Henry Polic II explained

Henry Polic II
Birth Name:Henry Albert Polic II
Birth Date:February 20, 1945
Birth Place:Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Death Place:Sherman Oaks, California, U.S.
Alma Mater:Florida State University
Occupation:Actor
Years Active:1975–2004

Henry Albert Polic II (February 20, 1945 – August 11, 2013) was an American stage, screen, and voice actor, best known as Jerry Silver on Webster.

He earned his Master of Fine Arts degree from Florida State University and later served in the military police at Fort Riley in Kansas. While at Florida State University he starred in many stage productions including Our Town. He also was an active member of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity. In 1975, Polic was a regular cast member on Mel Brooks' short-lived television comedy, When Things Were Rotten. Polic also had a regular role as Dracula in Monster Squad (1976).[1]

In the 1980s, Polic was often seen as a celebrity guest player on various game shows. His most frequent guest spots were on the various incarnations of Pyramid, as he appeared multiple times on The $25,000 Pyramid and the editions of The $100,000 Pyramid hosted by Dick Clark and John Davidson for producer Bob Stewart. Polic did various other work for Stewart, hosting the game show Double Talk in 1986, a pilot for a revival of Stewart's Eye Guess called Eye Q in 1988, and sharing announcing duties with Johnny Gilbert and Dean Goss on the latter edition of The $100,000 Pyramid.[2] His specialties included foreign and regional accents, ballroom dancing and baritone singing.

From the early 1990s until his death, Polic was perhaps best known as the original British-accented voice of the Scarecrow in . Originally he had a deep, gruff voice, but later made his voice a bit higher for the role. Polic also worked at Florida State University as a guest star in the School of Theatre's production of A Christmas Carol, playing Ebenezer Scrooge in 1996.

Polic died on August 11, 2013, of cancer.[3] A US Army Vietnam era veteran, he is interred at National Memorial Cemetery of Arizona in Phoenix.[4]

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
1977The Last Remake of Beau GesteCaptain Merdmanger
1978Rabbit TestTito
1979Scavenger HuntNaked Policeman
1980Oh, God! Book IIPsychiatrist 5
1989Hollywood Chaos
1992Double TroubleStephen TarlowUncredited
1993King B: A Life in the MoviesStuart Peters
2000Bring Him HomeAmes
2001All You NeedMr. Etheridge
2002Would I Lie to You?Button KingDirect-to-video

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1975When Things Were RottenSheriff of Nottingham13 episodes
1976The Bionic WomanThe ManEpisode: "Bionic Beauty"
1976Monster SquadDracula13 episodes
1977AliceWalterEpisode: "The Failure"
1977McNamara's BandSchnellTelevision film
1978–1980Eight Is EnoughJay Redding2 episodes
1978–1981Fantasy IslandBaron Boris, Marty2 episodes
1979Mork & MindyDr. Benton PhillipsEpisode: "Mork Runs Down"
1979Detective SchoolZarkovEpisode: "Hooray for Bulgaria"
1979Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-DooAdditional voices
1980The Incredible HulkDonaldEpisode: "Equinox"
1980The Love BoatPierreEpisode: "No Girls for Doc/Marriage of Convenience/The Caller/The Witness"
1980–1981The Fonz and the Happy Days GangAdditional voices24 episodes
1981ScruplesMark StinerTelevision film
1982DarkroomFrederickEpisode: "The Rarest of Wines"
1982Shirt TalesAdditional voices13 episodes
1982Cagney & LaceyFrancoisEpisode: "Beauty Burglars"
1982The New Odd CoupleDaviesEpisode: "The Cordon Blues"
1982The Smurfs Christmas SpecialVoice, television short
1982–1989The SmurfsTracker SmurfVoice, recurring role
1983The DukesVoice, 13 episodes
1983Gun ShyRandy TurnerEpisode: "We Gotta Know When to Hold 'Em"
1983The New Scooby and Scrappy-Doo ShowVoice
1983–1989WebsterJerry Silver, The Devil66 episodes
1984The New Scooby-Doo MysteriesAdditional voicesEpisode: "Happy Birthday, Scooby-Doo"
1984–1985E/RDr. Ravi Raja, Ivo2 episodes
1985HotelRoy SternEpisode: "Illusions"
1985SecalVoice, episode: "Daniel and the Lion's Den"
1986–1989Murder, She WroteArthur Bishop, Alan Dupree2 episodes
1988Top Cat and the Beverly Hills CatsSnerdlyVoice, television film
1988The New Yogi Bear ShowAdditional voices4 episodes
1988SupermanWildsharkkVoice, episode: "Wildsharkk"
1988–1989Fantastic MaxAdditional voicesVoice, 3 episodes
1989–1990Paddington BearSir Sealy BloomVoice, 2 episodes
1990Voice, 13 episodes
1990The Adventures of Don Coyote and Sancho PandaAdditional voicesEpisode: "Pity the Poor Pirate"
1991They Came from Outer SpaceVal VincentEpisode: "Hair Today, Gone Tomorrow"
1991Morton & HayesMaitre'dEpisode: "Daffy Dicks"
1991Yo Yogi!Baba LooeyVoice, 9 episodes
1992The Golden PalaceDining Room GuestEpisode: "Seems Like Old Times: Part 1"
1992Saved by the BellMr. BainbridgeEpisode: "Snow White and the Seven Dorks"
1992Tom & Jerry KidsVoice, episode: "Penthouse Mouse/12 Angry Sheep/The Ant Attack"
1992–1994Jonathan Crane / ScarecrowVoice, 6 episodes
1993I Yabba-Dabba Do!Seagull WriterVoice, television film
1994Mighty MaxNemoVoice, episode: "Around the World in Eighty Arms"
1999ProfilerRichard FallenEpisode: "Three Carat Crisis"
2000The Trial of Old DrumDoc ThompsonTelevision film
2000SheenaProfessor BarringtonEpisode: "Wild Thing"
2003She SpiesMichael OsborneEpisode: "Gone Bad"
2004CombustionDr. WatsonTelevision film; final role

Notes and References

  1. Veteran Actor Henry Polic II Dies at Age 68. Broadway Worldwide. August 12, 2013. September 25, 2017.
  2. News: Four Decades of Scrooge. December 12, 1997. St. Petersburg Times. September 25, 2017. 16. Polic hosted Celebrity Double Talk and was a semi-regular on the $100,000 Pyramid. subscription .
  3. Web site: Character Actor Henry Polic II Dies at 68. August 12, 2013. Variety. September 25, 2017.
  4. https://gravelocator.cem.va.gov/ngl/result#results-content Veterans Administration Grave Locater Search Results