London was born in Cleveland, Ohio, the son of Isadore and Minna Yulish. His parents were Russian Jewish immigrants. Initially raised in
Cleveland, Ohio, Eugene Yulish and his brothers, Stanley, Morton and Charles, moved with their parents to
Miami Beach, Florida, where his father, a grocer, opened one of the first supermarkets. The store became so successful that the family became millionaires. With their father kept busy with the operation of his new store and their mother occupied with multiple charitable and social obligations, the boys saw little of their parents, but instead found enjoyment in their own pursuits. In Eugene's case, those pursuits included comedy programs and vocal mimicry, fantasy romance, Marie Antoinette, Napoleon and other historical figures, literature, including Shakespeare's
Romeo and Juliet, mythology, radio programs, and the cartoons of Walt Disney. An imaginative child, London recalled, "Alone in my room when all the other kids were playing ball, I'd tell myself the story, acting out all the parts, including
Snow White standing by the side of the well singing, 'I'm Wishing'." His father's supermarket success was short-lived, however; according to an interview with London in 1974, his family "lost everything when an A&P was built close by." As a result, he went to work as a teenager. His early career included stints as a counselor at Summerdale Day Camp, just outside Philadelphia, where he taught arts and crafts and
puppetry; occasional work on
NBC-TV's
Hi Mom! hosted by
ventriloquist Shari Lewis; a cast member on the
puppet show
Johnny Jupiter; as Re-ject the Robot. At the age of seventeen, he traveled to
New York City, where he hoped he would have a better chance at becoming a more successful entertainer. It was there that he changed his name to Gene London, had cosmetic surgery to fix a bump on his nose and a cracked front tooth, and became a
puppeteer on
Herb Sheldon's kids' TV shows on
WABD-TV. In 1957, London succeeded Henry Burbig as the second host/performer and instructor of
WABC-TV's ''Tinker's Workshop'', and portrayed the character of "Tinker Tom, the Toymaker" as a big brother type, rather than as a grandfatherly inculcator of values. London hosted the show from 1957 to mid-1958, when he was ousted from the program following a creative dispute with station management. In 1959, he appeared semi-regularly on holiday-themed special editions of NBC-TV's
Today Show with the series' first host/interviewer,
Dave Garroway. ==Show history==