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Jerry Maren

Biography

Jerry Maren

Edit

Overview

  • Born
    January 24, 1920 · Roxbury, Massachusetts, USA
  • Died
    May 24, 2018 · San Diego, California, USA (congestive heart failure)
  • Birth name
    Gerard Emil Marenghi
  • Height
    1.30 m

Biography

    • Born to Italian emigrant parents, Emilio Marenghi and Raffaella Scanzillo, young Jerry took dancing lessons when he was young and aspired to be an actor. In November 1938, standing just 3' 4", he met up with the Oz-bound group of little people in New York and went by bus to California. There he was chosen to be the Munchkin who hands Dorothy a welcoming lollipop.
      - IMDb mini biography by: Stephen Cox

Family

  • Spouse
      Elizabeth Barrington(May 10, 1975 - January 26, 2011) (her death)

Trivia

  • With the death of Ruth Duccini on January 16, 2014, Maren became the last surviving actor to have played a Munchkin in Le Magicien d'Oz (1939). He outlived all the major cast members as well as the original Tin Man Buddy Ebsen.
  • Claims that the Munchkins got paid only $50 a week while the dog Toto received $200 a week during the filming of Le Magicien d'Oz (1939).
  • He played Buster Brown on television and radio during the 1950s and 1960s and did McDonald's commercials under the heavy costume of Mayor McCheese or the Hamburglar for several years.
  • Worked a stand in for child actors.
  • Was a professional wrestler.

Quotes

  • We represent the Lollipop Guild, the Lollipop Guild, the Lollipop Guild and in the name of the Lollipop Guild we welcome you to Munchkin Land.
  • For me, it was meeting all the little people from all over the world. Not only the United States but from all over. A few of them came from Texas. You'd never believe that. I always thought only big tall men came from Texas and there they had about 10 little guys from Texas--I couldn't believe it. I met other little people from Germany, France, Italy--they were from all over. There were over 120! -- JM, describing the "Munchkins" experience while filming The Wizard of Oz.
  • [on Samson et Dalila (1949)] Oh, that was a lot of fun. I had more fun doin' that picture. Me and a whole gang was in that, you know, about seven or eight of us, and our job was to torture Samson in one of the arenas. I had a torch and then we had another guy with a scissors and another guy with jaws and anything to torture the poor soul. When he was tied up in the arena, the director said, "Closer to Samson!" That meant us, you know, so I got close as I could to Samson, and I sat really rubbing his feet, you know. Of course I didn't meant it. I just meant to tickle him, you know. But then he used to say to me, "You little monster, get away from there!"
  • [on Cecil B. DeMille] He was kind of demanding, you know. He goes, "Don't forget you guys are gettin' paid," or something like that. He'd holler down with the microphone, you know, "Let's see you act now!" He wanted the whole crowd to be, which I don't blame him, 'cause the pictures cost a ton of money and he had to answer to the stockbrokers.
  • I pulled the door open and there was this beautiful gal. Holy Toledo! I couldn't believe it. You know, there was Hedy Lamarr right in the doorway.

Salary

  • Le Magicien d'Oz (1946) - $50 per week

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