Early life and career
Hovis was born in Wapato, Washington, and moved toTelevision
Hovis moved to California in 1963, where he performed comedy and tried to break into television. In 1964, he was discovered by Andy Griffith's manager and was hired to appear on the TV series '' Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C.'', where he played "Pvt. Larry Gotschalk". He also appeared on '' The Andy Griffith Show.'' In 1965, when another actor backed out of the television show '' Hogan's Heroes'', Hovis was cast as "Sgt. Andrew Carter", a POW in a German prison camp who was an expert on explosives. In the pilot episode, Carter was a lieutenant, and was only going to appear in that one episode. For the series, the character became Sgt. Carter, replacing a character played by Leonid Kinskey in the pilot. (Kinskey decided after the pilot that he did not want to stay with a show that had actors pretending to be Nazis.) In the series, Carter was of partial Sioux ancestry. A few sources say that Hovis was partly of Yakama Indian ancestry, but no documentation supports his membership within the Yakama Nation. Later, in an episode of the comedy '' Alice'', Hovis played an American Indian police detective who arrests a fake American Indian conman. While Hovis was a regular on ''Hogan's Heroes'', he also did other work in the entertainment industry, including writing the screenplay for the 1966 spy- spoof '' Out of Sight''. He also co-wrote Mitzi Gaynor's 1968 and 1969 television specials, and appeared in and wrote comedy bits for '' Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In''.After ''Hogan's Heroes''
Even before ''Hogan's Heroes'' was canceled in 1971, Hovis had already made appearances on other TV shows. In the mid-1970s, Hovis made appearances on the game show '' Match Game'' and the comedy series '' Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In'' alongside his ''Hogan's Heroes'' castmate. Richard Dawson, Later in the decade, he produced and was a regular panelist on the game show '' Liar's Club''. From 1979 to 1981, Hovis toured in the musical '' The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas'' as Melvin P. Thorpe. In 1982, Hovis was a writer/producer on the show ''So You Think You Got Troubles'', which was hosted by actor and ventriloquist Jay Johnson. Later in the decade, Hovis teamed up with Gary Bernstein to form Bernstein-Hovis Productions, which produced the game shows '' Anything for Money'', the original version of '' Lingo'' and the short-lived '' Yahtzee'', a TV version of the classic dice game, for which Hovis also announced and served as a regular panelist. Hovis was hired as a co-producer for the hidden-camera television show '' Totally Hidden Video'', but was fired by Fox executives who conducted an investigation of the pilot episode’s segments and found that 3 of 4 taped segments included paid actors and scripted content. The investigation was initially prompted by a lawsuit filed by '' Candid Camera'' creator Allen Funt, alleging that the new series was copying old ''Candid Camera'' situational contrivances. Beginning in the 1990s, Hovis taught drama at Southwest Texas State University in San Marcos, Texas – now called Texas State University-San Marcos.Death
Hovis died of esophageal cancer inPartial filmography
*'' Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C.'' (1964–1965, TV series) – Larry *'' The Andy Griffith Show'' (1965, TV series, episodes "The Case of the Punch in the Nose" and "Goober Takes a Car Apart") – Gilly Walker *'' Hogan's Heroes'' (1965–1971, TV series) – Sgt. Andrew Carter *'' Wild in the Sky'' (1972) – Capt. Breen *'' McMillan and Wife'' (1972) – Mr. O’Day S2 E4 *'' Liar's Club'' (1976–1979, TV game show) – producer, regular panelist *'' Alice'' (1977, TV series, episode "The Indian Taker") – Detective Fred Scott *'' Hello, Larry'' (1981, TV series) *'' Shadow Force'' (1992) – Frank Bergmann *''Yorick'' (2002) – Archbishop *'' Lone Star State of Mind'' (2002) – Doctor (final film role)References
NotesExternal links
* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Hovis, Larry 1936 births 2003 deaths American male film actors American male television actors Game show announcers Male actors from Austin, Texas Male actors from Houston People from Wapato, Washington Deaths from esophageal cancer in Texas University of Houston alumni 20th-century American male actors