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Laugh-In’ star Arte Johnson dies

The versatile Johnson won an Emmy for his work on Dan Rowan and Dick Martin’s Laugh-In in 1969 and was among the troupe members who developed breakout characters
 Arte Johnson, a lurking presence on US television’s Rowan , Martin’s Laugh-In as a lecherous geriatric and a comic German soldier who found things on the show “verrry interesting” – but not necessarily funny – died on Wednesday at the age of 90, his family said.
Johnson died at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles from heart failure following a three-year battle with bladder and prostate cancer, a statement from his family said.
The versatile Johnson won an Emmy for his work on Dan Rowan and Dick Martin’s Laugh-In in 1969 and was among the troupe members who developed breakout characters.
The top-rated, award-winning show aired from 1968 through 1973 and was a ground-breaking, fast-moving mix of comedy, music and social satire, all overlaid with a hippie-era psychedelic sensibility. Guest stars ranged from falsetto-voiced Tiny Tim to Richard Nixon, who once uttered one of the show’s catch phrases – “sock it to me” – during an appearance in the midst of his 1968 presidential campaign.
The diminutive Johnson would play as many as 10 characters – often with foreign accents – in an hour long Laugh-in episode. Three of those characters would become stand-outs – a man in a yellow raincoat who inexplicably rode a child-sized tricycle until he tipped over, the dirty old man Tyrone F Horneigh and Wolfgang, the leering German soldier.
Before Laugh-In, Johnson’s career consisted of New York stage work, semi-regular sit-com parts starting in the late 1950s and one-off roles on popular 1960s shows such as The Andy Griffith Show, Bewitched and The Dick Van Dyke Show.
Johnson was born on January 29, 1929, in Benton Harbor, Michigan.