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| - Jim Boyd (March 31, 1920 - October 22, 2006) was a NASCAR driver from Cottonwood, CA. He competed in two Sprint Cup Series events in his career. Both of those races came in 1975, when Boyd debuted at Riverside. Starting 26th in the field, Boyd completed most of the laps and rolled to a solid 14th place effort. He was unable to improve in his other event, as engine failure left him 27th at Ontario.
- Jim Boyd (1933 - 2013) was an actor best known for his work on The Electric Company, staying for the entire run from 1971 to 1977. Boyd had originally been a puppeteer on the WPIX-TV series The Surprise Show and was hired by CTW to reprise his puppet character Lorelei the Chicken, perform the suit character Paul the Gorilla, and providing off-screen voice-overs, notably as the angry caller J. Arthur Crank. Beginning in the second season, Boyd brought Crank before the cameras and expanded his repertoire to include the Blue Beetle, The Wolfman, and the puppet Maurice the Plant.
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abstract
| - Jim Boyd (March 31, 1920 - October 22, 2006) was a NASCAR driver from Cottonwood, CA. He competed in two Sprint Cup Series events in his career. Both of those races came in 1975, when Boyd debuted at Riverside. Starting 26th in the field, Boyd completed most of the laps and rolled to a solid 14th place effort. He was unable to improve in his other event, as engine failure left him 27th at Ontario.
- Jim Boyd (1933 - 2013) was an actor best known for his work on The Electric Company, staying for the entire run from 1971 to 1977. Boyd had originally been a puppeteer on the WPIX-TV series The Surprise Show and was hired by CTW to reprise his puppet character Lorelei the Chicken, perform the suit character Paul the Gorilla, and providing off-screen voice-overs, notably as the angry caller J. Arthur Crank. Beginning in the second season, Boyd brought Crank before the cameras and expanded his repertoire to include the Blue Beetle, The Wolfman, and the puppet Maurice the Plant. Crank remained Boyd's signature character, however, and had the privilege of meeting two Sesame Street Muppets. He proved fairly sympathetic when encountering a tearful Grover at Vi's Diner, but later rejoiced in paying tribute to his mentor and role model, Oscar the Grouch. Boyd also appeared in the 1974 prime-time network special Out to Lunch, reprising most of his characters and playing bit parts in the Electric Company/Sesame Street crossover segments, such as the ABC studios stage manager in the intro and a beaten gambler in the "Kookamunga Kid" sketch with Cookie Monster. Boyd also supplied the voice of Spider-Man in the Spidey Super Stories album based on the Electric Company skits. Outside of a guest appearance on Law & Order, Boyd's post-Electric Company work was limited, mostly in supplementary DVD interviews and PBS documentaries about the series. Boyd died after a brief illness on January 2, 2013.
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