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Larry Wolf

Veteran singer and character actor Lawrence (Larry) Wolf was born in New York City, studied acting with Stella Adler and is best known as an ensemble member of filmmaker Robert Downey Sr.’s legendary catalog of satirical films. The two most notable, Putney Swope and Pound, are avant-garde and shocking today, perhaps even more so than in the febrile artistic ground of the 1960s and 70s when they were created. In Pound, he was Robert Downey Jr.’s acting partner in the five-year-old’s first onscreen speaking role, Wolf’s anguished Mexican Hairless lamenting to Downey Jr.’s not-so-innocent puppy in a film in which clothed and unmasked humans play canines languishing in a dog lockup, waiting to be gassed that night. And in Putney Swope, his character Borman 6, a German auto tycoon with suspicious political leanings, resonates eerily.

Wolf has appeared in numerous other films, commercials and television shows, including two pilots that never made it to air: The Great Gondoli, an NBC pilot in which he played a ventriloquist with two dummies (one sounding like Mae West, the other like W. C. Fields), and Phoebe B. Beebie’s Popcorn Parade, a children’s show pilot in which he starred as Dr. Disgusting. He wrote and directed the award-winning short film Billy Butterfly in 1971.

Working in live theatrical productions as well as film and television, Wolf’s stage career has been no less avant-garde than his onscreen one. As Jacques Goldetsky, leader of The First Topless String Quartet, he led a string quartet of four nubile and, yes, topless women as a similarly topless (but cummerbund-wearing) conductor. The group received acclaim as serious artists, while never playing a single note. Produced by celebrated hoaxter Alan Abel, they won Esquire Magazine’s annual Dubious Achievement Award in 1969, and Wolf was invited as Jacques to interview for an appearance on the popular game show To Tell The Truth. It was ultimately turned down as too risqué for a family program, only enhancing its bawdy cachet.

Wolf is also a musician and has been singing since the 1960s. As the lead singer of The Electric Chair Rock band, another collaboration with Robert Downey Sr., Wolf provided lead vocals to such tongue-in-cheek originals as “Bow Wow Wow” and “Cremation Blues.” And as alter ego Vegas lounge singer Johnny Slime, he performed a satirical rendition of the Lord’s Prayer that prompted the then-fledgling Saturday Night Live to call him upon seeing it. But, as luck would have it, the entire production staff was replaced right at that time, and Johnny Slime never graced the SNL stage.

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“…Wolf and company offer inimitable singing and moving instrumentation.” – Take Effect

“Timeless deliveries.” – George W. Harris, Jazz Weekly

“Larry Wolf offers wonderful, personal deliveries on songs like Embraceable You, Goodnight Irene, and I’ll Be Seeing You.” – Michael Doherty’s Music Log

“Larry Wolf knows his stuff and delivers it righteously.” – Midwest Record

“In no time at all I found myself looking forward to the next track and really enjoying the one I just heard. Sometimes being anti-mainstream works. Sure does here.” – Audiophile Review

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Louis Armstrong
trumpet and vocals
Sidney Bechet
saxophone, soprano
Bing Crosby
vocals
Johnny Dodds
clarinet
Mel Torme
vocals

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Music

Recordings: As Leader | As Sideperson

Mood Swings

Whole Big Productions
2019

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The Past Lives of...

Whole Big Productions
2016

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