Charles Nelson Reilly

January 13, 1931 – May 25, 2007



 

Charles Nelson Reilly
Charles Nelson Reilly

 

Obviously he said this when he was in some sort of career slump, because from the look of his IMDB page, he did quite a bit after being on game shows, including a near record 97 appearances on The Tonight Show.

Findadeath friend Doug Goding sent me this: “Back in the 70’s and early 80’s, Charles Nelson Reilly was a fixture on the talk show circuit. I guess scale made the house payments. At any rate, I vividly recall him being on Johnny Carson one night with Rob Reiner. Reiner treated him like a dog. That totally spoiled me on Rob Reiner to this day. Not long after, he was on again and this time Bob Hope was on. Hope always came on first and then left….he always said he had something to do when in reality he probably just didn’t want to listen to the drivel. The night in question, his segment was up, Johnny told him goodbye, and started to go to commercial. Hope didn’t leave and Johhny turned to him kind of confused and said, ‘don’t you have to go?’ Hope just replied, ‘No, I want to say hello to Charles.’ They came back from commercial and Charles Nelson Reilly came out. Hope gave him a warm greeting and THEN he left.

The two events may have been totally unrelated, but it always seemed to me that Hope was making amends for Rob Reiner and showing that, at least in his circle, Charles Nelson Reilly was a good guy deserving friendship and respect. Whatever the truth, I carried a soft spot in my heart for Bob Hope after that. To me it showed class.”  Thanks Doug, I’d have to see that myself before I unpass any judgment on Hope, and I appreciate you sending it.

Now, does anyone else think he was cut from the same cloth as JoAnne Worley? Same thing as Paul Lynde and Alice Ghostly. Both JoAnne and Charles made that same weird noise. He does it at the end of the Lidsville song. How’s that for a topper- she usually made it while laughing and twisting a finger into her cheek. Just a weird, indescribable noise, but oddly alike to each other.

My favorite CNR moment was a Match Game moment, when he was mocking Brett Somers claim that she lived in Beverly Hills. One of probably mostly local interest to those in LA, but it still makes me laugh every time I see it.

Charles had been living in a house way up in Coldwater Canyon, I would imagine with his boyfriend of over 25 years, Patrick Hughes.

 

 

For the past few years of his life, Charles had been performing in his one man show, The Life of Reilly. During his last performance in October 2004, his health started to deteriorate. He started losing weight and getting worse. According to one report he almost died in January of 2006. His last six months – he was quite aware of what was going on, and that he had little time left. Friends (Angie Dickinson, Dom Deluise and fellow deadie Beverly Sills) stopped by to keep him company – his home was converted into a mini hospital.

In spring of 2007 he was admitted to UCLA Medical Center and on the 24th he headed for organ failure, he died eventually on May 25, 2007. He was 76 years old. Official cause of death: Pneumonia.

 

 

RIP CNR.

I met him once in Chicago when he was directing The Nerd, this was during a time I was working on a show called Pump Boys and Dinettes. Did you ever notice how showbiz people have to shorten names to make them less taxing to discuss? Instead of Pump Boys and Dinettes, they reduced it to ‘Pump Boys’. Little Shop of Horrors became’Little Shop’.  They even shortened The Nerd, down to just ‘Nerd.’ I hated that.  As a kid, I adored him in Ghost…

 

 

And…

I really want to know what the hell he and Angie Dickinson had to talk about.

Wanna see his mailbox?

 

My pal Mark Langlois sends this:
Back story as told in his one man show/movie:

Charles’ overbearing Mother saw him sneaking off to the Circus with his friend Donald,  after she had forbade it.

Mom yelled out in spite from their apartment window, “I HOPE IT BURNS DOWN !!!”

Charles and Donald escaped the horrors. Charles said, “Donald never repeated what he heard my Mother yell that day. He was a good friend.”

Salacious Dept  – don’t read if you easily offend – I’m not stating this as fact, this is gossip:  Someone who wished to remain anonymous sent this: Bit of trivia about Charles Nelson Reilly: One of his favorite games to play was naked lost boy…. He’d pick up a hustler on Santa Monica Blvd. And drive them to his home. At the gate, he’d have them get out and take all their clothes off – he’d continue up to the house and go inside and then act surprised when poor, lost, naked boy arrived at his door step.  I got this info first hand when I lived in Hollywood in 1981. I was “dating” an exec from MGM/UA around the time of their merger.

 

 

6 thoughts on “Charles Nelson Reilly

  • February 22, 2023 at 9:37 am
    Permalink

    I always enjoyed his funny personality. Even today on Pluto game channel I’m still laughing at how much fun he was, yes, even with Brett Somers! They crack me up!

  • October 28, 2022 at 4:09 pm
    Permalink

    Charles Nelson Reilly witnessed the Ringling Bros Barnum and Bailey fire, huh?
    Let’s face it, he really was a Death Hag.

  • August 9, 2020 at 5:15 pm
    Permalink

    Saw him once on Pacific Coast Highway stopped to make a left hand turn at Sunset Blvd. He pulled up right next to me in a top down fire engine red Alfa Romeo convertable. Looked healthy and happy. Was kind of surprised he was riding around in a convertable what with his toupee and all.

    Since you mentioned it, also recall his Match Game perry with Brett Summers on her living in Beverly Hills. He made mention of something like if you threw a pebble ten feet you wouldn’t be in BH anymore and that she used tablecloths as curtains!

  • May 24, 2020 at 3:18 pm
    Permalink

    Oh Lord the “naked lost boy” game lol CNR lived a life, didn’t he? Lol RIP

  • November 19, 2019 at 1:02 am
    Permalink

    Charles Nelson Reilly was 13 when he survived the The Hartford CT. Circus Fire, one of the worst fire tragedies in U.S. history, killing 168 attendees (mainly children) and injuring more than 700.
    Fire broke out just 20 minutes into the Thursday afternoon performance of the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus on July 6, 1944. 7,000 people were trapped under the burning big top — a huge flammable canvas weatherproofed with 1,800 pounds of paraffin wax dissolved in 6,000 gallons of gasoline. Most of the dead were found in piles, some three bodies deep, at the most congested exits. A small number of people were found alive at the bottoms of these piles, protected by the bodies on top of them when the burning big top ultimately fell down.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.