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Jack Gilford (July 25, 1908 – June 4,2 1990) was an Academy Award- and Tony Award-nominated, and Daytime Emmy Award-winning American actor on Broadway, films and television.
BiographyEarly lifeGilford was born Jacob Aaron Gellman on the lower East Side of Manhattan in New York City, and grew up in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. His parents were Romanian-born Jewish immigrants Sophie "Susksa" (née Jackness), who owned a restaurant and was also a bootlegger, and Aaron Gellman, a furrier.3 Gilford was the second of three sons, with an older brother Murray ("Moisha") and a younger brother Nathaniel ("Natie"). Gilford was discovered working in a pharmacy by his mentor Milton Berle. While working in amateur theater, he competed with other talented youngsters, including a young Jackie Gleason. He started doing imitations and impersonations. His first appearance on film was a short entitled Midnight Melodies where he did his imitations of George Jessel, Rudy Vallee and Harry Langdon. He developed some unique impressions that became his trademarks — most notably, one of "split pea soup coming to a furious boil" using only his face. Other unusual impressions he created were a fluorescent light going on in a dark room, John D. Rockefeller Sr. imitating Jimmy Durante, and impressions of animals. CareerIn 1938, Gilford worked as the Master of Ceremonies in the first downtown New York integrated nightclub, "Cafe Society". He created original spoofs on movies — in one of them, he coined the now-common phrase "The butler did it". He was a unique blend of the earlier style of the Yiddish theater, Vaudeville and Burlesque and started the tradition of Monology such as later comedians Lenny Bruce and Woody Allen used. One of Gilford's specialties was pantomime, and this talent was put to good use by director George Abbott when he cast Gilford as the silent King Sextimus in Once upon a Mattress (Off-Broadway, 1959). Gilford shared the stage with a young Carol Burnett in this production, and reprised his performance with her in two separate televised versions of the show, in 1964 and in 1972. Gilford won many industry awards. He was nominated for several Tony Awards for best supporting actor as Hysterium in A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (1963), and for his role as Herr Schultz in Cabaret (1966). He was nominated for an Academy Award for best supporting actor in (1973) for his role as Phil Green in Save the Tiger (his co-star Jack Lemmon won for Best Actor). Gilford's career was derailed for a time during the 1950s and the McCarthy Era. He was an activist who campiagned for social change, integration and labor unions. He was quite active both socially and politically in left wing causes, as was his wife, actress Madeline Lee Gilford.1 Gilford and his wife were implicated for their alleged sympathies by the House Un-American Activities Committee during the McCarthy Era. Gilford and Madeline were specifically named by choreographer, Jerome Robbins, in his testimony to the HUAC.14 Gilford and his wife were called to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1953.4 The couple had difficulty finding work during much of the rest of the 1950s due to the Hollywood blacklist.4 Jack and Madeline often had to borrow money from friends to make ends meet.4 Gilford once again found work towards the end of the 1950s and early 1960s with the end of the McCarthy Era. He made his comeback as Hysterium in the 1962 production of A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum.4 He co-starred in the play with his close friend, Zero Mostel.4 Ironically, this particular production was also choreographed by Jerome Robbins, who had previously testified against Jack Gilford before the HUAC in 1953.4 He managed to become successful mostly through roles on the Broadway stage, such as Drink To Me Only, Romanoff and Juliet, and The Diary of Anne Frank. He later enjoyed success in film and television, as well as a series of nationwide television commercials for Cracker Jack.4 The most memorable of these commercials featured Gilford walking through the sleeping car of a train when he discovers two passengers passing a box of Cracker Jack back and forth between their sleeping compartments and decides to surreptitiously intercept. Some of Gilford's most memorable work was done for series television, where he made numerous guest appearances. Some notable examples:
He also appeared in The Golden Girls, (1988, 1990), playing "Max Weinstock", The Defenders, All in the Family, The Duck Factory, Rhoda, Night Court, Car 54, Where Are You?. In 1979, Gilford won a Daytime Emmy award for his guest appearance on the children’s series Big Blue Marble. Gilford and his wife, Madeline Lee, created a Jack Gilford Special in 1981 for the Canadian television channel, CBS. At this time after forty years of night club performing, Gilford started to perform his one man shows in the 1980s. This included appearances at the Paramount Theater in Denver, as well as at the Town Hall NYC. One of his last performances was on the American Broadcasting Company's thirtysomething as an enigmatic rabbi. Personal lifeGilford met actress (and later producer) Madeline Lee at political meetings in 1947.1 Although both were married to other people at the time, they divorced their spouses during the late 1940s4 and were married in 1949,1 remaining together for 40 years until his death in 1990. He and Lee raised three children: Lisa Gilford (from Madeline's previous marriage), now a producer; Joseph Edward Gilford, a screenwriter, playwright and director; and Sam Max Gilford, an artist and archivist. Following a three-year battle with stomach cancer, he died in his Greenwich Village home in 1990, aged 81. His wife, Madeline Lee Gilford, died on April 14, 2008.1 Broadway stage appearances
Filmography
References
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