Following her work with “The Munsters,” Yvonne De Carlo remained active in her acting career until 1995. De Carlo, though, actually played Lily Munster in the later parts of her career as an actress. When the show was shut down, the Canadian-American actress returned as Lily for the Technicolor movie “Munsters, Go Home!”
After “The Munsters” ultimately reached its end, she starred in a couple of low-budget Western films, “Hostile guns” and “Arizona Bushwhackers.” De Carlo was also a supporting cast for the suspenseful film, “The Power.” Following the end of 1967, De Carlo shifted her focus to theatre play and worked in various musical plays like “Catch me if You Can” and “Little Me.” She made her last screen appearance on the TV film, “The Barefoot Executive.” This talented actress passed away in 2007 at the age of 84.
Fred Gwynne Now
Following his performance as Herman Munster, Fred Gwynne maintained a career in acting until he passed away at 66 years old in 1993. Even after "The Munsters" was long over, the public still labeled the actor as Herman Munster, which became a source of constant struggle for Gwynne in landing an acting gig for a period of two years.
Fortunately for Fred Gwynne, after a lot of bad luck, he was chosen to perform in the TV production of "Arsenic and Old Lace." Since then, Gwynne enjoyed a long and successful acting career, working in a considerable amount of shows, films, and mini-series. Some of his most notable appearances on TV after "The Munsters" include Judge Chamberlain Haller in the comedy film "My Cousin Vinny" and Jud Crandall in the hair-raising horror movie, "Pet Sematary."
Yvonne De Carlo Then
Lily Munster is the mother of the Munster family. Lily nurtured a deep relationship with her niece Marilyn and considered her as a daughter. The Munster matriarch also served as the crucial beacon of reason in her family, continuously telling her husband Herman to avoid getting lured in on any more schemes.
Lily Munster was also the mediator between Herman and Grandpa throughout their numerous quarrels. She was hot-tempered as well, constantly becoming furious at Herman, despite the fact she was madly in love with him. Lily Munster was the complete inverse of Herman Munster’s character, and that is precisely what anyone would expect a mother of the Munster family would be.
Al Lewis Then
Al Lewis was cast as Grandpa, who was Yvonne De Carlo’s father in "The Munsters." Grandpa was also called Count Sam Dracula and operated a laboratory in the Munster home’s basement. The numerous spells and potions he conjured and concocted were typically principal to the show’s plotlines and generally led him and his son-in-law, Herman Munster, into deep trouble.
Grandpa was full of sarcasm and spent a great deal of his personal time throwing insults at Herman, even though the two monsters were, in fact, pretty close with each other. Generally speaking, the show was at its finest when Grandpa and Herman were brewing some kind of scheme together.
Al Lewis Now
AL Lewis began his career as an actor in 1953 with the television show "The Big Story." Lewis also became a star on several other shows such as "Car 54, Where Are You?," "Naked City," and "Route 66." Lewis’s first film role came with the movie "Pretty Boy Floyd" as Machine Gun Manny. After that, he landed various small roles in the movies "The World of Henry Orient," "They Shoot Horses Don’t They?," "They Might Be Giants," and "Used Cars."
For the American actor, being branded as a typecast didn’t bother him at all as it reserved him for various grandpa roles that became instrumental in forging his acting career. Sadly, the world will no longer see Al Lewis portraying any Grandpa character after he passed away due to natural causes in 2006. Lewis’s ashes were stored in his favorite cigar box.