well,I warned you" he states as the camera pulls up to his face. He really was funny,without even trying.

RIP C.D.

Jesse Joe
03-23-2007, 08:59 PM
Thanks B. Stone,

I did not know that. I started watching Letterman in 1984, and was a big fan of his.

These days I dont like him as much, as when he was on NBC. :)