Johny Grant (1923-2008)

Photo Albums

View all albums

Latest Candles

View all candles | Post new candle

Send email to memorial's guardian

Johnny Grant, the avuncular honorary mayor of Hollywood who traveled the world as Tinseltown’s No. 1 cheerleader for more than a half- century, has died. He was 84.

Grant a life-long bachelor, died of natural causes, just before 7 p.m. Wednesday, January 9, 2008, at his long-time home in his 14th floor suite at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel.

Grant was perhaps best known as the jolly host alongside more than 500 celebrities he inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Grant’s mission in life was bringing the Tinseltown story to everyone. He hosted red carpet Oscar arrivals and Walk of Fame festivities, appeared in bit parts in movies, and produced Hollywood’s annual Christmas Parade.

“I feel I have been the luckiest guy in the world,” he often said. “It’s been a pretty good ride.”Grant also joined globe-trotting Bob Hope as a USO ambassador, bringing entertainers to war zones to perform for U.S. military personnel during the Korean and Vietnam wars and battles in the Middle East.

He helped introduce homesick solidiers to Debbie Reynolds, Connie Stevens, Jane Russell, Terry Moore, Penny Singleton an Angie Dickinson, among others, leading Hope to once quip that he himself was “the rich man’s Johnny Grant.”

“You’ll never find a more generous soul in your life,” Dickinson told The Associated Press in 2006. “He was a ladies man. He’s a Taurus. He’s a doll.”

Another close friend, actress Mamie Van Doren, described Grant simply as “Mr. Hollywood.”

“I dated him in my teens,” she recalled. “He’s one of the greatest people I’ve ever known, so kind.”

Over the years, Grant chatted with Marilyn Monroe, Elizabeth Taylor, Michael Jackson, Tom Cruise, Bing Crosby, Walt Disney, Frank Sinatra and Dolly Parton, and was a friend to several presidents, including John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson and Richard Nixon. He counted President Reagan as one of his closest friends.

Born in Goldsboro, N.C., Grant was a cub reporter for radio station WGBR when he hitchhiked to Washington to cover President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s third inauguration. The diminutive reporter sat in a tree to write down what he saw for his report.

Grant went into the Army Air Corps during 1943 in World War II, he hosted a daily radio show in New York City for servicemen and women in which, among other duties, he did interviews with entertainment stars who were in the city.

For a time he remained in New York after his discharge and worked as a reporter for ...

Read more »


Tributes & Condolences

 

Post new condolence