Jerry Mathers

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Gerald Patrick Mathers (born June 2, 1948) is an American former actor best known for his role in the television sitcom Leave It to Beaver, originally broadcast from 1957 to 1963. He played the protagonist Theodore "Beaver" Cleaver, the younger son of the suburban couple June and Ward Cleaver (Barbara Billingsley and Hugh Beaumont, respectively) and the younger brother of Wally Cleaver (Tony Dow).

Early life and family

Mathers was born in Sioux City, Iowa, in 1948, the son of a high school principal, and grew up in the San Fernando Valley, California.<ref name= parade /> Mathers has one sister and two brothers, including Jimmy Mathers.

Early career

Mathers began his career at the age of two when he appeared as a child model for a department store ad.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Soon after, he starred in a commercial for PET Milk opposite vaudeville comedian Ed Wynn.<ref name=parade>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

His early movies included This Is My Love (1954), Men of the Fighting Lady (1954), The Seven Little Foys (1955) and Alfred Hitchcock's black comedy The Trouble with Harry (1955), in which he plays Arnie, the son of Shirley MacLaine's character, and finds Harry's body in the nearby forest.

Leave It to Beaver

File:Jerry Mathers 1959.JPG
Mathers in a 1959 publicity shot

Mathers states that he got the role of Beaver Cleaver after telling the show's producers he would rather be at his Cub Scout meeting than to do an audition for the part. The producers found his candor appealing and perfect for the role.<ref name=parade /><ref>Jerry Mathers on auditioning for "Leave it to Beaver" Emmy TV Legends video. (posted in 2010)</ref> Mathers played the Beaver for six years, appearing in all 234 episodes of the series. He was the first child actor to have had a deal made on his behalf to get a percentage of the merchandising revenue from a television show. Leave It to Beaver still generates revenue more than six decades after its original production run.

The original sitcom has been shown in over 80 countries in 40 languages. Mathers noted that the Leave It to Beaver phenomenon is worldwide. "I can go anywhere in the world, and people know me," Mathers has said. "In Japan, the show's called The Happy Boy and His Family. So I'll be walking through the airport in Japan, and people will come up and say 'Hi, Happy Boy!'"<ref name=nytimes>Template:Cite news</ref>

When asked in a 2014 television interview whether he had known at the time of the filming of Leave it to Beaver that the show was special, and would be in perpetual syndication, Mathers responded: "No, not at all. I had worked since I was two years old. I did movies. I didn't do any other series, but I had done a lot of movies and things like that so, in fact, every year it was a question whether we would come back for the next year 'cause you had to be picked up. So you would do 39 shows and then we would go to New York and meet all the press, and then we'd go to Chicago to meet the ad people, then we'd come back and take about five to six weeks off, and if we got picked up, then we'd start again. So we did that for six years because that was the length of the contracts at those times. So that's why there are 39 [episodes] for six years, and then it was off the air. Not off the air, but we didn't film any new ones [after that.]"<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Mathers remained friends with Barbara Billingsley, who played his TV mother June Cleaver, and he remembered her after her death as "a good friend and an even better mentor. For me she was like the favorite teacher that we all had in school."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Music

In 1962, near the end of the run of Leave It to Beaver, Mathers recorded two songs for a single 45 rpm: "Don't 'Cha Cry," and for the flip side, the twist ditty "Wind-Up Toy".<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> During high school, Mathers had a band named Beaver and the Trappers.<ref name="hammer">Template:Cite magazine</ref>

Education and military service

File:USAF Sergeant Jerry Mathers.png
Mathers in U.S. Air Force uniform

As he moved into his adolescence, Mathers retired from acting to concentrate on high school. He attended Notre Dame High School in Sherman Oaks, California. During this time, he led the musical band Beaver and the Trappers.<ref name=parade />

While still in high school, Mathers joined the U.S. military. From 1966 to 1969, he was a member of the 146th Airlift Wing, nicknamed The Hollywood Guard,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> of the California Air National Guard in Van Nuys, California.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="Air Wing">Template:Cite news</ref> In 1967, while wearing his dress uniform, Mathers, along with child actress Angela Cartwright, presented an Emmy Award to Gene Kelly. In December 1969, a rumor began that Mathers was killed in action in the Vietnam War. Although the origin of the rumor is unclear,<ref>Jerry Mathers discusses the urban myth of his "death in Vietnam" Emmy TV Legends video (posted 2010)</ref> Mathers never saw action and was never stationed outside the United States.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In 1980, Mathers and Dow appeared with Bill Murray on Saturday Night Live's Weekend Update segment, making fun of the Vietnam War death rumor.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Mathers graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in philosophy from University of California, Berkeley in 1973.<ref name= odyssey />

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Later career

Jerry Mathers in 2021
Mathers in 2021

After college, Mathers worked as a commercial loan officer at a bank. He then used well-invested savings from his acting career, in which he earned a starting weekly salary of $500,<ref name="Lamparski">Template:Cite book</ref> to begin a career in real estate development.

In 1978, he reentered the entertainment industry. That year, he and Tony Dow starred in a production of the comedy play Boeing, Boeing which ran for 10 weeks in Kansas City, Missouri. Mathers and Dow then toured the dinner theater circuit in a production of So Long, Stanley, written specifically for the TV brother duo, for 18 months.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In 1981, he worked as a disc jockey at KEZY radio in Anaheim, California.<ref name="hammer" />

In 1983, Mathers reprised his role in the television reunion film Still the Beaver, which featured the majority of the original cast from Leave It to Beaver.<ref name="hammer" /> The success of the television movie led to the development of a series with the same title. The series began airing on the Disney Channel in 1984, then aired on TBS and broadcast syndication, where it was retitled The New Leave It to Beaver and ran until 1989.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In the 1990s, Mathers guest-starred on episodes of Parker Lewis Can't Lose, Vengeance Unlimited, Diagnosis: Murder, and as himself on Married... with Children. In 1998, he released his memoir And Jerry Mathers as The Beaver.<ref name="palo">Template:Cite news</ref>

In 2001, he appeared on a special episode of Weakest Link, titled "Child TV stars edition," where he got voted off in the first round. On June 5, 2007, he made his Broadway debut with a starring role as Wilbur Turnblad in the musical Hairspray at the Neil Simon Theatre.<ref name=nytimes /> In 2009, Mathers became the national spokesman for Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) and its Partnership for Prescription Assistance.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In 2018 and 2019, Mathers promoted Leave It to Beaver and other classic television shows on MeTV.Template:Citation needed

Personal life

File:Jerry Mathers.jpg
Mathers in 2007

Mathers has been married three times. He met his first wife, Diana Platt, in college. They married in 1974 and later divorced.<ref name=odyssey>Template:Cite magazine</ref><ref name= reilly>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Mathers met his second wife, Rhonda Gehring, while touring in the production of So Long, Stanley. They have three children. Mathers and Gehring divorced in 1997.<ref name="schoenberg">Template:Cite news</ref> Mathers married his third wife, Teresa Modnick, on January 30, 2011.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Diabetes

Mathers was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes in 1996.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> On the advice of his doctor, Mathers enrolled in a weight loss program in May 1997 and lost over Template:Convert,<ref name="palo" /> and later became the company's first male spokesperson.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="hammer" /> He represented a Type 2 diabetes reversal program's publications in a television ad.<ref>Template:Cite AV mediaTemplate:Dead link</ref>

Filmography

Film
Year Title Role Notes
1952 Son of Paleface Child at Finale Uncredited
1954 Men of the Fighting Lady Richard Dodson Uncredited
1954 This Is My Love David Myer
1955 The Seven Little Foys Bryan Lincoln Foy - Age 5 Uncredited
1955 The Trouble with Harry Arnie Rogers
1956 That Certain Feeling Norman Taylor
1956 Bigger Than Life Freddie Uncredited
1957 The Shadow on the Window Petey Atlas
1958 The Deep Six Steve Innes Uncredited
1987 Back to the Beach Judge #2
1990 Down the Drain Policeman (desk)
1994 The Other Man Sergeant Dun Alternative title: Sexual Malice
1998 Playing Patti
2002 Better Luck Tomorrow Biology Teacher
2005 Angels with Angles Mr. Cohiba
2008 Will to Power Mr. Simpson
Television
Year Title Role Notes
1952 The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet Trick-or-treating Child Episode: "Halloween Party"
1955 Lux Video Theatre Little Boy Episode: "The Great McGinty"
1955 General Electric Theater Tommy Episode: "Into the Night"
1955 NBC Matinee Theater Episode: "Santa is no Saint"
1956 Screen Directors Playhouse Peter at 5 Episode: "It's a Most Unusual Day"
1957–1963 Leave It to Beaver Theodore "Beaver" Cleaver 234 episodes
1963 Insight Episode: "The Boy and the Bomb"
1966 The Dating Game Himself
1968 Batman Pop, the Stage Doorman Episode: "The Great Escape"
Uncredited
1968 Lassie Ken Hines Episode: "Lassie and the 4-H Boys"
1970 My Three Sons Joe Lawrie Episode: "Love Thy Neighbor"
1978 Flying High Chuck Wallace Episode: "Fear of Cheesecake"
1981 The Girl, the Gold Watch & Dynamite Deputy Henry Thomas Watts Television film
1983 Match Game-Hollywood Squares Hour Himself Game Show Participant / Celebrity Guest Star
1983 Still the Beaver Theodore "Beaver" Cleaver Television film
1983–1989 The New Leave It to Beaver Theodore "Beaver" Cleaver 101 episodes
1984 Hardcastle and McCormick Cameo Appearance Season 1; Episode 19 "The Homecoming: Part 2"
1987 The Love Boat "Beaver" Cleaver Episode: "Who Killed Maxwell Thorn?"
1991 Married... with Children Himself Episode: "You Better Shop Around (Part 2)"
1991 Parker Lewis Can't Lose Theodore Musso Episode: "Jerry: Portrait of a Video Junkie"
1999 Vengeance Unlimited Lucas Zimmerman Episode: "Friends"
1999 Diagnosis: Murder Mr. Lustig Episode: "Trash TV: Part One"
2001 Weakest Link Himself Child TV Stars Edition
2006 The War at Home Principal Episode: "Back to School"
2008 Mother Goose Parade Television film

Awards

Year Award Category Title of work
1984 Young Artist Award Former Child Star "Lifetime Achievement" Award<ref name="Young Artist Awards 6">Template:Cite web</ref> Leave It to Beaver

Bibliography

References

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