Max Baer Jr.

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Max Baer Jr.
Max Baer, Jr. 1962.JPG
As Jethro in 1962
Born
Maximilian Adalbert Baer Jr.

(1937-12-04) December 4, 1937 (age 83)
OccupationActor, producer, director, comedian, entrepreneur
Years active1949–1991
Spouse(s)
Joanne Kathleen Hill
(m. 1966; div. 1971)
Parent(s)
RelativesAmy Lynn Baxter (niece)[1]

Maximilian Adalbert Baer Jr. (born December 4, 1937) is an American actor, producer, comedian, and director. He is best known for playing Jethro Bodine, the dim-witted nephew of Jed Clampett (played by Buddy Ebsen) on The Beverly Hillbillies.

Early life[]

Baer was born Maximilian Adalbert Baer Jr. at East Oakland Hospital in Oakland, California, in 1937,[citation needed] the son of boxing champion Max Baer and his wife Mary Ellen Sullivan. His father was of German Jewish descent, and his mother was of Scots-Irish descent. His brother and sister are James Manny Baer (1941–2009) and Maude Baer (b. 1943). His uncle was boxer and actor Buddy Baer.

He attended Christian Brothers High School in Sacramento, where he earned letters in four sports and twice won the junior title at the Sacramento Open golf tournament. (Playing with Charlie Sifford, he later won the pro-am tournament at the 1968 Andy Williams - San Diego Open.)[2]

Baer earned a bachelor's degree in business administration from Santa Clara University, with a minor in philosophy.

Career[]

Baer's first acting role was in Goldilocks and the Three Bears at the Blackpool Pavilion in England in 1949. He began acting professionally in 1960 at Warner Bros., where he made appearances on television programs such as Maverick, Surfside 6, Hawaiian Eye, Cheyenne, The Roaring 20s, and 77 Sunset Strip.[3] His career took off two years later, when he joined the cast of The Beverly Hillbillies.[3]

The Beverly Hillbillies[]

Max Baer (left), Nancy Kulp, and Sharon Tate in The Beverly Hillbillies (1965)

In 1962, Baer was cast in the role of the naïve but well-meaning Jethro Bodine, Jed Clampett's nephew.

He continued to take other parts during the nine-year run of The Beverly Hillbilles and appeared on the television programs Vacation Playhouse and Love, American Style, as well as in the Western A Time for Killing.[3]

Later career[]

Following the cancellation of The Beverly Hillbillies in 1971, Baer made numerous guest appearances on television, but he found his TV acting career hampered by typecasting. He concentrated on feature motion pictures, especially behind the camera, writing, producing, and directing. Baer wrote and produced the drama Macon County Line (1974),[3] in which he played Deputy Reed Morgan, the highest-grossing movie per dollar invested at the time. Made for US$110,000, it earned almost US$25 million at the box office, a record that lasted until The Blair Witch Project superseded it in 1999.[citation needed] Baer also wrote, produced, and directed the drama The Wild McCullochs (1975), and played the role of Culver Robinson.

Baer is credited with being one of the first to use the title of a popular song as the title and plot anchor of a film, acquiring the rights to Bobbie Gentry's hit song and producing the 1976 film Ode to Billy Joe, which he also directed. Made for US$1.1 million, the film grossed $27 million at the box office, and earned over US$2.65 million outside the US, US$4.75 million from television, and US$2.5 million from video. The film starred Robby Benson and Glynnis O'Connor.

Since the success of Ode to Billy Joe, the motion picture industry has produced more than 100 song-title movies. Baer pursued the rights to the hit song "Like a Virgin", recorded by the singer Madonna in 1984. When ABC tried to prevent him from making the film, he sued and won a judgment of more than US$2 million.

He directed the 1979 comedy Hometown U.S.A. before retiring to his home at Lake Tahoe, Nevada. He continues to make occasional guest appearances on television.

Baer has said that playing Jethro Bodine undermined his acting career. When Paul Henning asked him to reprise the role for the 1981 television movie Return of the Beverly Hillbillies, he declined, yet when the feature film The Beverly Hillbillies was made 12 years later, reports cited Baer's dissatisfaction that only Ebsen was asked to do a cameo. He appeared in the 1993 television special The Legend of the Beverly Hillbillies, reprising his role as Jethro. By 2004, Baer had recognized the marketability of The Beverly Hillbillies and appeared with actress Donna Douglas at the annual TV Land Awards.

Other ventures[]

In 1985, Baer began investigating the gambling industry. He noted that tourists paid a US$5 to $6 admission to tour the "Ponderosa Ranch", in Incline Village, Nevada, which was the location for filming exterior scenes for episodes of TV's popular program Bonanza. The Ponderosa was a cattle ranch with horses, barns, Bonanza displays, restaurants, hay rides, and a wedding chapel, and tourists enjoyed the Ponderosa because of the Bonanza connection. Baer decided that tourists would also pay for something dealing with The Beverly Hillbillies. He began using his Jethro Bodine role as a marketing opportunity toward the gambling and hotel industry. Baer obtained the sublicensing rights, including food and beverage rights, to The Beverly Hillbillies from CBS in 1991. His business partner estimates the cost of obtaining the rights and developing the ideas at US$1 million. Sixty-five Beverly Hillbillies slot machines were built in 1999 and placed in 10 casinos.[4]

In late 2003, Baer attempted the redevelopment of a former Walmart location in Carson City into a Beverly Hillbillies-themed hotel and casino, but was unsuccessful due to building code conflicts and other developers on the neighboring properties. On May 4, 2007, he announced the sale of the property and the purchase of another parcel just outside Carson City, in neighboring Douglas County, where he expected less resistance to his plans. Baer purchased a 2.5-acre (10,000 m2) parcel in north Douglas County for US$1.2 million, and would purchase an additional 20 acres (81,000 m2) once he obtained the required zoning variances. The plans were for a 40,000-square-foot (3,700 m2) gambling area with 800 slot machines and 16 tables, flanked by various eateries, including "Jethro's All You Ken Et Buffet." The project would feature a showroom, cinema complex and a 240-room, five-story hotel.[5]

Plans for Baer's casino included a 200-foot-tall (61 m) mock oil derrick spouting a 20- to 30-foot (9.1 m) flame.

As of July 2012, development of Jethro's Casino had been suspended. Ongoing litigation involving Max Baer Jr, the developer, and Douglas County has delayed the development of the project indefinitely.[6]

In 2014, Baer sued CBS after claiming a secret deal with a Des Moines-based Jethro's BBQ was interfering with his opportunity to cash in on his role from the iconic television show. The lawsuit claims that Baer negotiated a deal with CBS for the rights to use the fictional character and other motifs from the show to create a chain of restaurants, hotels, and casinos.

Recent years[]

He remained close friends with Buddy Ebsen until Ebsen's death from pneumonia on July 6, 2003. Just before his acting mentor's death, Donna Douglas and he both had visited Ebsen in the hospital.[7]

The 2015 death of co-star Donna Douglas left Baer as the only surviving regular cast member of The Beverly Hillbillies.[8]

Filmography[]

List of credits[]

Year Title Role Notes
1960 Maverick Ticket Taker / Chuck / Brazos 3 episodes
— "Bundle from Britain"
— "A Bullet for the Teacher"
— "Kiz"
1960–1961 Surfside 6 Joe Wilk / Party Guest 2 episodes
— "High Tide" (1960)
— "Facts on the Fire" (1961)
1960–1961 Cheyenne Callow / Bert McGuire / Pete 4 episodes
— "Two Trails to Santa Fe" (1960)
— "Duel at Judas Basin" (1961)
— "The Beholden" (1961)
— "The Frightened Town" (1961)
1960–1961 Hawaiian Eye Ali / Bill Gorham 2 episodes
— "Vanessa Vanishes" (1960)
— "The Big Dealer" (1961)
1960–1961 77 Sunset Strip Government Man / Luther Martell / Billy Blackston 3 episodes
— "Double Trouble" (1960)
— "The Corsican Caper" (1961)
— "The Chrome Coffin" (1961)
1961 Bronco Cowboy Episode: "The Invaders
1961 Sugarfoot Frank Episode: "Angel"
1962 Follow the Sun Tom Baylor Episode: "A Choice of Weapons"
1962 It's a Mans' World 1st GI Episode: "Drive Over to Exeter"
1962–1971 The Beverly Hillbillies Jethro Bodine main role (273 episodes)
TV Land Award for Favorite "Fish Out of Water" (2004)
1967 A Time for Killing Sergeant Luther Liskell
1967 Dream Girl of '67 Himself (Bachelor Judge) series regular (10 episodes)
1968 Hollywood Squares Himself (Panelist) recurring role (5 episodes)
1971 The Birdmen Tanker Television Movie
1972 Two for the Money N/A Producer
1972–1973 Love, American Style Rocky / Jackie Lee Rhodes 2 episodes
— "Love and the Fullback" (1972)
— "Love and the Games People Play" (1973)
1974 Macon County Line Deputy Reed Morgan also Producer/Writer
1975 The Wild McCullochs Culver Robinson also Director/Producer/Writer
1976 Ode to Billy Joe N/A Director/Producer
1979 Fantasy Island Big Jake Farley Episode: "Nobody's There/The Dancer"
1979 Hometown U.S.A. N/A Director
1980 The Asphalt Cowboy Max Caulpepper Television Movie
1982 The Circle Family unknown role Television Movie
1984 Matt Houston Andy MacKay 2 episodes
— "Return to Nam: Part 1"
— "Escape from Nam: Part 2"
1989 Murder, She Wrote Johnny Wheeler Episode: "Jack and Bill"
1991 State Trooper Boone Willoughby Episode: "Who Killed J.B. Fletcher?"
2005 Biography Himself (Interviewee) Episode: "Buddy Ebsen"

References[]

  1. ^ Luigi Lucaire (15 January 1997). Howard Stern A To Z. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-15144-7.
  2. ^ "Golf exhibition set Tuesday at CC course", Times-News (Hendersonville, NC), September 15, 1971.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c d "Max Baer Jr". TVGuide.com. TV Guide. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
  4. ^ "Max Baer reflects on his fight to open Hillbillies casino". The Nevada Appeal. Retrieved May 6, 2016.
  5. ^ "'Jethro' Buys Land for Nevada Casino". Retrieved May 6, 2016.
  6. ^ "News Updates". Retrieved July 21, 2019.
  7. ^ "Ebsen, who played Jed Clampett, Barnaby Jones, many others, dies". Las Vegas Sun.com. July 7, 2003. Retrieved August 7, 2017.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ "Max Baer Jr. On Donna Douglas: 'She Was Elly May Until The Day She Died' - RumorFix - The Anti Tabloid". RumorFix - The Anti Tabloid. Retrieved May 6, 2016.

External links[]

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