Buddy Ebsen in "Breakfast at Tiffany's"
Life is timing for some actors I guess.
And dancers, too. In Buddy Ebsen's case..a male dancer. A "hoofer."
He was famous(I've read) in movies of the 30s as a dancer. Sort of disappeared after WWII service in the 40s.
Had a BIG role -- on Disney's TV show -- as the sidekick to Fess Parker as Davy Crockett.
And then some struggling years.
But came 1961: Blake Edwards hired him for a key part in Breakfast at Tiffany's
And came 1962: Paul Henning hired him for a key part in "The Beverly Hillbillies."
Its a one-two punch. The Beverly Hillbillies was Ebsen's claim to fame -- 274 episodes worth -- but there's ol' Jed himself -- SANS moustache -- showing up in a classy movie and hitting various unsettling notes --we feel sorry for him even as we rather fear him, and somewhat dislike him.
Per the book on the making of Breakfast at Tiffany's, director Blake Edwards wanted Buddy Ebsen -- and ONLY Buddy Ebsen -- for this key part in BAT and promised Ebsen "if you play this part, you will get an Oscar nomination."
Didn't happen. No Oscar nom for Ebsen. But he DOES have an impact in Breakfast at Tiffany's.
He is first introduced -- with trademark eerie Henry Mancini thriller music(see: Wait Until Dark, Experiment in Terror, Charade) - as a menace. A possible stalker of Hepburn's Holly Golightly. Or maybe a "mob enforcer" sent to follow her for her dealings with the mobster in prison (played by another 60's TV icon -- Alan Reed, the voice of Fred Flintstone.)
"Hero" George Peppard elects to stalk the stalker - more suspense music -- and confronts him on a bench in Central Park.
The suspense falls away into something more emotional. This man KNOWS Holly Golightly, but knows her as someone else "Lulu May." A hillbilly girl from the South.
Peppard tries to figure it out:
Peppard: You her father?
Ebsen: I'm her HUSBAND.
Gut punch. The end of Peppard's romantic hopes? Or something creepier. This guy looks too old to be her husband. She looks to young to have had this husband. And Doc mentions their KIDS.
Soon, Holly must confront her husband and Paul(Peppard) sees the truth for what it is. Doc's a widower. The kids were from his first wife. But he took a near child bride in "Lula May" and likely had sex with her and saddled her with a whole life she didn't really want.
But she has a brother. "Fred." And Ebsen reveals a manipulative, cruel side in threatening "LuluMay" about the need to come back "before Fred has to go back into the Army and who knows what will happen.,"
A little bit of struggle and coming to terms ensues. And Buddy Ebsen -- wackily -- ends up with the second most sad and dramatic rendering of "Moon River" in the movie(other than at the end)...as he boards a Grayhound bus home -- without LuluMay -- and goes back a broken man on a bus that swings past Holly and away.
Its his last line that is the most poignant. He can't believe how thin LuluMay is now. To Paul: "Gee...she should EAT something."
Ebsen seemed a likeable, easy going and funny fellah as Jed Clampett on The Beverly Hillbillies. Granny got most of the gags, followed by lummox Jethro. Ebsen was the anchor.
But his role in Breakfast at Tiffany's allowed the very tall, rather menacing Ebsen to show "other notes." The only reason he did NOT get an Oscar nom is that there were 5 guys who polled better.
PS. Ebsen was famously cast as The Tin Man in The Wizard of Oz(1939) but had to give up the role because he was allergic to the metal paint.
PPS. Ebsen had a life AFTER The Beverly Hillbillies. In the 70's when he played "Barnaby Jones" -- the "Elderly Detective" to play alongside Cannon --"the Fat Detective" on a Quinn Martin production. Turns out that Ebsen was the heartthrob of grandmothers across American and Barbaby Jones lasted the second longest of any QM production (The FBI came in first.) I watched the Barnaby Jones pilot the other day(everything streams) and Ebsen -- out to find the killer of his adult son -- was believably tall, big and tough when needed, and quite cold in his more vengeful line readings. He had something, acting-wise.