Maurice Lionel Gosfield was an American stage, film, radio and television actor, best remembered for his portrayal of Private Duane Doberman on the 1950s sitcom The Phil Silvers Show and voicing Benny the Ball in Top Cat.
He began to act with the Ralph Bellamy and Melvyn Douglas Players in Evanston, and joined the summer stock theatre circuit in 1930. In 1937, he made his Broadway debut as Manero in the play Siege. Other theatre credits from the 1930s include The Petrified Forest, Three Men on a Horse and Room Service. He also made several appearances on radio programs.
From 1955 to 1959, Gosfield played Private Duane Doberman in The Phil Silvers Show. Doberman was written as the most woebegone soldier. The actor originally hired for the part was Maurice Brenner, but Brenner was recast as Private Irving Fleischman. The show's creator Nat Hiken's biography details the casting for the role and the effect that Gosfield had on him, the producer and Phil Silvers when he appeared in front of them: In 1959, Gosfield was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series for the show. That same year, he again played Private Doberman in the television showKeep in Step and made his final appearance as the character, the following year, when he guest starred on The Jack Benny Program.
Later years
In 1961, Gosfield appeared in the film The Teenage Millionaire. Gosfield also provided the voice for Benny the Ball on the cartoon seriesTop Cat which was partially based on the Sergeant Bilko series. His last role was in the 1963 film The Thrill of It All, playing a truck driver. In 1964 he unsuccessfully tested for the role of Uncle Fester in the TV series The Addams Family.
Personal life
Gosfield never married and had no children. At 5'2" and weighing over 200 pounds, Gosfield once told TV writer Bert Resnik that he was "too ugly to get married". In 1957, he received the "TV's Bachelor of the Year" Award from the Bachelor and Bachelorettes Society of America.
DC Comics published eleven issues of a Private Doberman comic from 1957 to 1960. Phil Silvers, in his 1973 autobiography, said of Gosfield that he had a pomposity and condescension off-screen and "thought of himself as Cary Grant playing a short, plump man," Silvers continued: "He began to have delusions. He did not realize that the situations in which he worked, plus the sharp lines provided by Nat and the other writers, made him funny." For his part, Gosfield crowed, "Without me, the Bilko show would be nothing."