Willie Gilbert (24 February 1916 – 2 December 1980) was an American author and playwright.
Born
William Gomberg in
Cleveland, Ohio, Gilbert's proclivity for creating gags emerged as the humor writer for the
Glenville High School Torch on which he worked alongside future playwright
Jerome Lawrence and the creators of
Superman,
Jerry Siegel and
Joe Shuster.
After earning a BS in education he moved to
New York City to pursue a career as a comedian. There he discovered that his physician,
Jack Weinstock, had a skill for writing, and soon the two were contributing sketch comedy to night-club performers including
Kaye Ballard and
Eileen Barton, and then to the
Broadway review
Tickets Please. They worked extensively in early television, particularly the children's programs
Howdy Doody and
Tom Corbett, Space Cadet, although they also sold material to such mainstream performers as
Jackie Gleason. They achieved their first Broadway success as co-authors of the book for
How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying in 1962, for which they shared in two
Tony Awards.
Later, Gilbert and Weinstock wrote the books for
Hot Spot, which starred Judy Holliday, and
Catch Me If You Can, a murder mystery based on a French play by Robert Thomas. Weinstock died in 1969, as the team was writing another Broadway musical,
The Candy Store.
In the 1970s, Gilbert returned to children's television, writing gags for
Yogi Bear,
Scooby Doo and other
Hanna-Barbera characters. Gilbert died in
New......
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