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'''Michael Vale''' ([[June 28]], [[1922]] – [[December 24]], [[2005]]) was an [[United States of America|American]] commercial [[actor]] famous for being the longtime sleepy-eyed [[mascot]] "[[Fred the Baker]]" for [[doughnut]] chain [[Dunkin' Donuts]], with his famous [[catchphrase]] "Time to make the doughnuts." He was featured for 15 years until he retired in [[1997]], having done more than 1,300 [[television commercial]]s. Vale also reprised the role for commercials for the short-lived Dunkin' Donuts Cereal. |
'''Michael Vale''' ([[June 28]], [[1922]] – [[December 24]], [[2005]]) was an [[United States of America|American]] commercial [[actor]] famous for being the longtime sleepy-eyed [[mascot]] "[[Fred the Baker]]" for [[doughnut]] chain [[Dunkin' Donuts]], with his famous [[catchphrase]] "Time to make the doughnuts." He was featured for 15 years until he retired in [[1997]], having done more than 1,300 [[television commercial]]s. Vale also reprised the role for commercials for the short-lived Dunkin' Donuts Cereal. |
Revision as of 02:24, 20 November 2007
Michael Vale (June 28, 1922 – December 24, 2005) was an American commercial actor famous for being the longtime sleepy-eyed mascot "Fred the Baker" for doughnut chain Dunkin' Donuts, with his famous catchphrase "Time to make the doughnuts." He was featured for 15 years until he retired in 1997, having done more than 1,300 television commercials. Vale also reprised the role for commercials for the short-lived Dunkin' Donuts Cereal.
Vale also was a longtime spokesman for Kraft Foods' Breakstone line of cottage cheese and sour cream products, for whom he portrayed long-suffering dairy owner "Sam Breakstone". The focus on those commercials is Sam's dedication to quality, usually with Sam having a comedic "eureka" moment on how to make a better product.
Vale was born in Brooklyn, New York, and studied acting at the Dramatic Workshop in New York City with classmates Tony Curtis, Ben Gazzara, and Rod Steiger.
Growing up in Brooklyn, Vale was dubbed "the actor" by his childhood friends because of his ability to imitate ballplayers and celebrities. After serving in the U.S. Army Signal Corps in Europe during World War II, he studied at the Dramatic Workshop at The New School in New York.
One of his earliest appearances was in a summer stock production of George Bernard Shaw's "Androcles and the Lion." Vale later described his modest role: "I was thrown to the lions."
Vale was a veteran of the Broadway stage (a dozen), film (handful), and television.
Vale appeared in several television series, including Car 54, Where Are You? in the 1960s and The Cosby Show in 1987. On the big screen, he was a cab driver in A Hatful of Rain in 1957 and a jewelry salesman in Marathon Man in 1976. The actor described working with British leading man Laurence Olivier in Marathon Man as "the most wonderful experience of my life."
He died of complications from diabetes at age 83 in Manhattan, New York City at New York-Presbyterian Hospital.
External links
- Michael Vale at IMDb