fbpx
Wikipedia

Eli Wallach

Eli Herschel Wallach (/ˈl ˈwɒlək/; December 7, 1915 – June 24, 2014) was an American film, television, and stage actor from New York City. From his 1945 Broadway debut to his last film appearance, Wallach's entertainment career spanned 65 years. Originally trained in stage acting, he became "one of the greatest character actors ever to appear on stage and screen"[1][better source needed] and ultimately garnered over 90 film credits. He and his wife Anne Jackson often appeared together on stage, eventually becoming a notable acting couple in American theater.

Eli Wallach
Wallach in 1966
Born
Eli Herschel Wallach

(1915-12-07)December 7, 1915
Brooklyn, New York City, U.S.
DiedJune 24, 2014(2014-06-24) (aged 98)
Manhattan, New York City, U.S.
Alma materUniversity of Texas (B.A.)
City College of New York (MEd)
Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre
OccupationActor
Years active1945–2010
Spouse
(m. 1948)
Children3
RelativesJoan Wallach Scott (niece)
A. O. Scott (grandnephew)
AwardsBAFTA Awards, Tony Awards, Emmy Awards, Honorary Academy Award
Signature

Wallach initially studied method acting under Sanford Meisner and later became a founding member of the Actors Studio, where he studied under Lee Strasberg. He played a wide variety of roles throughout his career, primarily as a supporting actor.

For his debut screen performance in Baby Doll (1956), he won a BAFTA Award for Best Newcomer and a Golden Globe Award nomination. Among his other most famous roles are Calvera in The Magnificent Seven (1960), Guido in The Misfits (1961), and Tuco ("The Ugly") in The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966). Other notable portrayals include outlaw Charlie Gant in How the West Was Won (1962), Hitman Leon B. Little in Tough Guys (1986), Don Altobello in The Godfather Part III, Cotton Weinberger in The Two Jakes (both 1990), Donald Fallon in The Associate (1996), and Arthur Abbott in The Holiday (2006). One of America's most prolific screen actors, Wallach remained active well into his nineties, with roles as late as 2010 in Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps and The Ghost Writer.

In 1988, Wallach was inducted into the American Theater Hall of Fame.[2] He received BAFTA Awards, Tony Awards and Emmy Awards, and an Academy Honorary Award at the second annual Governors Awards on November 13, 2010.

Early life and military service

Eli Herschel Wallach was born on December 7, 1915, at 156 Union Street in Red Hook, Brooklyn, a son of Polish Jewish immigrants Abraham and Bertha (Schorr) Wallach from Przemyśl. He had a brother and two sisters.[3] He and his family were one of a few of Jewish faith in an otherwise Italian American neighborhood.[4][5] His parents owned Bertha's Candy Store.[3] Wallach graduated in 1936 from the University of Texas with a degree in history.[6] While there, he performed in a play with fellow students Ann Sheridan and Walter Cronkite. In a later interview, Wallach said that he learned to ride horses while in Texas, explaining that he liked Texas because "It opened my eyes to the word friendship... You could rely on people. If they gave you their word, that was it ... It was an education."[7]

Two years later he received a master of arts degree in education from the City College of New York.[8][9] He gained his first method acting experience at the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre in New York City, where he studied under Sanford Meisner.[10] There, according to Wallach, actors were forced to "unlearn" all their physical and vocal mannerisms, while traditional stage etiquette and "singsong" deliveries were "utterly excised" from his classroom.[11]

Wallach's education was cut short when he was drafted[3][12] into the United States Army in 1940.[13][14] He served as a staff sergeant and medic[15] in a military hospital in Hawaii and later was sent to Officer Candidate School (OCS) in Abilene, Texas, to train as a medical administrative officer.[13][15][16][17] Commissioned as a second lieutenant, he was ordered to Casablanca. Later, when he was serving in France, a senior officer noticed his acting career and asked him to create a show for the patients. He and his unit wrote a play called Is This the Army?, which was inspired by Irving Berlin's This Is the Army. In the comedy, Wallach and the other actors mocked Axis dictators, with Wallach portraying Adolf Hitler.[18] Wallach was discharged as a captain following the war's end in 1945.[3][13][17] He was awarded the Army Good Conduct Medal, the American Defense Service Medal, the American Campaign Medal, the Asiatic–Pacific Campaign Medal, the European–African–Middle Eastern Campaign Medal and the World War II Victory Medal.[13]

Career

Stage actor

Wallach took classes in acting at the Dramatic Workshop of the New School in New York City with the influential German director Erwin Piscator. He later became a founding member of the Actors Studio, taught by Lee Strasberg. There, he studied more method acting technique with founding member Robert Lewis, and with other students including Marlon Brando, Montgomery Clift, Herbert Berghof, Sidney Lumet, and his soon-to-be wife, Anne Jackson.[19] Wallach became Marilyn Monroe's first new friend when she became a student at the Actors Studio, once insisting on watching him perform in The Teahouse of the August Moon from the backstage wings, simply to see up close how experienced actors perform a two-hour play.[20] She also became friends with his wife, Anne Jackson, also studying at the Studio, and would visit the couple at their home and sometimes babysit their new child.[21]

In 1945 Wallach made his Broadway debut and he won a Tony Award in 1951 for his performance alongside Maureen Stapleton in the Tennessee Williams play The Rose Tattoo.[22] His other theater credits include Mister Roberts, The Teahouse of the August Moon, Camino Real, Major Barbara (in which director Charles Laughton discouraged Wallach's established method acting style),[22] Luv, and Staircase, co-starring Milo O'Shea, which was a serious depiction of an aging homosexual couple. He also played a role in a tour of Antony and Cleopatra, produced by the actress Katharine Cornell in 1946.[23] He exposed Americans to the work of playwright Eugène Ionesco in plays like The Chairs and The Lesson in 1958, and in 1961 Rhinoceros opposite Zero Mostel.[22] He last starred on stage as the title character in Visiting Mr. Green.[24]

 
With Maureen Stapleton in The Rose Tattoo (1951)

The stage was where Wallach focused his early career. From 1945 to 1950 he and his wife, Anne Jackson, worked together acting in various plays by Tennessee Williams. The five years following, he continued only working on stage, not becoming involved in film work until 1956. During those years, however, they were generally having a hard time making ends meet. He recalls they were getting along on unemployment insurance and living in a one-room, $35 a month apartment on lower Fifth Avenue in the Village.[3] When he did get offered early movie parts, he turned them down with no regrets, and very early in his career he explained his reasoning:

What do I need a movie for? The stage is on a higher level in every way, and a more satisfying medium. Movies, by comparison, are like calendar art next to great paintings. You can't really do very much in movies or in television, but the stage is such an anarchistic medium.[3]

He said that the stage was what attracted him most and what he "needed" to do.[25] "Acting is the most alive thing I can do, and the most joyous," he stated.[3]

Wallach and Jackson became one of the best-known acting couples in the American theater, as iconic as Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne, and Jessica Tandy and Hume Cronyn,[22] and they looked for opportunities to work together. During an interview, he said of Jackson, "I have tremendous respect and admiration for her as an actress. . . we have a terrific working compatibility when we're in the same play, especially when the play means something important to us."[3]: 159–160  When he did gravitate toward accepting parts in films, he did so to "help pay the bills," he said, adding, "for actors, movies are a means to an end."[26]

Despite the fact that he eventually acted in over 90 films and almost as many television dramas,[27] he continued to accept stage parts throughout his career, often with Jackson. They played in comedies like The Typists and The Tiger in 1963, and acted together in Waltz of the Toreadors in 1973. In 1978 they played in a revival of The Diary of Anne Frank, along with their daughters, and in 1984 they acted in Nest of the Wood Grouse, directed by Joseph Papp. Four years later, in 1988, they acted in a revival of Cafe Crown, a portrait of the Yiddish theatre scene during its prime.[26] They continued acting together as late as 2000, while he also took on roles alone throughout all those years.[26]

Film and television roles

 
Wallach and Carroll Baker in the swing scene from Baby Doll

Wallach's film debut was in Elia Kazan's controversial 1956 Baby Doll, for which he won the British Academy Film Awards (BAFTA) as "Most Promising Newcomer."[28] Baby Doll was controversial because of its underlying sexual theme. Director Elia Kazan however, set explicit limits on Wallach's scenes, telling him not to actually seduce Carroll Baker, but instead to create an unfulfilled erotic tension.[29] Kazan later explained his reasoning:

What is erotic about sex to me is the seduction, not the act ... The scene on the swing with Eli Wallach and Carroll Baker in Baby Doll is my exact idea of what eroticism in films should be.[30]

Wallach went on to a prolific career as "one of the greatest 'character actors' ever to appear on stage and screen," notes Turner Classic Movies,[1] acting in over 90 films.[27] Having grown up on the "mean streets" of an Italian American neighborhood,[31] and his versatility as a method actor, Wallach developed the ability to play a wide variety of different roles, although he tried to not get pinned down to any single type of character. "Right now I'm playing an old man," he said at age 84. But "I've been through all the ethnic groups, from Mexican bandits to Italian Mafia heads to Okinawans to half-breeds, and now I'm playing old Jews. Who knows?"[7]

Noting this versatility as a character actor, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences called him "the quintessential chameleon," with the ability to play different characters "effortlessly,"[32] and L.A. Times theater critic Charles McNulty saw Wallach's "power to illuminate" his various screen or stage personas as being "radioactive."[31] The Guardian newspaper has written that "Wallach was made for character acting," and includes movie clips from some of his most memorable roles in a tribute to him.[33]

In 1961, Wallach co-starred with Marilyn Monroe, Montgomery Clift and Clark Gable in The Misfits, Monroe's and Gable's last film before their deaths.[34][35] Wallach never learned why he was cast in the film, although he suspected that Monroe had something to do with it.[21] Its screenwriter, Arthur Miller, who was married to Monroe at the time, said that "Eli Wallach is the happiest good actor I've ever known. He really enjoys the work."[1]

Some of his other films included The Lineup (1958); Lord Jim (1965) with Peter O'Toole; a comic role in How to Steal a Million (1966), again with O'Toole, and Audrey Hepburn; and as Tuco (the "Ugly") in Sergio Leone's The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966) with Clint Eastwood, followed by other Spaghetti Westerns, such as Ace High. At one point, Henry Fonda had asked Wallach whether he himself should accept a part offered to him to act in a similar Western, Once Upon a Time in the West (1968), which would also be directed by Leone. Wallach said "Yes, you'll enjoy the challenge," and Fonda later thanked Wallach for that advice.[36]

Wallach and Eastwood became friends during the filming of The Good, the Bad and the Ugly and he recalled their off-work time together: "Clint was the tall, silent type. He's the kind where you open up and do all the talking. He smiles and nods and stores it all away in that wonderful calculator of a brain."[37] In 2003 Wallach acted in Mystic River, produced and directed by Eastwood, who once said "working with Eli Wallach has been one of the great pleasures of my life."[1]

A pivotal moment in Wallach's career came in 1953, when he, along with Frank Sinatra and Harvey Lembeck, tried out for the role of Maggio in the film From Here to Eternity. Sinatra biographer Kitty Kelly notes that while Sinatra's test was good, it had none of the "consummate acting ability" of Wallach. Producer Harry Cohn and director Fred Zinnemann were "dazzled" by Wallach's screen test and wanted him to play the part. However, Wallach had previously been offered an important role in another Tennessee Williams play, Camino Real, to be directed by Elia Kazan, and turned down the movie role. Wallach said that when he learned that the play had finally received financing, he "grabbed" the opportunity: "It was a remarkable piece of writing by the leading playwright in America and it was going to be directed by the country's best. There really wasn't much of a choice for me."[38] The film, however, went on to win eight Academy Awards, including one for Sinatra, which revived his career. Wallach recalled afterwards, "Whenever Sinatra saw me, he’d say, 'Hello, you crazy actor!'"[4] Wallach, however, claimed to have no regrets.

Film historian James Welsh states that during Wallach's career, he appeared in most of the "prestige" television dramas during the "Golden Age" of the 1950s, including Studio One, The Philco Television Playhouse, The Armstrong Circle Theatre, Playhouse 90, and The Hallmark Hall of Fame, among others. He won the 1966–1967 Emmy Award for his role in the telefilm The Poppy is Also a Flower.[5][39] In 2006 Wallach appeared on NBC's Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, playing a former writer who was blacklisted in the 1950s. His character was a writer on The Philco Comedy Hour, a show that aired on a fictional NBS network. This is a reference to The Philco Television Playhouse, in several episodes of which Wallach actually appeared in 1955. Wallach earned a 2007 Emmy nomination for his work on the show.[40]

 
Wallach at the 2010 TCM Classic Film Festival

During the filming of The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, Wallach nearly died three times. Once, he accidentally drank a bottle of acid which was placed next to his pop bottle; another time was in a scene where he was about to be hanged, someone fired a pistol which caused the horse underneath him to bolt and run a mile while Wallach's hands were still tied behind his back; in a different scene with him lying on a railroad track, he was close to being decapitated by steps jutting out from the train.[41]

Wallach appeared as DC Comics' supervillain Mr. Freeze in the 1960s Batman television series. He said that he received more fan mail about his role as Mr. Freeze than about all of his other roles combined.[42] He played Gus Farber in the television miniseries Seventh Avenue in 1977, and 10 years later, at the age of 71, he starred alongside Michael Landon in Highway to Heaven episode "A Father's Faith". Three years later, he played aging mob boss Don Altobello in the Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather Part III.

On November 13, 2010, at the age of 94, Wallach received an Academy Honorary Award for his contribution to the film industry from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.[43] A few years prior to that event, Kate Winslet told another audience that Wallach, with whom she acted in The Holiday in 2006,[44] was one of the "most charismatic men" she'd met, and her "very own sexiest man alive."[32]

Wallach's final performance was in the short film The Train (2015). Wallach plays a Holocaust survivor who, in a meeting, teaches a self-consumed and preoccupied young man that life can change in a moment. The short was shot in early 2014 and premiered on August 6, 2015, at the Rhode Island International Film Festival.[citation needed]

Between 1984 and 1997, he also performed voiceovers in a series of television commercials for the Toyota Pickup.

Personal life

Wallach was married to stage actress Anne Jackson for 66 years from March 5, 1948, until his death. They had three children: Peter, Roberta, and Katherine. Roberta played an epileptic teenager in Paul Zindel's The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds and appeared in several other movies.[citation needed]

Wallach was a strict teetotaler and once asked the director John Huston for advice on how to play a "drunk" scene during the filming of The Misfits.[citation needed]

A few years before 2005, Wallach lost sight in his left eye as the result of a stroke.[32]

His niece is the historian Joan Wallach Scott (the daughter of his brother, Sam Wallach). A. O. Scott, a film critic for The New York Times, is his great-nephew.[27]

Death

Wallach died on June 24, 2014, of natural causes at the age of 98. His body was cremated.[26][45]

Katherine Wallach told The New York Times that Anne Jackson died on April 12, 2016, aged 90, at her home in Manhattan.[46][47][48]

Filmography

Selected filmography:

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Nominated work Result Ref.
1951 Tony Award Best Featured Actor in a Play The Rose Tattoo Won
1956 British Academy Film Awards Most Promising Newcomer Baby Doll Won [49]
1956 Golden Globe Awards Best Supporting Actor Nominated
1967 Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series The Poppy Is Also a Flower Won
1968 Outstanding Single Performance in a Drama CBS Playhouse Nominated
1987 Outstanding Supporting Actor – Limited Series/Movie Something in Common Nominated
2001 Grammy Award Best Spoken Word Album The Complete Shakespeare Sonnets Nominated
2006 National Board of Review Career Achievement Award Won
2007 Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip Nominated
2011 Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series Nurse Jackie Nominated
2011 Academy Award Honorary Academy Award Won

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Eli Wallach Tribute at the TCM Classic Film Festival 2010" on YouTube, video, 4 min.
  2. ^ "Theater Hall of Fame Adds Nine New Names". The New York Times. November 22, 1988. Retrieved February 6, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Ross, Lillian; Ross, Helen (1962). The Player: A Profile of an Art. Simon and Schuster. Retrieved January 2, 2011 – via archive.org.
  4. ^ a b Leon, Masha (August 6, 2004). "Eli Wallach Knows His Lines". Forward.com. Retrieved May 27, 2020.
  5. ^ a b "Eli Wallach Biography (1915–)". Filmreference.com. Retrieved January 2, 2011.
  6. ^ . Department of History, University of Texas, Austin. Archived from the original on February 11, 2011.
  7. ^ a b "Texas". The Alcalde. March 2000.
  8. ^ . City College of New York. October 19, 2010. Archived from the original on January 9, 2012.
  9. ^ Hal Erickson (2008). . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Archived from the original on September 19, 2008.
  10. ^ "Eli Wallach, veteran actor, dead at 98". CBS News. June 25, 2014.
  11. ^ Gordon, Mel (2010). Stanislavsky in America: An Actor's Workbook. Routledge. p. 178.
  12. ^ The Guardian via Internet Archive. Retrieved May 14, 2021.
  13. ^ a b c d CPT Eli Herschel Wallach - Military Timeline army.togetherweserved.com. Retrieved September 6, 2021.
  14. ^ Famous Veterans: These Celebrities Served in the United States Armed Forces veteranownedbusiness.com. Retrieved September 6, 2021.
  15. ^ a b Texas History Minute: Eli Wallach’s time in Texas helped shape him The Herald Democrat. Retrieved September 6, 2021.
  16. ^ Eli Wallach - American actor Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved September 6, 2021.
  17. ^ a b The New York Times via Internet Archive. Retrieved September 6, 2021.
  18. ^ . Starpulse.com. Archived from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved June 26, 2014.
  19. ^ Lewis, Robert (1996). "Actors Studio, 1947". Slings and Arrows: Theater in My Life. New York: Applause Books. p. 183. ISBN 1-55783-244-7.
  20. ^ Gottfried, Martin. Arthur Miller: His Life and Work, Da Capo Press (2003), p. 245.
  21. ^ a b Harding, Les (2012). They Knew Marilyn Monroe: Famous Persons in the Life of the Hollywood Icon. McFarland. p. 154.
  22. ^ a b c d Simonson, Robert (June 25, 2014). . Playbill. Archived from the original on August 17, 2014. Retrieved June 26, 2014.
  23. ^ Mosel, "Leading Lady: The World and Theatre of Katharine Cornell.
  24. ^ David Ng. "Eli Wallach, an Actors Studio veteran and theater stalwart". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 25, 2014.
  25. ^ Wallach, Eli (May 6, 2010). "TCM interview". The Evening Class (Interview). Interviewed by Robert Osborne – via blogspot.com.
  26. ^ a b c d Berkvist, Robert (June 25, 2014). "Eli Wallach, Multifaceted Actor, Dies at 98". The New York Times.
  27. ^ a b c Scott, A. O. (November 4, 2010). "Eli Wallach, From Brooklyn to Honorary Oscar". The New York Times. Archived from the original on January 1, 2022.
  28. ^ Heintzelman, Greta (2005). Critical Companion to Tennessee Williams. Infobase Publishing. p. 33.
  29. ^ Wallach, Eli (2005). The Good, the Bad, and Me: In My Anecdotage. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 172. ISBN 9780151011896.
  30. ^ Young, Jeff (1999). Kazan: The Master Director Discusses His Films – Interviews with Elia Kazan. Newmarket Press. p. 224. ISBN 9781557043382.
  31. ^ a b McNulty, Charles (June 25, 2014). "Eli Wallach had the power to illuminate a character on stage and screen". Los Angeles Times.
  32. ^ a b c "Eli Wallach dead: Star of The Good, the Bad and the Ugly dies aged 98". Mirror. UK. June 25, 2014.
  33. ^ "Eli Wallach: a career in clips". The Guardian. June 25, 2014.
  34. ^ Churchwell, Sarah (December 27, 2005) [2004]. The Many Lives of Marilyn Monroe. Granta Books. p. 266. ISBN 978-0-312-42565-4.
  35. ^ Miller, Arthur (1987). Timebends. New York: Grove Press. p. 485. ISBN 0-8021-0015-5.
  36. ^ Schochet, Stephen (2010). Hollywood Stories: Short, Entertaining Anecdotes about the Stars and Legend. Hollywood Stories Publishing. p. 118.
  37. ^ McGilligan, Patrick (1999). Clint: The Life and Legend. Macmillan. p. 154.
  38. ^ Kelly, Kitty. His Way: An Unauthorized Biography Of Frank Sinatra, Random House (2010).
  39. ^ Welsch, James M. and Phillips, Gene D. The Francis Ford Coppola Encyclopedia, Scarecrow Press (2010), p. 273.
  40. ^ . TVWeek. July 19, 2007. Archived from the original on September 24, 2012. Retrieved June 26, 2014.
  41. ^ Armour, Philip (2011). The 100 Greatest Western Movies of All Time. Morris Book Publishing. p. 70.
  42. ^ "Eli Wallach, prolific U.S. character actor, dies at 98". Reuters.com. June 25, 2014.
  43. ^ Eli Wallach's acceptance speech, Honorary Academy Award, Governors' Award ceremony on YouTube, November 13, 2010.
  44. ^ . August 17, 2011. Archived from the original on June 25, 2014. Retrieved February 13, 2016 – via YouTube.
  45. ^ Reuters Editorial (June 25, 2014). "Eli Wallach, prolific U.S. character actor, dies at 98". Reuters. Retrieved February 13, 2016. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  46. ^ McFadden, Robert D. (April 13, 2016). "Anne Jackson, Stage Star With Her Husband, Eli Wallach, Dies at 90". The New York Times. Retrieved May 30, 2018.
  47. ^ Staff (April 13, 2016). "Actress Anne Jackson, Widow of Eli Wallach, Dies at 90". Variety. Penske Business Media, LLC. Retrieved May 30, 2018.
  48. ^ Barnes, Mike (April 13, 2016). "Anne Jackson, Acclaimed Actress and Widow of Eli Wallach, Dies at 90". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved May 30, 2018.
  49. ^ "Eli Wallach – Awards". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved April 8, 2020.

External links

wallach, herschel, wallach, december, 1915, june, 2014, american, film, television, stage, actor, from, york, city, from, 1945, broadway, debut, last, film, appearance, wallach, entertainment, career, spanned, years, originally, trained, stage, acting, became,. Eli Herschel Wallach ˈ iː l aɪ ˈ w ɒ l e k December 7 1915 June 24 2014 was an American film television and stage actor from New York City From his 1945 Broadway debut to his last film appearance Wallach s entertainment career spanned 65 years Originally trained in stage acting he became one of the greatest character actors ever to appear on stage and screen 1 better source needed and ultimately garnered over 90 film credits He and his wife Anne Jackson often appeared together on stage eventually becoming a notable acting couple in American theater Eli WallachWallach in 1966BornEli Herschel Wallach 1915 12 07 December 7 1915Brooklyn New York City U S DiedJune 24 2014 2014 06 24 aged 98 Manhattan New York City U S Alma materUniversity of Texas B A City College of New York MEd Neighborhood Playhouse School of the TheatreOccupationActorYears active1945 2010SpouseAnne Jackson m 1948 wbr Children3RelativesJoan Wallach Scott niece A O Scott grandnephew AwardsBAFTA Awards Tony Awards Emmy Awards Honorary Academy AwardSignatureWallach initially studied method acting under Sanford Meisner and later became a founding member of the Actors Studio where he studied under Lee Strasberg He played a wide variety of roles throughout his career primarily as a supporting actor For his debut screen performance in Baby Doll 1956 he won a BAFTA Award for Best Newcomer and a Golden Globe Award nomination Among his other most famous roles are Calvera in The Magnificent Seven 1960 Guido in The Misfits 1961 and Tuco The Ugly in The Good the Bad and the Ugly 1966 Other notable portrayals include outlaw Charlie Gant in How the West Was Won 1962 Hitman Leon B Little in Tough Guys 1986 Don Altobello in The Godfather Part III Cotton Weinberger in The Two Jakes both 1990 Donald Fallon in The Associate 1996 and Arthur Abbott in The Holiday 2006 One of America s most prolific screen actors Wallach remained active well into his nineties with roles as late as 2010 in Wall Street Money Never Sleeps and The Ghost Writer In 1988 Wallach was inducted into the American Theater Hall of Fame 2 He received BAFTA Awards Tony Awards and Emmy Awards and an Academy Honorary Award at the second annual Governors Awards on November 13 2010 Contents 1 Early life and military service 2 Career 2 1 Stage actor 2 2 Film and television roles 3 Personal life 4 Death 5 Filmography 6 Awards and nominations 7 References 8 External linksEarly life and military service EditEli Herschel Wallach was born on December 7 1915 at 156 Union Street in Red Hook Brooklyn a son of Polish Jewish immigrants Abraham and Bertha Schorr Wallach from Przemysl He had a brother and two sisters 3 He and his family were one of a few of Jewish faith in an otherwise Italian American neighborhood 4 5 His parents owned Bertha s Candy Store 3 Wallach graduated in 1936 from the University of Texas with a degree in history 6 While there he performed in a play with fellow students Ann Sheridan and Walter Cronkite In a later interview Wallach said that he learned to ride horses while in Texas explaining that he liked Texas because It opened my eyes to the word friendship You could rely on people If they gave you their word that was it It was an education 7 Two years later he received a master of arts degree in education from the City College of New York 8 9 He gained his first method acting experience at the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre in New York City where he studied under Sanford Meisner 10 There according to Wallach actors were forced to unlearn all their physical and vocal mannerisms while traditional stage etiquette and singsong deliveries were utterly excised from his classroom 11 Wallach s education was cut short when he was drafted 3 12 into the United States Army in 1940 13 14 He served as a staff sergeant and medic 15 in a military hospital in Hawaii and later was sent to Officer Candidate School OCS in Abilene Texas to train as a medical administrative officer 13 15 16 17 Commissioned as a second lieutenant he was ordered to Casablanca Later when he was serving in France a senior officer noticed his acting career and asked him to create a show for the patients He and his unit wrote a play called Is This the Army which was inspired by Irving Berlin s This Is the Army In the comedy Wallach and the other actors mocked Axis dictators with Wallach portraying Adolf Hitler 18 Wallach was discharged as a captain following the war s end in 1945 3 13 17 He was awarded the Army Good Conduct Medal the American Defense Service Medal the American Campaign Medal the Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal the European African Middle Eastern Campaign Medal and the World War II Victory Medal 13 Career EditMain article Eli Wallach credits Stage actor Edit Wallach took classes in acting at the Dramatic Workshop of the New School in New York City with the influential German director Erwin Piscator He later became a founding member of the Actors Studio taught by Lee Strasberg There he studied more method acting technique with founding member Robert Lewis and with other students including Marlon Brando Montgomery Clift Herbert Berghof Sidney Lumet and his soon to be wife Anne Jackson 19 Wallach became Marilyn Monroe s first new friend when she became a student at the Actors Studio once insisting on watching him perform in The Teahouse of the August Moon from the backstage wings simply to see up close how experienced actors perform a two hour play 20 She also became friends with his wife Anne Jackson also studying at the Studio and would visit the couple at their home and sometimes babysit their new child 21 In 1945 Wallach made his Broadway debut and he won a Tony Award in 1951 for his performance alongside Maureen Stapleton in the Tennessee Williams play The Rose Tattoo 22 His other theater credits include Mister Roberts The Teahouse of the August Moon Camino Real Major Barbara in which director Charles Laughton discouraged Wallach s established method acting style 22 Luv and Staircase co starring Milo O Shea which was a serious depiction of an aging homosexual couple He also played a role in a tour of Antony and Cleopatra produced by the actress Katharine Cornell in 1946 23 He exposed Americans to the work of playwright Eugene Ionesco in plays like The Chairs and The Lesson in 1958 and in 1961 Rhinoceros opposite Zero Mostel 22 He last starred on stage as the title character in Visiting Mr Green 24 With Maureen Stapleton in The Rose Tattoo 1951 The stage was where Wallach focused his early career From 1945 to 1950 he and his wife Anne Jackson worked together acting in various plays by Tennessee Williams The five years following he continued only working on stage not becoming involved in film work until 1956 During those years however they were generally having a hard time making ends meet He recalls they were getting along on unemployment insurance and living in a one room 35 a month apartment on lower Fifth Avenue in the Village 3 When he did get offered early movie parts he turned them down with no regrets and very early in his career he explained his reasoning What do I need a movie for The stage is on a higher level in every way and a more satisfying medium Movies by comparison are like calendar art next to great paintings You can t really do very much in movies or in television but the stage is such an anarchistic medium 3 He said that the stage was what attracted him most and what he needed to do 25 Acting is the most alive thing I can do and the most joyous he stated 3 Wallach and Jackson became one of the best known acting couples in the American theater as iconic as Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne and Jessica Tandy and Hume Cronyn 22 and they looked for opportunities to work together During an interview he said of Jackson I have tremendous respect and admiration for her as an actress we have a terrific working compatibility when we re in the same play especially when the play means something important to us 3 159 160 When he did gravitate toward accepting parts in films he did so to help pay the bills he said adding for actors movies are a means to an end 26 Despite the fact that he eventually acted in over 90 films and almost as many television dramas 27 he continued to accept stage parts throughout his career often with Jackson They played in comedies like The Typists and The Tiger in 1963 and acted together in Waltz of the Toreadors in 1973 In 1978 they played in a revival of The Diary of Anne Frank along with their daughters and in 1984 they acted in Nest of the Wood Grouse directed by Joseph Papp Four years later in 1988 they acted in a revival of Cafe Crown a portrait of the Yiddish theatre scene during its prime 26 They continued acting together as late as 2000 while he also took on roles alone throughout all those years 26 Film and television roles Edit Wallach and Carroll Baker in the swing scene from Baby Doll Wallach s film debut was in Elia Kazan s controversial 1956 Baby Doll for which he won the British Academy Film Awards BAFTA as Most Promising Newcomer 28 Baby Doll was controversial because of its underlying sexual theme Director Elia Kazan however set explicit limits on Wallach s scenes telling him not to actually seduce Carroll Baker but instead to create an unfulfilled erotic tension 29 Kazan later explained his reasoning What is erotic about sex to me is the seduction not the act The scene on the swing with Eli Wallach and Carroll Baker in Baby Doll is my exact idea of what eroticism in films should be 30 Wallach went on to a prolific career as one of the greatest character actors ever to appear on stage and screen notes Turner Classic Movies 1 acting in over 90 films 27 Having grown up on the mean streets of an Italian American neighborhood 31 and his versatility as a method actor Wallach developed the ability to play a wide variety of different roles although he tried to not get pinned down to any single type of character Right now I m playing an old man he said at age 84 But I ve been through all the ethnic groups from Mexican bandits to Italian Mafia heads to Okinawans to half breeds and now I m playing old Jews Who knows 7 Noting this versatility as a character actor the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences called him the quintessential chameleon with the ability to play different characters effortlessly 32 and L A Times theater critic Charles McNulty saw Wallach s power to illuminate his various screen or stage personas as being radioactive 31 The Guardian newspaper has written that Wallach was made for character acting and includes movie clips from some of his most memorable roles in a tribute to him 33 In 1961 Wallach co starred with Marilyn Monroe Montgomery Clift and Clark Gable in The Misfits Monroe s and Gable s last film before their deaths 34 35 Wallach never learned why he was cast in the film although he suspected that Monroe had something to do with it 21 Its screenwriter Arthur Miller who was married to Monroe at the time said that Eli Wallach is the happiest good actor I ve ever known He really enjoys the work 1 Some of his other films included The Lineup 1958 Lord Jim 1965 with Peter O Toole a comic role in How to Steal a Million 1966 again with O Toole and Audrey Hepburn and as Tuco the Ugly in Sergio Leone s The Good the Bad and the Ugly 1966 with Clint Eastwood followed by other Spaghetti Westerns such as Ace High At one point Henry Fonda had asked Wallach whether he himself should accept a part offered to him to act in a similar Western Once Upon a Time in the West 1968 which would also be directed by Leone Wallach said Yes you ll enjoy the challenge and Fonda later thanked Wallach for that advice 36 Wallach and Eastwood became friends during the filming of The Good the Bad and the Ugly and he recalled their off work time together Clint was the tall silent type He s the kind where you open up and do all the talking He smiles and nods and stores it all away in that wonderful calculator of a brain 37 In 2003 Wallach acted in Mystic River produced and directed by Eastwood who once said working with Eli Wallach has been one of the great pleasures of my life 1 A pivotal moment in Wallach s career came in 1953 when he along with Frank Sinatra and Harvey Lembeck tried out for the role of Maggio in the film From Here to Eternity Sinatra biographer Kitty Kelly notes that while Sinatra s test was good it had none of the consummate acting ability of Wallach Producer Harry Cohn and director Fred Zinnemann were dazzled by Wallach s screen test and wanted him to play the part However Wallach had previously been offered an important role in another Tennessee Williams play Camino Real to be directed by Elia Kazan and turned down the movie role Wallach said that when he learned that the play had finally received financing he grabbed the opportunity It was a remarkable piece of writing by the leading playwright in America and it was going to be directed by the country s best There really wasn t much of a choice for me 38 The film however went on to win eight Academy Awards including one for Sinatra which revived his career Wallach recalled afterwards Whenever Sinatra saw me he d say Hello you crazy actor 4 Wallach however claimed to have no regrets Film historian James Welsh states that during Wallach s career he appeared in most of the prestige television dramas during the Golden Age of the 1950s including Studio One The Philco Television Playhouse The Armstrong Circle Theatre Playhouse 90 and The Hallmark Hall of Fame among others He won the 1966 1967 Emmy Award for his role in the telefilm The Poppy is Also a Flower 5 39 In 2006 Wallach appeared on NBC s Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip playing a former writer who was blacklisted in the 1950s His character was a writer on The Philco Comedy Hour a show that aired on a fictional NBS network This is a reference to The Philco Television Playhouse in several episodes of which Wallach actually appeared in 1955 Wallach earned a 2007 Emmy nomination for his work on the show 40 Wallach at the 2010 TCM Classic Film Festival During the filming of The Good the Bad and the Ugly Wallach nearly died three times Once he accidentally drank a bottle of acid which was placed next to his pop bottle another time was in a scene where he was about to be hanged someone fired a pistol which caused the horse underneath him to bolt and run a mile while Wallach s hands were still tied behind his back in a different scene with him lying on a railroad track he was close to being decapitated by steps jutting out from the train 41 Wallach appeared as DC Comics supervillain Mr Freeze in the 1960s Batman television series He said that he received more fan mail about his role as Mr Freeze than about all of his other roles combined 42 He played Gus Farber in the television miniseries Seventh Avenue in 1977 and 10 years later at the age of 71 he starred alongside Michael Landon in Highway to Heaven episode A Father s Faith Three years later he played aging mob boss Don Altobello in the Francis Ford Coppola s The Godfather Part III On November 13 2010 at the age of 94 Wallach received an Academy Honorary Award for his contribution to the film industry from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences 43 A few years prior to that event Kate Winslet told another audience that Wallach with whom she acted in The Holiday in 2006 44 was one of the most charismatic men she d met and her very own sexiest man alive 32 Wallach s final performance was in the short film The Train 2015 Wallach plays a Holocaust survivor who in a meeting teaches a self consumed and preoccupied young man that life can change in a moment The short was shot in early 2014 and premiered on August 6 2015 at the Rhode Island International Film Festival citation needed Between 1984 and 1997 he also performed voiceovers in a series of television commercials for the Toyota Pickup Personal life EditWallach was married to stage actress Anne Jackson for 66 years from March 5 1948 until his death They had three children Peter Roberta and Katherine Roberta played an epileptic teenager in Paul Zindel s The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man in the Moon Marigolds and appeared in several other movies citation needed Wallach was a strict teetotaler and once asked the director John Huston for advice on how to play a drunk scene during the filming of The Misfits citation needed A few years before 2005 Wallach lost sight in his left eye as the result of a stroke 32 His niece is the historian Joan Wallach Scott the daughter of his brother Sam Wallach A O Scott a film critic for The New York Times is his great nephew 27 Death EditWallach died on June 24 2014 of natural causes at the age of 98 His body was cremated 26 45 Katherine Wallach told The New York Times that Anne Jackson died on April 12 2016 aged 90 at her home in Manhattan 46 47 48 Filmography EditMain article List of Eli Wallach performances Selected filmography Baby Doll 1956 Seven Thieves 1960 The Magnificent Seven 1960 The Misfits 1961 How the West Was Won 1962 The Victors 1963 Genghis Khan 1965 The Poppy Is Also a Flower 1966 How to Steal a Million 1966 The Good the Bad and the Ugly 1966 The Tiger Makes Out 1967 How to Save a Marriage and Ruin Your Life 1968 A Lovely Way to Die 1968 Ace High 1968 Le Cerveau 1969 The Domino Principle 1977 Movie Movie 1977 The Deep 1977 Circle of Iron 1978 The Hunter 1980 Our Family Honor 1985 The Godfather Part III 1990 Night and the City 1992 Elia Kazan A Director s Journey 1995 The Associate 1996 Keeping the Faith 2000 Mystic River 2003 The Holiday 2006 New York I Love You 2008 The Ghost Writer 2010 Wall Street Money Never Sleeps 2010 Awards and nominations EditYear Award Category Nominated work Result Ref 1951 Tony Award Best Featured Actor in a Play The Rose Tattoo Won1956 British Academy Film Awards Most Promising Newcomer Baby Doll Won 49 1956 Golden Globe Awards Best Supporting Actor Nominated1967 Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series The Poppy Is Also a Flower Won1968 Outstanding Single Performance in a Drama CBS Playhouse Nominated1987 Outstanding Supporting Actor Limited Series Movie Something in Common Nominated2001 Grammy Award Best Spoken Word Album The Complete Shakespeare Sonnets Nominated2006 National Board of Review Career Achievement Award Won2007 Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip Nominated2011 Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series Nurse Jackie Nominated2011 Academy Award Honorary Academy Award WonReferences Edit a b c d Eli Wallach Tribute at the TCM Classic Film Festival 2010 on YouTube video 4 min Theater Hall of Fame Adds Nine New Names The New York Times November 22 1988 Retrieved February 6 2019 a b c d e f g h Ross Lillian Ross Helen 1962 The Player A Profile of an Art Simon and Schuster Retrieved January 2 2011 via archive org a b Leon Masha August 6 2004 Eli Wallach Knows His Lines Forward com Retrieved May 27 2020 a b Eli Wallach Biography 1915 Filmreference com Retrieved January 2 2011 Alumni in the News Eli Wallach to receive lifetime achievement award Department of History University of Texas Austin Archived from the original on February 11 2011 a b Texas The Alcalde March 2000 Marian Seldes Eli Wallach to Receive CCNY Alumni Finley Award City College of New York October 19 2010 Archived from the original on January 9 2012 Hal Erickson 2008 Biography Eli Wallach Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times Archived from the original on September 19 2008 Eli Wallach veteran actor dead at 98 CBS News June 25 2014 Gordon Mel 2010 Stanislavsky in America An Actor s Workbook Routledge p 178 From Tennessee Williams to Sergio Leone Actor Eli Wallach at 95 The Guardian via Internet Archive Retrieved May 14 2021 a b c d CPT Eli Herschel Wallach Military Timeline army togetherweserved com Retrieved September 6 2021 Famous Veterans These Celebrities Served in the United States Armed Forces veteranownedbusiness com Retrieved September 6 2021 a b Texas History Minute Eli Wallach s time in Texas helped shape him The Herald Democrat Retrieved September 6 2021 Eli Wallach American actor Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved September 6 2021 a b Eli Wallach Multifaceted Actor on Stage and Screen Dies at 98 The New York Times via Internet Archive Retrieved September 6 2021 Eli Wallach Biography Starpulse com Archived from the original on March 5 2016 Retrieved June 26 2014 Lewis Robert 1996 Actors Studio 1947 Slings and Arrows Theater in My Life New York Applause Books p 183 ISBN 1 55783 244 7 Gottfried Martin Arthur Miller His Life and Work Da Capo Press 2003 p 245 a b Harding Les 2012 They Knew Marilyn Monroe Famous Persons in the Life of the Hollywood Icon McFarland p 154 a b c d Simonson Robert June 25 2014 Eli Wallach Seasoned Star of Stage and Film Dies at 98 Playbill Archived from the original on August 17 2014 Retrieved June 26 2014 Mosel Leading Lady The World and Theatre of Katharine Cornell David Ng Eli Wallach an Actors Studio veteran and theater stalwart Los Angeles Times Retrieved June 25 2014 Wallach Eli May 6 2010 TCM interview The Evening Class Interview Interviewed by Robert Osborne via blogspot com a b c d Berkvist Robert June 25 2014 Eli Wallach Multifaceted Actor Dies at 98 The New York Times a b c Scott A O November 4 2010 Eli Wallach From Brooklyn to Honorary Oscar The New York Times Archived from the original on January 1 2022 Heintzelman Greta 2005 Critical Companion to Tennessee Williams Infobase Publishing p 33 Wallach Eli 2005 The Good the Bad and Me In My Anecdotage Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 172 ISBN 9780151011896 Young Jeff 1999 Kazan The Master Director Discusses His Films Interviews with Elia Kazan Newmarket Press p 224 ISBN 9781557043382 a b McNulty Charles June 25 2014 Eli Wallach had the power to illuminate a character on stage and screen Los Angeles Times a b c Eli Wallach dead Star of The Good the Bad and the Ugly dies aged 98 Mirror UK June 25 2014 Eli Wallach a career in clips The Guardian June 25 2014 Churchwell Sarah December 27 2005 2004 The Many Lives of Marilyn Monroe Granta Books p 266 ISBN 978 0 312 42565 4 Miller Arthur 1987 Timebends New York Grove Press p 485 ISBN 0 8021 0015 5 Schochet Stephen 2010 Hollywood Stories Short Entertaining Anecdotes about the Stars and Legend Hollywood Stories Publishing p 118 McGilligan Patrick 1999 Clint The Life and Legend Macmillan p 154 Kelly Kitty His Way An Unauthorized Biography Of Frank Sinatra Random House 2010 Welsch James M and Phillips Gene D The Francis Ford Coppola Encyclopedia Scarecrow Press 2010 p 273 List of Emmy Nominations 2007 TVWeek July 19 2007 Archived from the original on September 24 2012 Retrieved June 26 2014 Armour Philip 2011 The 100 Greatest Western Movies of All Time Morris Book Publishing p 70 Eli Wallach prolific U S character actor dies at 98 Reuters com June 25 2014 Eli Wallach s acceptance speech Honorary Academy Award Governors Award ceremony on YouTube November 13 2010 The Holiday Arthur s award ceremony August 17 2011 Archived from the original on June 25 2014 Retrieved February 13 2016 via YouTube Reuters Editorial June 25 2014 Eli Wallach prolific U S character actor dies at 98 Reuters Retrieved February 13 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help McFadden Robert D April 13 2016 Anne Jackson Stage Star With Her Husband Eli Wallach Dies at 90 The New York Times Retrieved May 30 2018 Staff April 13 2016 Actress Anne Jackson Widow of Eli Wallach Dies at 90 Variety Penske Business Media LLC Retrieved May 30 2018 Barnes Mike April 13 2016 Anne Jackson Acclaimed Actress and Widow of Eli Wallach Dies at 90 The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved May 30 2018 Eli Wallach Awards Internet Movie Database Retrieved April 8 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eli Wallach Eli Wallach at the Internet Broadway Database Eli Wallach at IMDb Eli Wallach at the TCM Movie Database Eli Wallach at the Internet Off Broadway Database Anne Jackson and Eli Wallach Papers at the Harry Ransom Center The Bookwrap video interviews The short film The Actor As Citizen 1998 is available for free download at the Internet Archive Preceded byOtto Preminger Mr Freeze Actor1967 Succeeded byArnold Schwarzenegger Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eli Wallach amp oldid 1143440690, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.