NEW YORK, NY.- Larry Storch, who played a memorable television oddball on the 1960s sitcom F Troop and for years carried a secret in his personal life that was odd in an entirely different way, died Friday at his home on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. He was 99.
His stepdaughter, June Cross, confirmed the death.
Storch had a long career as a nightclub comic and as a character actor on the stage and the big and small screens. But his other work was dwarfed by the impression he made during the two-season run of F Troop on ABC, from 1965 to 1967.
The show was a slapstick comedy about an outpost called Fort Courage in Indian country just after the Civil War, and Storch played Cpl. Randolph Agarn, one of the bigger misfits in a unit full of them. Agarn and his business partner, Sgt. Morgan ORourke, played by Forrest Tucker, were constantly hatching moneymaking schemes, most of them involving the local Indian tribe, the Hekawis.
ORourke was the brains of the partnership; Agarn provided the idiocy, and Storchs well-honed comic timing served him deliciously in the role. So did the mimicry skills he had honed in nightclubs, where his act included all sorts of impersonations: In various F Troop episodes he played not only Agarn but also assorted Agarn relatives, who somehow found their way to the fort from far-off locales.
I had cousins who came from Moscow, Mexico, Montreal, Storch recalled in a 2009 interview.
F Troop wasnt on long. But, like many sitcoms in that era of limited television choices, it burned itself into the minds of those who watched it, perhaps in part because it trafficked in the kinds of stereotypes especially those hard-drinking, firewater-brewing Indians that would soon disappear from television.
Storch, in a 2007 interview with The Asbury Park Press, credited Tucker with securing him the role of Agarn.
I was supposed to be the sergeant, Storch said, but when they saw Forrest Tucker dressed in a cavalry suit he looked like a polar bear they said, Thats going to be it. And Forrest Tucker said: Wait a minute. Im going to need a corporal around here, and I think he and I would have good chemistry. The he was Storch.
When not clowning around on the stage or screen, Storch was party to an unusual secret at home. Before he and his wife, Norma Greve, were married in 1961, she had had a biracial daughter, Cross, with a Black performer named Jimmy Cross. Mother and child left Cross soon after Junes birth in 1954, but since the girl was dark-complexioned enough that she could not pass as white, she and her mother began encountering racism. When June was 4, Norma asked friends, a middle-class Black couple in Atlantic City, New Jersey, to raise her.
Later, when the Storches were married and living in Hollywood, June would come to visit, and they would explain to friends that she was an abused child of former neighbors and that they had adopted her but that she lived most of the year with Black friends.
In those days, people were encrusted in prejudice, Storch explained to People magazine in a 1996 interview. We saw no reason to rock the boat.
June Cross later became a television producer and then a professor at Columbia University. In 1996 she told her story in Secret Daughter, a documentary broadcast on PBS that won an Emmy Award.
The personal story of Storch and his wife has another wrinkle. In 1948, years before they were married, they had a daughter, whom they put up for adoption. After Cross documentary came out, the Storches and that daughter, Candace Herman, were reunited.
Lawrence Samuel Storch was born on Jan. 8, 1923, in Manhattan. His father, Alfred, is described in several biographical listings as a real estate agent, though in a 1983 interview with The Washington Post Storch said he was a cabdriver. His mother, Sally, was a telephone operator who later had a jewelry store and ran a rooming house.
Cross, in a telephone interview, said that as a child Storch would pick up voices and accents from the rooming house guests (Orson Welles, he always said, was one) that served him well later as a comedian.
Storch left high school during the Depression when he found that he could make a few dollars doing impressions in the citys clubs and acting as MC for vaudeville shows.
He served in the Navy during World War II. By the time television came along, he was a well-established comic in the city and had used his mimicry skills to gain a foothold in radio.
He first came to the attention of television audiences in 1951 as a guest host of Cavalcade of Stars, and in 1953 CBS picked him to host the summer replacement show that filled Jackie Gleasons Saturday night slot. A string of television appearances followed, including a recurring role on Car 54, Where Are You? Storch was also the voice of the TV version of Koko the Clown in scores of cartoon shorts, and teamed with his friend Don Adams as one of the voices in the 1963 cartoon series Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales.
Then came F Troop, which brought Storch an Emmy nomination in 1967. He worked steadily in television through the 1980s, doing guest spots on The Flying Nun, The Love Boat, Love, American Style and numerous other shows. In 1975 he reunited with Tucker in a live-action childrens show called The Ghost Busters, in which the two men played detectives who searched for spooks. (The show was unrelated to the later Ghostbusters movies.)
One of Storchs Navy friends was a fellow sailor named Bernard Schwartz, who became better known as Tony Curtis and gave Storch roles in several of his films, including 40 Pounds of Trouble (1962), Sex and the Single Girl (1964) and The Great Race (1965).
Curtis and Storch teamed up again in 2002 in a stage musical version of Some Like It Hot, the 1959 Billy Wilder movie that had starred Curtis, Jack Lemmon and Marilyn Monroe. (The show drew upon the 1972 Broadway musical Sugar and added new material.) Curtis played not his original role, a musician on the run from gangsters who joins a band disguised as a woman, but the millionaire Osgood Fielding; Storch played the band manager, Bienstock.
That show, which toured the country, never made Broadway, but Storch had a half-dozen Broadway appearances to his credit, beginning with The Littlest Revue, a 1956 show that also starred Joel Grey. In 1958 he appeared in the play Who Was That Lady I Saw You With? and had roles in revivals of Porgy and Bess (1983), Arsenic and Old Lace (1986), Annie Get Your Gun (2000) and Sly Fox (2004).
His other films included Blake Edwards S.O.B. and the disaster movie Airport 1975. His vocal talents turned up in numerous cartoons as well as in McDonalds commercials (the most money I ever made, he said in 2009).
Storchs wife died in 2003. His brother, Jay, an actor who used the name Jay Lawrence, died in 1987. In addition to Cross and Herman, he is survived by a stepson, Lary May, the author of several books on film and popular culture; five grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.
Storch was still making public appearances late in life. In June 2014 he served as mayor for a day of Fort Lee, New Jersey, a town where he had once performed. That September he appeared at the Comedy Store in Los Angeles and was honored with a star on the Palm Springs Walk of Stars.
In 2016 he was honored by Passaic, New Jersey, the city the fictitious Cpl. Agarn called home. Mayor Alex Blanco said at the ceremony that Passaic had been mentioned all over the world because of F Troop; Storch said he had never been there but had chosen Passaic for his characters hometown because it sounded tough.
In his later years Storch maintained an active Facebook page and posted videos on TikTok. He also put in appearances at Wild West City, a Western-themed attraction in Stanhope, New Jersey. In July 2021, at 98, for what was billed as his final public appearance, he toured the site in a sporty red sedan, hamming it up for onlookers.
Storch could sometimes be seen playing the saxophone, a lifelong hobby, in Central Park. Another signature activity, even late in life, was standing on his head.
It helps your breathing, he explained in 2002 to a reporter for The Detroit News, while standing on his head. The blood goes to your brain, whatever brain you have.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.