Ken Hunt had shoulder problems throughout the 1963 major league baseball season and the Los Angles Angeles sold his rights to the Washington Senators. (He portrayed a character named Elmore Crocker in his final appearance on My Three Sons in a 1971 episode entitled "Ernie Drives" (Season 11. In 19, Butch had a recurring role as Gordon Dearing on My Three Sons. In 1963, he had a recurring role as Greg Howard in seven episodes of The Real McCoys. In 1962, when Butch was eight, Patty married major league baseball player Ken Hunt of the Los Angles Angels, Ken adopted the child actor, who had already established himself as a child actor in movies and on television.ĭuring the 1960s, Butch Patrick appeared on some of the most popular television series at the time. According to IMDb, Patty and Butch's agent, Mary Grady, created Butch's stage name by combining his nickname, "Butch", with his real first name. His third interview was for a Kellogg's Cornflakes commercial in which he played a little child who couldn't quite read the back of the cereal box. She submitted Butch's name for interviews for movie parts, guest spots on television and roles in TV commercials. The photos of Butch were noticed by someone (most likely a producer), who contacted Grady. They were introduced to talent agent Mary Grady (mother of Don Grady of My Three Sons and Lani O'Grady of Eight is Enough), who was planning to open a child agency Photos were taken of both children and placed in Carr's Hollywood Blvd. When Butch was about 7 years old, he accompanied his little sister to a photo shoot with Hollywood photographerĪmos Carr. Butch's parents divorced soon after his birth and his mother, Patty, raised him as a single mother. The trial is expected to conclude on Wednesday.Butch Patrick was born Patrick Alan Lilley in Inglewood, California on August 2, 1953. There is no physical evidence that links any of the five men to the killing, witnesses from a police crime lab testified this week, according to WSAW. Patrick said he couldn't recall where he was the day, over a decade ago, that Juedes was murdered and he does not have an alibi. He also claimed to have no relationship with the other four people the defense has associated him with. He maintained he had nothing to do with the murder. The tabloid story came out in 2012, and Patrick claimed it was the first time he heard his name in connection with the killing. “I was in the process of booking an event when someone says, ‘Have you seen the ‘ National Inquirer’ today?’ I said, ‘No,’ and when I looked it up I noticed I was on the cover with the headline that says ‘Munster Murder Bombshell at Monster Hall’ and that’s how I found out about my invol- supposedly my involvement in it,” Patrick testified Monday, WSAW reports. The piece of land named in the suit was also home to a racetrack known as Monster Hall Raceway, which prompted tabloid fodder. The defense has accused Patrick of conspiring with Landwehr and three other investors of the brewery business to kill Ken Juedes.Īmerican child actor Butch Patrick as Eddie Munster, a boy werewolf, in a promotional still from the CBS television situation comedy 'The Munsters' episode 'Far Out Munster,' February 11, 1965. The Juedes' won the suit in 2006 and were rewarded $300,000. Patrick's mother allegedly invested $10,000 in the business. The defense claims that the Juedes' sued a man named Randall Landwehr, who operated a brewery business on land they owned. They claim Patrick, who became famous by playing child-werewolf Eddie Munster, was part of that group. The widow’s defense maintains that Schulz-Juedes wasn’t the trigger person and that five other people conspired to kill her husband. While long considered a person of interest in the shooting death, Schulz-Juedes wasn’t charged until 2019. She’s accused of murdering her husband Ken Juedes, 58, in 2006. The former child actor who played Eddie Munster in the sixties sitcom “The Munsters” testified at a Wisconsin murder trial this week while denying any connection to the slaying.īutch Patrick, 68, born Patrick Alan Lilley, was called to testify on Monday for the murder trial of Cindy Schulz-Juedes, 67, local outlet WSAW reports.
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