

In '69 I got married, and we were going to start a family and I needed a job, so I went out signed up for the LAPD (Los Angeles Police Department)." I'm not complaining because Eddie's been too good to me, but I found work hard to come by. He made the following remarks to host Stu Shostak: "I was very much typecast. Ken described his feelings about being typecast in a 2008 radio interview on Stu's Show.
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Unhappily, he found himself relegated to guest roles on such TV series as Petticoat Junction (1964), The Munsters (1966) and Lassie (1967). He found it difficult to find work as an actor because he was typecast as Eddie Haskell. When Leave it to Beaver ended its run in 1963, Ken was 20 years old. (He was an editor for the 2011 film Captain America: The First Avenger). Osmond (born October 8, 1971) and Christian Scott Osmond (born June 12, 1974). On June 28, 1969, Ken married Sandra Purdy. It was just another family show that had enough fans to keep it on the air." The ironic thing was that Beaver was never a top ten show during the original network run. "He's the guy you can blame when things go wrong. "Everyone knows an Eddie Haskell," Ken told the Chicago Tribune in 1992. As it turns out, Beaver enjoys the roller coaster ride, while Eddie is scared out of his wits. Beaver is frightened about riding the roller coaster with the older boys after his own friends tell him how scary it is. In the episode, Beaver visits an amusement park with Wally and his friends Lumpy and Eddie. One of my favourite Leave it to Beaver episodes is from 1962 and it is called "Beaver's Fear" (Season 5, Episode 21, Air Date: February 24, 1962). His sneaky behaviour was obviously a cover for his lack of confidence. He would encourage Wally to break some kind of curfew rule or bully Beaver, calling him "squirt." Eddie was definitely a phony, but he was also a very vulnerable and insecure person. Then he would walk up the stairs and stir up all kinds of mischief. June, recognizing Eddie's insincerity, would roll her eyes whenever Eddie complimented her appearance or her attire, In typical Eddie fashion, he would say, "That's a lovely dress you're wearing today, Mrs.

He was unfailingly sweet and polite with Beaver's parents, June (Barbara Billingsley) and Ward Cleaver (Hugh Beaumont). Always fawning over adults and people with authority, unctuous Eddie became a symbol for a two-faced troublemaker. With his curly blond hair and menacing sneer, Ken's Eddie Haskell character really resonated with fans. His first appearance as Eddie was in a 1957 episode entitled "New Neighbors" (Season 1, Episode 5, Air Date: November 1, 1957). Over a spam of six seasons, from 1957 to 1963, he appeared in 97 of the show's 234 episodes. However, the show's producers were so impressed by Ken's performance and viewer response was so positive that Ken became a regular on the series. The character of Eddie was originally intended to be a one-shot guest appearance during the first season of Leave it to Beaver. Ken was 14 years old in 1957 when he was called to audition for the role of Eddie Haskell, for which he was eventually chosen. He and his brother made their film debut as child extras in the 1952 Mayflower pilgrim tale Plymouth Adventure, starring Spencer Tracy At the age of four, Ken began appearing in television commercials. She was eager to get Ken and his brother, Dayton into acting.
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Pearl, whom Ken described as "a typical movie mother," was a show business agent. Thurman Osmond was a studio carpenter and a prop maker. He was the son of Pearl (Hand) and Thurman Osmond.

Kenneth Charles Osmond was born in Glendale, California on June 7, 1943. Eric described Ken as "an incredibly kind and wonderful father." He stated that Ken "had his family gathered around him when he passed."

Ken's son, Eric, revealed that the cause of his father's death was chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and peripheral arterial disease. Ken Osmond, the man who brought Eddie to life on Leave it to Beaver died on at his home in suburban Los Angeles. RIP dear friend."Įddie Haskell is one of the most memorable characters on American television. I have always said that he was the best actor on our show because in real life his personality was so opposite of the character he brilliantly portrayed. "I will greatly miss my lifelong friend Ken Osmond who I have known for over 63 years. He was the closest thing the wholesome show had to a villain and viewers of all ages loved to hate him." He constantly kissed up to adults, flattering and flirting with Wally and Beaver's mother, and kicked down at his peers, usually in the same scene. "Eddie was the best friend of Tony Dow's Wally Cleaver, big brother to Jerry Mathers' Beaver Cleaver.
