(September 2, 1915 – April 9, 2010)
Raabe graduated from the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1937.
He was the coroner in The Wizard of Oz in 1939, with his only lines being:
- As coroner, I must aver
- I thoroughly examined her
And she's not only merely dead
- She's really, most sincerely dead!
Raabe joined the Civil Air Patrol during World War II. After the war he earned an MBA, and married a cigarette girl who was his height, Margaret Marie Raabe (1915-1997).[2] They were married for 50 years until her death in a car accident in 1997. Marie Raabe died on October 22, 1997, one day after the car she was riding in (Meinhardt was driving) ran into the back of a van, that had stopped to make a turn, near their retirement community in Penney Farms, Fl. Meinhardt Raabe was critically injured, but later recovered.
Raabe published an autobiography, Memories of a Munchkin: An Illustrated Walk Down the Yellow Brick Road. (ISBN 0-8230-9193-7). As of 2007, he lived alone at the Penney Retirement Community in Penney Farms, Florida.[3] [4]
Raabe appeared in an October 2005 episode of Entertainment Tonight with eight other surviving Munchkins, and made a guest appearance on The Jimmy Kimmel Show on April 11, 2005. On November 21, 2007, he appeared with six other surviving Munchkin actors, including Jerry Maren at the unveiling of a Hollywood Star for the Wizard of Oz Munchkins on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.[5] On September 19, 2009 he appeared on National Public Radio program Weekend Edition Saturday.[6]
Despite his age, Raabe still made occasional appearances at Wizard of Oz conventions and celebrations across the country.
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He died on April 9, 2010 from a heart attack at age 94.
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