Jerry Haynes
Jerry Haynes | |
---|---|
Dallas, Texas, U.S. | |
Died | September 26, 2011 Longview, Texas, U.S. | (aged 84)
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1961–2009 |
Spouse | Doris |
Children | Gibby Haynes |
Jerome Martin "Jerry" Haynes (January 31, 1927 – September 26, 2011) was an American
Early life
He was born in Dallas, Texas to Louise Schimmelpfennig Haynes and Fred Haynes.
Family
Jerry was the father of vocalist
Acting career
The "Mr. Peppermint" years
Haynes began his most famous role in 1961, playing a character who wore a red- and white-striped jacket and straw hat and carried a candy-striped magic cane. The original show ran for nine years as a live show on WFAA-TV (Channel 8, the ABC affiliate in Dallas owned by the parent company of the Dallas Morning News), with Mr. Peppermint talking with a variety of puppet characters and including everything from cartoons to French lessons.
Early in the run of his show, an accident of fate made Haynes the first to report the
I ran three blocks back to the station, and Jay got some eyewitnesses and brought them over. He and I were the first to go live on local TV and report the terrible moment. I went home that afternoon, and Doris and I gathered our children around and discussed it as best we could. There was no direct discussion about it on Mr. Peppermint the next week. I didn't feel qualified to counsel the viewers on it. We just behaved in a subdued and respectful manner.
— Jerry Haynes on the Kennedy assassination[3]
During these early years, Mr. Peppermint began at 7:30 AM and ran for one hour, competing in its last half-hour with the national CBS broadcast of Captain Kangaroo but usually winning its time slot. National trends shifted, however, and in 1970, the show was replaced by a talk program for the adult audience. Haynes moved back to the Channel 8 news team, reporting on sports (as he did for a few years in the 1950s before the Mr. Peppermint assignment) alongside sports director Verne Lundquist (later of CBS Sports fame); included among the sports legends Haynes interviewed (in much the same "subdued and respectful manner" as his Mr. Peppermint persona) were Joe Namath, Merlin Olsen, Hayden Fry, the then-head football coach of Southern Methodist University, Dallas Cowboys head coach Tom Landry and their then-star quarterback Roger Staubach. Haynes reported on the Cowboys' home of Texas Stadium as it neared completion and prepared for its inaugural season in 1971.
After the Federal Communications Commission called in 1975 for more educational programming for children, Haynes donned the candy-striped suit again, this time for a retooled Peppermint Place, a taped half-hour kids' magazine-style program, still originating from the WFAA studios. The show continued in that format for over 20 years, eventually being syndicated to 108 markets nationwide before ending its run in 1996.
Other television and film work

Most of Haynes' film career was in
His chief feature film roles included 1984's
He also appeared as himself, partly through archive footage, in four documentary films discussing the Kennedy assassination: Rush to Judgment (1967), 11-22-63: The Day the Nation Cried (1989), Stalking the President: A History of American Assassins (1992), and Image of an Assassination: A New Look at the Zapruder Film (1998).
In 1996 the Lone Star Film & Television Awards honored him with a Lifetime Achievement Award. He regularly appeared in the Red River, New Mexico, Fourth of July parade in a candy-striped Jeep.
Health
Haynes was diagnosed with
Partial filmography
- Places in the Heart (1984) – Deputy Jack Driscoll
- Sweet Dreams (1985) – Owen Bradley
- Papa Was a Preacher (1985) – Jack Murphy
- RoboCop (1987) – Dr. McNamara
- Heartbreak Hotel (1988) – Mr. Hansen
- Hard Promises(1991) – Walt's Dad
- Steele's Law (1991) – Ben Slade
- Bonnie & Clyde: The True Story (1992) – Arvin
- My Boyfriend's Back(1993) – Minister At Funeral
- Walker, Texas Ranger (1993–2001) – Hank Sweet / Judge Abe Stiegler
- The Stars Fell on Henrietta (1995) – George (farmer #2)
- It's in the Water (1997) – Mr. Adams
- The Locusts (1997) – Harlan
- Possums (1998) – Bob
- The Outfitters (1999) – Father John
- Abilene (1999) – Pete
- Boys Don't Cry (1999) – Judge
- The Keyman (2002) – Canman
- Balls Out: Gary the Tennis Coach (2009) – Stringerman (final film role)
References
- ^ a b "10 Notable Woodrow Wildcats". The Dallas Morning News. March 9, 2004. p. 15B.
- ^ "Rolling Stone Knows: Is Gibby Haynes of the Butthole Surfers really the son of a TV children's-show host?" Rolling Stone (undated)
- ^ a b "The Candy Man," by Joe Nick Patoski, Texas Monthly July 1996
- ^ Jerome Martin Haynes, "Texas, Birth Index, 1903-1997". FamilySearch. Retrieved 2013-09-04.
- ^ Blow, Steve (September 11, 2008). "TV icon 'Mr. Peppermint' deals with toll of Parkinson's, declining health". The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved October 28, 2008.
- WFAA-TV. Archived from the originalon August 22, 2014. Retrieved September 26, 2011.
External links
- Jerry Haynes at IMDb
- Jerry Haynes footage, including Mr. Peppermint reels, in the Southern Methodist University Jones Film Archive
- Patoski, Joe Nick (July 1996). "The Candy Man". Texas Monthly.
- Wilonsky, Robert (January 31, 2007). "Happy Birthday, Mr. Peppermint!". Unfair Park. Dallas Observer. Archived from the original on November 4, 2011. Retrieved June 9, 2007. (includes interview content)