Jay Waverly North Jr. (August 3, 1951 – April 6, 2025) was an American actor and later a corrections officer after retiring from acting. His career as a child actor began in the late 1950s, and he went on to appear in eight TV series, two variety shows, and three feature films. At age seven, he became a household name for his role as the good-natured but mischievous Dennis Mitchell on the CBS situation comedy Dennis the Menace (1959–1963), based on the comic strip created by Hank Ketcham.
As a teen, North had roles in two Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer feature films: Zebra in the Kitchen and Maya. He also starred in the NBC television series adaptation of the latter film. As an adult, he turned to voice acting for animated television series, voicing the roles of Prince Turhan in the Arabian Knights segment of The Banana Splits Adventure Hour and a teenaged Bamm-Bamm Rubble on The Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm Show.
After leaving show business, North began working with fellow former child star Paul Petersen and the organization A Minor Consideration, using his experiences as a child performer to counsel other children working in the entertainment industry.
Early life
North was born in Hollywood, the only child of Jay and Dorothy (née Cotton) North. North's father was an alcoholic, and his parents' marriage was turbulent. When he was four, his parents separated, and North never saw his father again.
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From a young age, North was a fan of television. When he was six, his mother used her connections at AFTRA to arrange for him to appear on his favorite television program, local Los Angeles children's show Cartoon Express, hosted by Engineer Bill. He continued to work as a child model and actor in commercials, and landed small parts on a number of popular NBC variety shows of the 1950s, such as The George Gobel Show, The Eddie Fisher Show, and The Milton Berle Show, before auditioning for the role that made him a star.
In June 1958, Columbia Pictures's television division Screen Gems was holding a nationwide search for a boy to play the title character in their television adaptation of the popular Dennis the Menace comic strip by Hank Ketcham, and six-year-old North auditioned. North was asked back to screen test with Herbert Anderson, Gloria Henry, and Joseph Kearns. A pilot was filmed later that summer.
The season passed, and North heard nothing more from Screen Gems, but continued to work, appearing in a Christmas-themed episode of the CBS Western series Wanted Dead or Alive titled "Eight Cent Reward". In the episode, he portrayed Laddie Stone, a young boy who pays bounty hunter Josh Randall (Steve McQueen) eight cents to find Santa Claus. Over the next several months, North made television appearances on such shows as 77 Sunset Strip, Rescue 8, Cheyenne, Bronco, Colt .45, and Sugarfoot, and broke into feature films with roles in The Miracle of the Hills and The Big Operator. his strawberry red hair was bleached platinum blonde for the role, and the 8-year-old was instructed to "shave" a year off his age when speaking with the press. His mother continued to work at AFTRA full-time, and hired business managers to invest his earnings. <!-- Hopper's wife Marie was North's maternal aunt. --> In addition to filming the series, he appeared as Dennis in commercials for the show's sponsors, Kellogg's cereals, Best Foods mayonnaise, Skippy peanut butter, and Bosco chocolate milk, and regularly traveled around the country with his aunt and uncle on the weekends to promote the show. He made crossover guest appearances as Dennis on such television shows as The Donna Reed Show and The Red Skelton Hour, and in the feature film Pépé. That year, North recorded The Misadventures of Dennis the Menace soundtrack stories on LP, and an LP album of songs titled Jay North – Look who's singing!. With the success of the series, the Hoppers became strict taskmasters and stern disciplinarians. Many years later, North revealed that his aunt physically and verbally abused him when he made mistakes on the set or did not perform to her standards. He said if he failed a line, she would take him behind the set and beat him. For years, watching reruns was too painful for him. This, combined with the unexpected death of the actor who played Dennis' foil, Mr. Wilson (Joseph Kearns), near the end of season three, had changed the dynamic of the show. During his interview with Filmfax, North recalled: "Between the pressures of the business and Joe's dying, I became very serious, very morbid, and very withdrawn from the world. I was the antithesis of the little kid that I played on the television show." In the movie, which was filmed on location in India, North played Terry Bowen, a boy who navigates the Indian jungle with a Hindu boy and an elephant and her baby calf, the latter a sacred white elephant. North agreed to reprise his role and was soon back filming on location in India. While Maya proved popular with teen audiences, the NBC series struggled in its time slot against popular shows of the time, CBS's The Jackie Gleason Show and ABC's The Dating Game and The Newlywed Game, and was canceled after one season.
Adult years
thumb|right|North as Don Baker in a dinner theater production of Butterflies Are Free,
After completing filming on the Maya television series, North found work as a voice actor for animated television series, providing the voices of Prince Turhan in the Arabian Knights segment of The Banana Splits Adventure Hour, Terry Dexter in Here Comes the Grump, and a teenaged Bamm-Bamm Rubble on The Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm Show. The young couple separated in April 1974, and their divorce was final on October 21, 1974. Los Angeles Times critic Kevin Thomas appreciated North's work in the film, writing,
<blockquote>The plot of The Teacher isn't worth outlining, yet it develops a relationship between a 28-year-old woman and an 18-year-old high school boy with sensitivity and credibility unusual for an exploitation film. [...] Avedis displays much concern for his people and allows Miss Tompkins and North plenty of room to give fresh, spontaneous performances. In January 1977, he reported to Navy boot camp at NTC Orlando. He was assigned to the , stationed in Norfolk, Virginia, as a seaman recruit boatswain's mate, the Navy's lowest rank. On August 10, 1979, he left the Dixie and the Navy with an honorable discharge and returned to Los Angeles. His first script was about a 1984 prison break by six death-row inmates from Virginia's Mecklenburg Correctional Center, but the screenplay was never completed.
Personal life and death
On March 2, 1991, North married his second wife, Rositia. The couple had met on a blind date and separated three months after their wedding. That year, with the release of the 1993 feature film Dennis the Menace, the media sought what had become of the "original" Dennis. This renewed interest prompted him to publicly disclose the abuse he had experienced as a child star.
From the early 1990s, North made occasional appearances on talk shows, documentaries, cameo appearances as "himself" on The Simpsons, and in the comedy feature film Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star.
Filmography
<!-- This section lists "scripted" and/or "staged" television and film appearances only. Unscripted "news" and/or "talk show" appearances have been deliberately excluded. -->
Television
thumb|right|North as Dennis Mitchell, 1959
- Cartoon Express with Engineer Bill (1957)
- Queen for a Day (1958)
- The George Gobel Show (1958)
- The Eddie Fisher Show (1958)
- The Milton Berle Show (1958)
- Wanted: Dead or Alive (1958)
- 77 Sunset Strip (1959)<!-- Season 1 Episode 19, Airdate: 13 February 1959-->
- Rescue 8 (1959)
- Cheyenne (1959)
- Bronco (1959)
- Colt .45 (1959)
- Sugarfoot (Bobby in "The Giant Killer") (1959)
- The Detectives Starring Robert Taylor (1959)
- The Tennessee Ernie Ford Show (1959)
- The Ed Sullivan Show (1960)
- The Donna Reed Show (1960)
- The Red Skelton Hour (1960)
- The Dinah Shore Chevy Show (1960)
- Art Linkletter's House Party (1961)
- Dennis the Menace (1959–1963)
- Wagon Train (1964)
- The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1965)
- The Lucy Show (1966)
- My Three Sons (1966)
- Jericho (1966)
- The Lone Ranger (1966)
- Maya (1967–1968)
- Arabian Knights (1968)
- Here Comes the Grump (1969–1971)
- The Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm Show (1971)
- The Flintstone Comedy Hour (1972)
- Lassie (1973)
- Fred Flintstone and Friends (1977)
- Scout's Honor (1980)
- General Hospital (1982)
- Our Time (1985)
- Not Necessarily the News (1988)
- Couch Potatoes (1989)
- The Simpsons (1999)
Film
- The Miracle of the Hills (1959)
- The Big Operator (1959)
- Pépé (1960)
- Zebra in the Kitchen (1965)
- Maya (1966)
- The Teacher (1974)
- Dikiy veter (Wild Wind) (1985)
- Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star (2003)
References
Further reading
- Holmstrom, John (1996). The Moving Picture Boy: An International Encyclopaedia from 1895 to 1995. Norwich, Michael Russell, p. 295.
- Edelson, Edward (1979). Great Kids of the Movies. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, pp. 103–105.
External links
- Jay North at TV Guide
