Lahr v. Adell Chemical Co.: The Sound-Alike Case That Predated Midler by a Generation
Long before the right of publicity protected a voice, the First Circuit held that imitating a famous comedian's distinctive vocal style to sell a product could state a claim for unfair competition.
Lahr v. Adell Chemical Co., 300 F.2d 256 (1st Cir. 1962), decided March 12, 1962 (argued November 9, 1961), is the quiet ancestor of every modern sound-alike dispute. Bert Lahr — the comic actor best remembered as the Cowardly Lion in The Wizard of Oz — complained that Adell Chemical Company had advertised its household cleaner, Lestoil, with a television cartoon of a duck whose voice was supplied by an actor hired to imitate Lahr’s distinctive “style of vocal comic delivery.” Lahr had not consented and had not been paid; worse, he alleged, the imitation was good enough that audiences took the duck for him. The federal district court in Massachusetts dismissed the complaint for failure to state a cause of action. A First Circuit panel of Chief Judge Woodbury and Circuit Judges Hartigan and Aldrich reversed in part, holding that Lahr had stated a claim — twenty-six years before Midler v. Ford gave the theory its modern name.
At a glance
- Case: Lahr v. Adell Chemical Co., 300 F.2d 256 (1st Cir. 1962)
- Decided: March 12, 1962 (argued November 9, 1961); panel of Woodbury, C.J., Hartigan and Aldrich, JJ.
- Posture: District court’s dismissal for failure to state a claim reversed in part; case remanded
- Holding: Deliberately imitating a widely known performer’s distinctive voice to sell a product can support claims for unfair competition (on a passing-off theory) and for defamation under Massachusetts law
- What it is not: Not a right-of-publicity case — that tort did not yet exist as such — and not a copyright case; the wrong is the trade harm and reputational injury from the imitation
The complaint and the dismissal below
Lahr pleaded three theories: unfair competition, invasion of privacy, and defamation. The factual core was narrow and, for its era, novel. He did not claim that the defendant had copied a recording, used his name, or shown his face. He claimed only that an actor had been engaged to reproduce his vocal mannerisms — the “distinctive and original combination of pitch, inflection, accent and comic sounds” by which the public recognized him as a unique comic performer — and that the imitation was convincing enough to be mistaken for the real thing.
The district court saw nothing actionable. Nothing tangible belonging to Lahr had been taken; the defendant had hired its own actor and produced its own commercial. On that reasoning, an imitation, however skillful, was simply lawful competition for the public’s ear. The First Circuit disagreed, and the way it disagreed is what makes the opinion durable.
Unfair competition without competition
The conceptual obstacle was that Lahr and Adell Chemical were not competitors in any ordinary sense. Lahr sold comic performances; Adell sold floor cleaner. Classic passing-off doctrine assumed two sellers of similar goods, one of whom dressed its product to look like the other’s. How could a comedian be “passed off” by a detergent advertiser?
The court answered by focusing on what the imitation accomplished in the audience’s mind. If listeners believed Lahr himself was performing the commercial, then the defendant had, in effect, sold the public a Bert Lahr performance that Lahr had neither given nor authorized. The relevant market was not floor cleaner but Lahr’s own market — his performances and the public appetite for them. The panel reasoned that the defendant’s conduct could be found to have “saturated” Lahr’s audience and thereby curtailed his market: every consumer who heard the duck and thought “that’s Bert Lahr” was a consumer whose demand for the genuine article had been partly satisfied by a counterfeit. That is a competitive injury even between parties who sell unlike goods.
This was an early, deliberate stretch of unfair-competition law beyond head-to-head rivalry toward a misappropriation rationale: the defendant had taken the commercial value of Lahr’s recognizable identity and turned it to its own account. The court did not need a statute or a freestanding publicity tort to reach that conclusion; the common law of unfair competition, applied functionally, was enough.
The defamation count
The opinion’s second surviving theory is often overlooked but doctrinally important. Lahr alleged that the imitation, though recognizable, was inferior — and that its inferiority defamed him. To an audience that believed it was hearing Lahr, a clumsy or cut-rate rendition suggested two damaging things: that his abilities had deteriorated, and that he had been reduced to lending his talents to anonymous television commercials. The court held that these allegations could state a claim for defamation under Massachusetts law, because a false impression injurious to a professional’s reputation in his field is the stuff of which libel and slander are made.
The defamation theory is a reminder that voice imitation can wound in two distinct ways. The unfair-competition claim is about diverted value — the audience the imitation captures. The defamation claim is about reputational harm — the false and damaging message the imitation conveys about the performer’s standing and judgment. The two can coexist, but they protect different interests and carry different elements and defenses.
Why Lahr matters: the road to Midler
The invasion-of-privacy count did not survive, and the reason is instructive: Massachusetts at the time did not recognize the privacy tort on which Lahr relied. That gap forced the court to reach the result through unfair competition and defamation instead — and in doing so it built the analytical bridge that later courts would cross.
When the Ninth Circuit decided Midler v. Ford Motor Co. in 1988, it was working in California, which by then had a robust common-law right of publicity. Midler reframed the wrong as the appropriation of identity and located the protected interest in the singer’s persona. But the underlying intuition — that a distinctive voice deliberately imitated for commercial gain is something the law should not let an advertiser take for free — is already fully present in Lahr. The First Circuit simply housed it in the doctrines available in 1962. Read together, the cases show a single principle migrating across labels: from unfair competition and defamation (Massachusetts, 1962) to the right of publicity (California, 1988), and onward to today’s debates over synthetic and cloned voices.
Open questions
Lahr answered the pleading question but left the hard line-drawing for trial and for later courts. How distinctive must a voice be before its imitation becomes actionable, and how convincing must the imitation be before audiences are actually deceived? The opinion assumes a recognizable, mistaken-for-the-original performance, but says little about how a factfinder measures either distinctiveness or deception. It is also a creature of Massachusetts common law: the unfair-competition and defamation theories travel only as far as a given state’s law allows, which is exactly why New York later reached the opposite result in Booth v. Colgate-Palmolive. And because the case predates modern federal copyright preemption, it leaves untouched the question that would later sink Sinatra v. Goodyear — whether a licensed copyrighted work changes the analysis. Finally, the defamation theory depends on the imitation being inferior; Lahr does not tell us what happens when the sound-alike is flawless.
Implications
- Voice imitation was actionable long before the right of publicity matured. Practitioners should not assume the doctrine begins with Midler; common-law unfair competition reached similar ground decades earlier.
- Passing off can apply between non-competitors. When an imitation captures a performer’s own audience, the competitive injury is to the performer’s market, not the advertiser’s product market.
- Defamation is a separate lever. An inferior imitation that suggests decline or cheapening can injure reputation independent of any diverted-value theory.
- State law controls outcomes. The same facts produce different results across jurisdictions, as the Lahr/Booth split demonstrates; venue and choice of law matter enormously.
- The principle scales to new technology. Lahr’s functional reasoning — protect the value of a recognizable voice from commercial appropriation — maps readily onto AI voice cloning.
Frequently asked questions
Did Bert Lahr ultimately win damages? The First Circuit did not award anything; it reversed a dismissal, meaning the case could proceed past the pleading stage. The opinion establishes that the claims were legally sufficient, not that the defendant was ultimately liable.
Why wasn’t this a copyright case? Because nothing copyrightable was copied. The defendant produced its own commercial with its own actor; it did not reproduce a fixed recording or work owned by Lahr. The wrong was the imitation of his vocal identity, which copyright does not protect.
How is this different from Midler v. Ford? Midler rested on California’s right of publicity and framed the injury as appropriation of identity. Lahr predated that tort and used unfair competition and defamation instead. The cases share a premise but apply different legal frameworks, and they arise under different states’ law.
Authorities and sources
- Lahr v. Adell Chemical Co., 300 F.2d 256 (1st Cir. Mar. 12, 1962) — opinion summary and text via Justia and CourtListener.
- Midler v. Ford Motor Co., 849 F.2d 460 (9th Cir. 1988) — the later California right-of-publicity sound-alike decision, full text via Law.Resource.Org.
- Booth v. Colgate-Palmolive Co., 362 F. Supp. 343 (S.D.N.Y. 1973) — the contrasting New York result, Justia.
- Studicata, Lahr v. Adell Chemical Co. case brief (secondary summary of facts and holding).