Dr. Toad Williams

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Dr. Robert Todd Williams (1938 - 2007)

Also Known As: "Toad"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, United States
Death: August 14, 2007 (69)
Healdsburg, Sonoma County, California, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Robert Fitzgerald Williams and Susan Jean Williams
Husband of Private
Half brother of Private; Private and Robin Williams

Occupation: Winemaker
Managed by: Jason Scott Wills
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Dr. Toad Williams

bar owner of bon vivant


He privately called one of his saloons the "Risky Liver Inn," referred to his pet dachshund as "a 10-pound bladder" in a national magazine interview, and at 14 ran away from home on a funky Whizzer scooter.

And that was all before he founded the Toad Hollow, the Healdsburg winery famous for its oddball toad-themed labels - and award-winning taste.

Yes, Robert Todd Williams was a character all right, his friends and wife recalled with chuckles Wednesday. And if he hadn't died from heart failure Tuesday, they said, he would be the first one to tell you so.

"The man essentially drove his life at 90 miles an hour until it went off a cliff," said Erik Thorson, Toad Hollow controller. "He enjoyed every minute he had on Earth, and he's probably in heaven right now having a BLT with extra bacon and laughing his head off."

His even better-known younger brother, actor/comedian Robin Williams, put it this way: "Toad left a big footprint with a cork, or as a friend said, he left a great trail."

Mr. Williams, who lived in Healdsburg and was known to friends as Todd or Toad, died at 69 at Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital.

Over the past 14 years, he built a national reputation as a top-flight winemaker with the Toad Hollow Vineyards he founded with vintner Rodney Strong. The vineyard drew early attention with its whimsical wine names, including Eye of the Toad and Cacophony, and labels featuring toads hoisting glasses - but it was the taste that kept connoisseurs coming back for more, boosting the winery's sales from 3,000 cases in 1994 to 100,000 cases last year. Its varietals have won dozens of prizes, including a silver medal for its Chardonnay last year in the New World Wine Competition.

One of the key goals of the winery, Mr. Williams always proclaimed, was to keep the bottles affordable while still tasting great. Most Toad Hollow selections cost less than $20.

"He wanted to make really good wine for the masses, where you wouldn't have to think about spending a big wad," said Mr. Williams' wife of 29 years, Francie "Frankie" Williams. "He tried to take some of the mystery and snobbery out of the wine business."

Mr. Williams was born in Chicago to Susan and Robert Williams, who divorced while he was an infant. He was raised in rural Versailles, Ky., by his mother - until the age of 14, when he left to seek adventure on a motor scooter. He worked at odd jobs until he found saloon work to be his calling, and with the exception of a hitch in the Air Force in the 1950s in Greenland, he spent the rest of his life selling alcohol in one way or another, friends and family recalled.

"He was full of stories, made everyone laugh and had a good time doing it," said his wife. "You never knew for sure about the details, because Todd went to the Mark Twain school of thought, where you don't let the truth get in the way of a good story."

Among these tales were recountings of running the Pink Elephant Club saloon in Oklahoma while serving in the Air Force, tending bar at 17 different nightclubs from Jamaica to California, and serving up drinks year after year with wild frivolity at Mardi Gras in New Orleans.

He lied about his age in so many inventive ways that at one point he forgot how old he truly was, friends recalled. Finally, when he was an adult, his mother pulled out his birth certificate and showed him he was four years younger than he thought.

Frankie Williams said she met her future husband, appropriately, in a saloon in San Francisco in the early 1970s, and the couple soon started up the Toad Manner bar in the Marina district. Mr. Williams called himself Mayor of the Marina, and his booming laugh made the bar a magnet for a dizzying collection of characters, from bikers and cross-dressers to lawyers and writers from Rolling Stone.

"There was one guy named Beefy, who wore a pillbox hat and a black housedress and had a big black beard," Robin Williams remembered with a laugh, phoning from a movie set in Connecticut. "In San Francisco, that's kind of like day-wear."

Mr. Williams called his customers and pals at the bar his "Marina maggots," which his brother deadpanned was particularly appropriate "because if you are a toad, it's always good to have maggots nearby."

"People were drawn to that bar not because of location, location, location," said Robin Williams. "It was Toad."

After running a bar in the Calaveras County town of Arnold and working as a salesman for companies including Shafer Vineyards in Napa, he hit his true stride with Toad Hollow, friends and family said.

"It was no surprise he turned that into such a success," said longtime pal Dick Donahue, co-owner of the Marina Lounge in San Francisco, which Mr. Williams continued to visit throughout his life after leaving the city. "He could be in a room with the longshoreman or the pope, and he'd get them to laugh, but he could also read people the minute he met them."

Robin Williams, who because of family divorces didn't know he had a brother until he was several years old, said it was only natural that his brother (who has the same father as the comedian) turned out to be funny. He cast his brother as the bartender in "Mrs. Doubtfire," but turning him into a pro was never a goal, he said. It was enough that the older Williams was just flat-out fun to hang with.

"It's in the genes," said the comedian. "Toad was outrageous, maybe even more than me. Hard to believe, but it's true."

In addition to his wife and brother, Mr. Williams is survived by another brother, McLaurin Smith of Memphis and eight nieces and nephews.

A public celebration of his life will be held at Richard's Grove and Saralee's Vineyard in Windsor on Aug. 25, from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
R. Todd Williams, co-founder of Toad Hollow Vineyards and the older brother of comedian Robin Williams, who used his own outgoing personality to help build his boutique winery into one of Sonoma County's best-known, has died. He was 69.∼Robert Todd Williams was always the showman, a thundering presence whether tending bar in a neighborhood joint or pouring a fine pinot noir at a fancy winemaker dinner.

Mr. Williams, who was known as "Dr. Toad" for his Toad Hollow Vineyards, died Tuesday at Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital of complications from heart surgery. He was 69.

He crisscrossed the country over the past 14 years using his copious charm and marketing savvy to build Russian River-based Toad Hollow from a tiny boutique winery into a 120,000-case operation offering dependably good wines at working man's prices.

Whatever and wherever the venue, the bearded and barrel-chested Mr. Williams treated life as a stage, assuming the starring role in his own production. As one longtime friend said of the Healdsburg vintner, Mr. Williams' larger-than-life personality could be counted on to fill a room, occasionally even eclipsing that of his famous younger brother, actor Robin Williams.

"He was huge. He was everywhere. I'd be at some place in a little town somewhere and they would go, 'Hey, you're Toad's brother,' " Robin Williams said in a phone interview. "In a lot of places around America, I'm just Toad's brother. That's so cool."

The actor described his brother, who at times was a hell-raiser but never lost the hard-work ethic and Southern manners he learned growing up in rural Versailles, Ky., as an "extraordinary man . . . kind but outgoing and very much a people person."

"It was his storytelling and the ability to draw to him unusual people. They would find a kind of sanctuary with him."

Robin Williams recalled the disparate characters who frequented a bar his brother once ran in San Francisco as a sort of "1980s version of a William Saroyan novel," from bikers to lawyers to a "guy named Beefy who wore a pillbox hat." When he needed a bartender for a scene in "Mrs. Doubtfire," Robin Williams recruited his experienced older brother.

"People just loved to come and sit with him and tell stories and shake dice," said Frankie Williams, his wife of 29 years.

Mr. Williams' gritty years mixing drinks at 17 different saloons, taverns, nightclubs and restaurants from Oklahoma to Chicago to Kingston, Jamaica, gave him a no-airs approach to wine consumption.

His mission, said longtime friend Susie Selby, a winemaker and fellow winery owner, was to strip away the mystique and make wine inclusive. "He discounted any snobbery around wine, and he made it clever and interesting."

His wines bear labels that feature a cast of dapper or dancing toads and frogs, and they have irreverent names such as Cacophony, Eye of the Toad featuring a red-eyed, drunken toad, and the crooked-labeled Askew.

Erich Russell of Rabbit Ridge winery in Paso Robles went to many a winemaker dinner with Mr. Williams, whose dress uniform was a Hawaiian shirt, jeans and a jacket. He would loosen up a group of sometime stuffy guests declaring, "I'm going to guarantee you're not going to learn chemistry. But you're going to have a hell of a good time."

Mr. Williams found his way to the wine world after the Whiskey River Inn, a restaurant he and his wife ran in the Sierra foothill town of Arnold, failed.

He learned wine through a series of jobs, first doing sales for Whitehall Lane and later working with Wine Distributors in San Francisco selling to upscale restaurants. But it was while working as national sales manager for Shafer Vineyards that he mastered the art of "guerrilla marketing," making sure everyone he came in contact with remembered his name and product.

In the 1980s, Mr. Williams put together a marketing company, Hillside Estates, to bring that same national exposure to small, specialty wineries such as Hanzell in Sonoma.

But Mr. Williams really came into his own after partnering with Rodney Strong in 1993 to create his own winery, Toad Hollow.

"He touched a lot of people in the winery business," Robin Williams remembered. "He was just an honorable man, and in times when that's really needed. He was a man who lived a great life. He leaves a big footprint – a big footprint, with a cork."

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Dr. Toad Williams's Timeline

1938
June 14, 1938
Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, United States
2007
August 14, 2007
Age 69
Healdsburg, Sonoma County, California, United States