Miltie |
Milton |
Uncle Milty |
Comic Milton |
Milton of TV |
Comic legend |
1950s NBC icon |
'Uncle Miltie' |
Amusing Milton |
Adolf or Milton |
Funnyman Milton |
Old Texaco star |
Early TV legend |
Comedian Milton |
'Mr. Television' |
Memorable Miltie |
Milton of comedy |
Mr. Tuesday Night |
Early TV comedian |
TV pioneer Milton |
TV's Uncle Miltie |
First TV superstar |
Early TV headliner |
Early TV sensation |
Golden Age TV star |
Milton from N.Y.C. |
Actor/comic Milton |
Old Texaco pitchman |
TV's first big star |
He played the Palace |
Early TV star Milton |
Superstar of early TV |
The Thief of Bad Gags |
Comedian from N. Y. C. |
Mr. Television, Milton |
Pioneer TV personality |
Uncle Miltie's surname |
Early TV comedian Milton |
Uncle Miltie of early TV |
Texaco Star Theatre" host |
Early Neil Simon employer |
First TV superstar Milton |
Texaco Star Theater" host |
Texaco Star Theater" star |
Roosevelt brain truster Adolf |
Texaco Star Theater" headliner |
TV Hall of Fame charter member |
Texaco Star Theater" star on TV |
Comedian dubbed "Mr. Television |
A Milton who found paradise in TV |
Comedian known as "Mr. Television |
Tuesday night fixture on early NBC |
Friars Club of Beverly Hills founder |
Charter member of the TV Hall of Fame |
Comedian dubbed "The Thief of Bad Gags |
Comic whose memoir was "B.S. I Love You |
Star of "Always Leave Them Laughing," 1949 |
TV great who said "I live to laugh, and I laugh to live |
1949 Emmy winner for Most Outstanding Kinescope Personality |
He played himself in "Broadway Danny Rose" and "Pee-wee's Big Adventure |
Comedian who married Joyce Mathews in 1941, divorced her in 1947 and married her again in 1949 "because she reminded me of my first wife |