Robert Goulet is nicely eulogized in the New York Times, in a more expansive piece than the one that ran in today’s Herald, following his death while awaiting a lung transplant. Goulet may be more ...
Goulet also has been sent up by Will Ferrell on “Saturday Night Live.” “You have to have humor and be able to laugh at yourself,” Goulet said in a biography on his Web site. The only son of ...
Robert Goulet, the Tony-winning star whose distinctive baritone made him one of the last of Broadway's classic musical leading men, died on October 30 in Los Angeles while awaiting a lung transplant.
Robert Goulet played a dashing Lancelot in 1960 and went on to a wide-ranging career as a singer and actor, winning a Tony, a Grammy and an Emmy. By Douglas Martin Robert Goulet played a dashing ...
Robert Peterson, 72, an actor who rose to fame after filling in for an ailing Robert Goulet in the 1961 production of “Camelot,” died of a heart attack Monday while playing handball in St. George, ...
Several years ago, noted baritone and TIME subscriber Robert Goulet wrote a fan letter–on gold-embossed stationery–to my friend and fellow writer Joel Stein. Soon after, a trip to Las Vegas was booked ...
This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts. Immediate Release: October 22, 2007 Robert Goulet, Internationally ...
LOS ANGELES — Robert Goulet, the handsome, big-voiced baritone whose Broadway debut in “Camelot” launched an award-winning stage and recording career, has died. He was 73. The singer died Tuesday ...
We’ll miss the machismo of Vegas crooner and Broadway star Robert Goulet, who passed away from a lung disease at We’ll miss the machismo of Vegas crooner and Broadway star Robert Goulet, who passed ...
Musical theater star and lounge singer extraordinaire Robert Goulet died yesterday of pulmonary fibrosis while awaiting a lung transplant in an L.A. hospital; he was 73. In the early 60s Goulet ...
Robert Goulet, the singer and actor who became inextricably linked with the Broadway show in which he made his debut, “Camelot,” died Tuesday at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. He was 73.