As a boy, I saw the Disney film, Pinocchio and was genuinely moved by the story, a classic fairy tale shared in many cultures and told in many languages with minor variations. This uniquely American version tells of the old Italian cobbler, Geppetto, the eponymous puppet who dreamed of being a boy, a magic blue fairy godmother and a mentor insect, Jiminy Cricket. The character of the old man was rich and textured and well drawn, the Pinocchio character was, no pun intended, a little wooden, the fairy was glowing and intriguingly sexy, and the Jiminy Cricket performance was brilliant. Interestingly, Jiminy Cricket played the cricket that shared his name. He received rave reviews; won acclaim at a number of foreign film festivals and critics in a dozen US cities chose this performance, in their year end "Best Of" lists, as Best Supporting - to the extent some even argued that Mr. Cricket stole the movie and was a "lock" for an Academy Award. In an upset, Walter Brennan won for The Westerner.
Apparently the scripts just never came his way plus it was a time in Hollywood history, best be forgotten, when movie studios black listed insect performers. He moved to Europe and though he acted in a number of French "new wave" films as well as Italian neo-realism roles, he was little used for anything except cricket parts. He returned to America and in the late fifties and appeared on screen again in the sci-fi film, The Swarm, this time as a wasp, but one reviewer predictably commented, "Cricket is no wasp". Disney attempted to re-energize his career and placed him in a number of little-seen nature films. He found a niche for a while doing voice-over work, most famously, it is Cricket chirping in the background of the late evening outdoor love scenes between Kim Novak and William Holden in the fifties classic, Picnic.
He gradually faded from the limelight, was last seen publicly on the 1977 PBS tribute, "Live from Lincoln Center" when former President Jimmy Carter bestowed the Medal of Freedom on comedian and entomologist, Pinky Lee.Jiminy retired to a quiet life in Palm Springs with his long time companion, the successful pool boy Ramon Aqua, where he has comfortably lived for thirty years off the royalties accumulated by lucrative merchandising contracts, negotiated early in his career, that licensed his likeness for products ranging from insect repelents to Caterpillar
tractors.
This brings me to the present and the chance to applaud the brave, genius and inspired casting by famed Broadway producer, David Florence who announced Monday that Cricket has won the lead role in the upcoming musical version of William Shakespeare's, King Lear, "The King and Me" scheduled to hit the great white way in the Fall of 2009. Rumor has it that Florence is attempting to reunite the Supremes for the roles of Lear's daughters, though well placed sources have indicated the Dixie Chicks have agreed to a five month commitment. HBO has secured the television and cable rights while MGM has optioned the film along with DVD and digital
rights. The stage production will be directed by newcomer Saul Kraft who up to now has directed a couple of Cops segments for the successful Fox TV series and the pilot for the Home Shopping Network jewelry segments.