Henry Z Jones Jr.

(Redirected from Henry Z. Jones Jr.)

Henry Z Jones Jr. (born June 3, 1940) is an American actor, musician, genealogist and author. He became known to a wide audience primarily through his appearances in Disney films.

Hank Jones
Hank Jones (2018)
Born (1940-06-03) June 3, 1940 (age 84)
Occupations
  • Actor
  • musician
  • genealogist
  • author
Years active1961–1981, 1981–present
Spouses
Deanna Joy Quintel
(divorced)
Lori Spring
(divorced)
Bonnie Lublin Aho
(m. 1988)
Children1
Websitehankjones.com

Life

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Jones was born in Oakland, California and raised in San Leandro, California. He attended San Leandro High School and Stanford University majoring in communications. While in school he was singer in the band Hank Jones & The White Bucks, as a student he formed the duo Hank and Dean with his schoolfriend Dean Kay. They had their first record contract with RCA Victor in 1961. Later albums were recorded with Capitol and Epitomé Records. Hank and Dean got into television entertainment in 1962 and performed in ABC's Tennessee Ernie Ford Show. Kay was drafted in 1963 and the duo dissolved. Kay became a music publishing executive; Jones's emphasis shifted towards TV entertainment and show-biz. He starred in eight Disney films in the 1960s and 1970s.[1]

On television, Jones had roles in My Three Sons (1960) with Fred MacMurray and William Frawley and in the Patty Duke Show (1963). He was featured in many comedy programs of the 1960s and 1970s, including Petticoat Junction (1963), Love, American Style (1969), The Jeffersons (1975), Love Boat (1977), Mork & Mindy (1978) and many others. One of his most interesting roles was playing the twin brother of the Beatle Ringo Starr (after five hours of makeup every day) in a TV version of Mark Twain's Prince & The Pauper. Over the years, Jones was featured in countless television commercials, some of which have won awards (for MacDonalds, Hai Karate After Shave, Honda, and Dial Soap) and were shown on NBC's World's Greatest Commercials. A longtime songwriter and member of ASCAP, Jones's song Midnight Swinger recorded by Mel Tormé in 1970 obtained a preliminary Grammy nomination. In 1986 Jones featured three times as the champion on the popular TV quiz show Jeopardy![1]

In 1981 he withdrew from the entertainment industry and increasingly turned to genealogy, his hobby from childhood. One of his ancestors was Abraham Bergmann, who emigrated in 1709 with a group of German Palatines from Iggelheim from the Electoral Palatinate to County Limerick in Ireland. Jones studied the records of the entire group of emigrants intensively and over the years published several books on this subject, first The Palatine Families of Ireland (1965, 2nd expanded edition 1990), then his main work The Palatine Families of New York (2 volumes, 1985). The work documents the origins and whereabouts of the 847 Palatinate families settled in New York State and won the 1986 Donald Lines Jacobus Award for the best genealogical work and the Award of Merit from the National Genealogical Society. Jones was elected as one of the 50 fellows to the American Society of Genealogists, of which he later became president. He was also a fellow of the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society.[1]

From his second marriage he has a daughter Amanda. He lives in San Diego with his wife, Bonnie.[1]

Filmography (selection)

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Works

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  • The Palatine Families of New York - 1710: A Supplement
  • A few more left!
  • Arrival Time
  • German origins of Jost Hite, Virginia pioneer, 1685–1761
  • Memories: the "show-biz" part of my life
  • Psychic roots: serendipity & intuition in genealogy
  • Story of Isaac Hillman
  • The Palatine Families of Ireland
  • The Palatine Families of New York
  • More Palatine families: some immigrants to the middle colonies 1717–1776 and their European origins, plus new discoveries on German families who arrived in Colonial New York in 1710
  • The Palatine Families of New York 1710: A supplement
  • Westerwald to America: some 18th century German immigrants

References

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  1. ^ a b c d "Henry Z (Hank) Jones Jr., Biographical Material".
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