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At 99, Dick Van Dyke Names The Six Actors He Hated – HT

 

 

 

said, “What’s the secret?” I don’t know.  You don’t know.  I have no idea. I still exercise. I go to the gym.  And I think that has something to do.  You might remember Dick Van Dijk as Hollywood’s most beloved icon, the charming heart of Mary Poppins, and the man who made America laugh for generations.

But there’s a dark truth you never heard. At 99, he finally broke his silence and named the six actors he secretly hated. people who were once his closest friends, even a former lover, before power and ego pushed him off projects he helped create and humiliated him at the height of his fame. And once you hear what they did to him, you’ll understand exactly why he never forgave them.

 Walt Disney, the mentor who let him fall. When you hear Dick Van Djk talk about the person he resented the most, it’s shocking to see who sits at the top spot. Walt Disney himself. The man who discovered him. The man who handed him his first movie. The man everyone else worships like a saint. That’s exactly why this part hurts. Because Dick didn’t expect a knife from someone standing that close.

What most fans never knew is that during the production of Mary Poppins, Dick wasn’t treated like the star you see today. He fought to be there. He begged Disney to let him audition for Mr. Daw’s senior and even wrote a personal check. Inside the studio, people whispered that he was trying too hard, that he didn’t belong in a major motion picture.

 And Dick felt that pressure every single day. In every rehearsal, Dick asked whether his accent worked or needed adjusting. He was desperate for direction. Walt was standing a few feet away watching, offering nothing. Dick later said, “I kept waiting for someone to say something, anybody.” But the room stayed quiet.

That silence crushed him. When Mary Poppins premiered, critics tore into him. headlines joked about the strangest accent ever attempted on film. Dick waited for Disney to step forward, not to apologize, just to explain, just to tell the truth that Dick never received proper coaching, that he’d been left to figure everything out alone.

But Disney didn’t say a word. Dick never forgot that. He always credited Walt for giving him a chance, but he never forgave him for letting him burn alone. Mary Tyler Moore, the love that turned into resentment. If there’s one name that twists Dick Van Dijk’s voice every time it comes up, it’s Mary Tyler Moore.

 Not because she betrayed him, but because she awakened something he spent decades trying to bury. He once joked that he never forgave himself for the feelings he carried for her. And that’s exactly where the tension lived. When the Dick Van Djk show started in 1961, the cast saw the chemistry instantly. Dick lit up around Mary in a way he didn’t around anyone else.

 Crew members teased him about how his posture changed when she walked into a room. And Mary, only 25, fresh, magnetic, had that effect effortlessly. What people didn’t see were the nights Dick went home wrestling with guilt, knowing he was married and knowing he couldn’t stop thinking about her. There were moments that made it worse.

 During a late night rehearsal, Mary flubbed a line and collapsed laughing. Dick laughed too, then stopped abruptly, realizing how he felt for her. That scared him. That’s the kind of feeling actors usually take straight into an affair. Years later, Mary publicly said, “The amazing thing is we never had an affair.

 I always thought it was a terrible waste.” That parallel confession exposed how real the tension truly was. After that, Mary rose to fame, awards, praise, magazine covers. Dick watched her become untouchable. She became a superstar, and he became the man pretending he didn’t love her. That’s why the resentment stayed.

 He was angry he couldn’t be the man she needed and angry that he never stopped wanting her. Carl Reiner, the genius who walked out on him. Carl Reiner ever leave you so abruptly that you still feel the door slam decades later? That’s exactly how Dick Van Djk described the moment everything between them cracked. People assumed their partnership was a dream team.

 Creator and star, genius and charm. But behind the curtain was a power struggle so tense that Dick carried the sting long after the cameras stopped rolling. Dick entered the Dick Van Djk show as Carl’s chosen lead, but that chosen feeling faded fast. Cast members said Dick would quietly vent during lunch breaks about how every creative decision had to pass through Carl.

 He once admitted privately, “I was the star of a show that didn’t belong to me.” That wasn’t jealousy. That was suffocation. The breaking point came later during the new Dick Van Djke show in 1971. They finally had a fresh setup, and for the first time in years, Dick hoped he’d have more freedom.

 Then CBS pulled the infamous episode Carl wrote about a sensitive family topic. The network panicked. Carl exploded and the next morning he simply didn’t show up. Dick walked onto set and found out his mentor had quit from a production assistant. That humiliation stuck deep. The show spiraled without Carl and Dick felt like he’d been blamed for a disaster he didn’t create.

 Years later, they reunited for dinners, smiles, nostalgia, but the wound never fully healed. Dick respected Carl as a legend. Yet he couldn’t forget that the man who shaped his career also abandoned him at the worst possible moment. Rosemary, the co-star who felt replaced. The fourth name on Dick’s list hits different because the tension with Rosemarie was never loud but always there, simmering under every laugh track and punchline they delivered.

Rose walked into the Dick Van Djk show expecting to be the female standout. She had the resume, the timing, the stage instincts. In her mind, she had earned that spotlight long before any network suit noticed Mary Tyler Moore. Dick understood that confidence. He admired it.

 But everything changed the moment Mary’s popularity took off like a rocket. Crew members remembered the shift vividly. Scripts slowly started giving Mary more emotional beats, more physical comedy, more chances to shine. Rose didn’t complain on day one, but by month three, her mood at readthroughs changed. She stopped laughing at jokes that weren’t hers.

 She scribbled harder in her script margins. Some nights, she left without saying goodbye to anyone, including Dick. The moment that sealed the resentment happened during season 3. After a taping, Dick approached Rose to compliment her improv that got a big audience reaction. She cut him off and said sharply, “It won’t matter.

 They only write to make her look good now.” Dick didn’t know what to say. She walked away before he could answer. The strange part is that Rose never hated Mary. She hated the feeling of being replaced. And because Dick was the lead, she quietly blamed him for letting the dynamic shift without fighting for her.

 But once the camera stopped, the room cooled instantly. Dick later admitted the tension drained the joy out of days that were supposed to be fun. Phil Ericson, the partner who disappeared without goodbye. Phil Ericson is the one name on Dick Van Dijk’s list that doesn’t come with fame or Hollywood power.

 Yet, he’s the one who dealt the very first blow. Dick never sugarcoated it. Phil didn’t just leave. He vanished. And that disappearance rewired the way Dick trusted people for the rest of his life. Long before television, long before Mary Poppins, Dick was just a restless kid hosting a morning radio show in 1947. Phil walked into that studio, watched Dick clown around with nothing but a mic and raw timing, and made a decision right there. You and I should team up.

It was the kind of offer that changes a life instantly. Within weeks, they were on stage as Eric and Van, the Merry Mutes, lip-syncing old records, inventing routines in cramped dressing rooms, and pulling five show nights like two soldiers on the same battlefield. People close to them said Phil became Dick’s creative compass.

 He taught him how to hold a pose, how to build a silent gag, how to sell a joke without saying a word. Dick once told a friend, “Phil was the first person who believed I could make it. That was fact. But everything cracked in 1953.” Dick showed up for rehearsal in Atlanta, costume pressed, routine memorized. Phil’s chair was empty.

 Crew members thought he was late. Dick waited. Then a stage hand walked over with a folded note. Phil had quit. He wasn’t coming back. He wasn’t performing again. He’d already left town. That single moment ripped something out of Dick. The partnership died in silence. And Dick spent the next years scrambling through failed game shows, small guest roles.

Phil didn’t break his heart. He broke his foundation. And Dick never rebuilt it the same way. And now you’ve heard the six names Dick Van Djk kept buried for almost a century. the betrayals, the heartbreak, and the moments that nearly broke him. Which one surprised you the most? Which story changed the way you see these Hollywood legends?