Frank Inn
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| Frank Inn | |
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| Born | May 8, 1916 Camby Marion County, Indiana |
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| Died | July 27, 2002 (aged 86) |
| Occupation | Dog Trainer |
| Spouse | Juanita Heard |
| Children | 3 |
Frank Inn was born as Elias Franklin Freeman , (May 8, 1916 - July 27, 2002) was an American animal trainer. He trained several animals for movies, but was most known for his work with the dogs in the Benji series.
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[edit] Personal life
Elias Franklin Freeman was born in Camby, Indiana[1] to a Quaker family. He left home at age 17, changed his name to Frank Inn, and sought his fortune in Hollywood. He learned to train animals while recovering from a serious automobile accident in Culver City, California.
Inn was married to the former Juanita Heard for 50 years, from 1946 until her death in 1996. They had three children.
After Juanita's death Inn retired and devoted his time to writing poetry, assembling a museum of memorabilia from his long career, and training a new generation of animal wranglers. [2]
Frank Inn died at age 86 after a brief illness. The ashes of his beloved dog Higgins and his award winning pig Arnold Ziffel were placed in his coffin and buried with him at his request. [3]
[edit] Career
Inn's career as an animal trainer spanned more than 50 years. His first professional work was as an assistant trainer of Skippy, the dog who played Asta in the Thin Man movie series.
In 1943, he assisted Rudd Weatherwax in the training of Pal, the dog who originated the movie role of Lassie.
In the early 1950s Inn left the Weatherwax animal training organization and began to work as an independent trainer. His animal stars included Orangey, a cat who was in the films "Rhubarb" (1952), "The Incredible Shrinking Man" (1957), "The Dairy of Anne Frank" (1959), and "Breakfast at Tiffany's" (1961), and appeared in the television series Our Miss Brooks with Eve Arden; Cleo, a bassett hound who was in the film "Bell, Book and Candle" (1957). and in Jackie Cooper's 1950s television show, The People's Choice; Arnold Ziffel, the pig from Green Acres; the chimps from Lancelot Link, Secret Chimp and many of Elly May Clampett's exotic "critters" on the Beverly Hillbillies.
Possibly his most famous animal was Higgins, a fluffy brown mutt he rescued from an animal shelter in Burbank, California. The dog, which Inn believed to be a cross between a miniature poodle, a cocker spaniel, and a small terrier (either a miniature Schnauzer or a Border terrier), starred in Petticoat Junction in the 1960s, and in the feature films Mooch Goes to Hollywood (1971) and Benji (1974). A sequel For the Love of Benji (1977) starred Higgins's daughter Benjean, also trained by Inn. Benjean portrayed the title role in the following three Benji movies.
In addition to his assistant trainers Gerry Warshauer and Karl Miller, Juanita Inn also helped Frank with animal training; she was listed in the opening credits of Benji and given credit as an animal trainer in Oh Heavenly Dog, a 1980 movie starring Benjean.
Frank Inn also took on small character roles in films that featured his trained animals. He portrayed a studio security guard (uncredited) in Mooch Goes to Hollywood in 1971, appeared as himself in Benji the Hunted in 1987, and played a cook in the 1976 camel comedy Hawmps!. He can also be seen working as Benjean's trainer in the 1980 documentary Benji at Work, and the voice of Juanita Inn can be heard calling Bejean from off-camera during the behind-the-scenes description of a comlex muti-part stunt that required the dog to approach a building, try to enter, and then run away as if driven off.
A true animal lover, Inn could not bear to see healthy animals euthanized or "put to sleep," as he called it, so he took them in. Those with acting ability he and his assistants kept and trained; the others he gave to friends and admirers as pets. Inn said that at one time he and his helpers had one thousand animals under their care, and the feeding bills alone came to $400.00 per day.
[edit] Honors
The International Association of Canine Professionals honored Frank Inn as their first inductee into the IACP Hall of Fame.
The Patsy Award (Picture Animal Top Star of the Year) was originated by the Hollywood office of the American Humane Association in 1939 to honor animal performers in four categories, canine, equine, wild and special. During his career, Inn's animals won 40 Patsy Awards, three of them multiple times: Orangey the cat won three times, for Rhubarb, The Incredible Shrinking Man, and Breakfast at Tiffany's; Arnold the Pig won for three successive years on Green Acres. from 1966 - 1968; and Higgins (then playing "Dog" on Petticoat Junction), won a Patsy in 1962. [4] [5]
[edit] External links
- Frank Inn at the Internet Movie Database
- Frank Inn at TV.com
- International Association of Canine Profesionals - Frank Inn
[edit] References
- ^ Frank Inn page at IMDB
- ^ Frank Inn page at Hooterville Petticoat Junction site
- ^ "Frank Inn, Who Trained Lassie and Benji, Is Dead at 86" by Douglas Martin, The New York Times, August 4, 2002
- ^ 1967 Patsy Award Nominations for Arnold and Higgins from Hooterville Petticoat Junction site
- ^ Frank Inn Credits from Hooterville Petticoat Junction site

