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Steven Hill

Steven Hill (born Solomon Krakovsky; Yiddish: שלמה קראַקאָווסקי; February 24, 1922 – August 23, 2016) was an American actor. He is best known for his television roles as district attorney Adam Schiff on the NBC television drama series Law & Order (1990–2000) and Dan Briggs on the CBS action television series Mission: Impossible (1966–1967). For the former, he received two nominations for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series.

Steven Hill
Hill in 1966
Born
Solomon Krakovsky

(1922-02-24)February 24, 1922
DiedAugust 23, 2016(2016-08-23) (aged 94)
Other namesSteve Hill
EducationUniversity of Washington
OccupationActor
Years active1928–1967; 1977–2000
Spouses
Selma Stern
(m. 1951; div. 1964)
Rachel Schenker
(m. 1967)
Children9

His film roles include The Goddess (1958), A Child Is Waiting (1963), The Slender Thread (1965), Yentl (1983), Raw Deal (1986), Running on Empty (1988), Billy Bathgate (1991), and The Firm (1993).

Early life Edit

Hill was born Solomon Krakovsky[1][2][3][4] in Seattle, Washington, to Russian Jewish immigrants.[5][6] His father owned a furniture store.[7] He decided to become an actor at age six when he played the lead in The Pied Piper of Hamelin.[8]

After graduating from Garfield High School in 1939, Hill (known at the time as Sol Krakovsky) attended the University of Washington[9] and served four years in the United States Navy during World War II.[10] He graduated from the University of Washington and moved first to Chicago[7] and then to New York City to pursue an acting career.[6]

Career Edit

Debut Edit

Hill made his first Broadway stage appearance in Ben Hecht's A Flag Is Born in 1946, which also featured a young Marlon Brando.[5] Hill said that his big break came when he landed a small part in the hit Broadway show Mister Roberts.[5] "The director, Joshua Logan, thought I had some ability, and he let me create one of the scenes," said Hill.[5] "So, I improvised a dialog, and it went in the show. That was my first endorsement. It gave me tremendous encouragement to stay in the business."[5] Hill said this was a thrilling time in his life when, fresh out of the Navy, he played the hapless sailor Stefanowski.[11] "You could almost smell it from the very first reading that took place; this is going to be an overwhelming hit," said Hill.[11] "We all felt it and experienced it and were convinced of it, and we were riding the crest of a wave from the very first day of rehearsals."[11]

Actors Studio member Edit

In 1947, Hill joined Brando, Montgomery Clift, and Julie Harris, among others, as one of the 50 applicants (out of about 700 interviewed) to be accepted by the newly created Actors Studio.[12][13]

Early screen work Edit

Hill made his film debut in 1950 in A Lady Without Passport.[14] He then re-enlisted in the Navy in 1952 for two years and, when he completed his service, resumed his acting in earnest.[14] Strasberg later said, "Steven Hill is considered one of the finest actors America has ever produced."[14] When he was starting out as an actor, Hill sought out roles that had a social purpose.[5] "Later, I learned that show business is about entertaining," he said.[5] "So, I've had to reconcile my idealistic feelings with reality."[5]

TV's Golden Age Edit

Hill was particularly busy in the so-called "Golden Age" of live TV drama, appearing in such offerings as The Trial of Sacco and Vanzetti in 1960, where he portrayed Bartolomeo Vanzetti.[14] "When I first became an actor, there were two young actors in New York: Marlon Brando and Steven Hill," said Martin Landau,[14] who later became Hill's castmate in the first season of Mission: Impossible. Landau went on to admit, "A lot of people said that Steven would have been the one, not Marlon. He was legendary — nuts, volatile, mad — and his work was exciting."[14]

In 1961, Hill had an unusual experience when he was cast as Sigmund Freud on Broadway in Henry Denker's A Far Country,[15] portraying Freud at the age of 35.[16] For on April 12, 1961, the night of a sold-out performance for the Masters Children's Center of Dobbs Ferry, Hill was stricken with a virus[17] which incapacitated him so severely that as a direct result, just as the curtain was about to rise, the producers decided to cancel the performance.[17] Among the notables in the audience were Joseph P. Kennedy, Jack Benny, and Richard Rodgers.[17] The audience was invited to exchange their ticket stubs for other performances.[17] The understudy was not ready to replace Hill, so Alfred Ryder, the play's director, stepped into the role of Freud for one performance.[18]

In 1961, he was cast as B.E. Langard in the episode "Act of Piracy" of the ABC series, Adventures in Paradise, which starred Gardner McKay. He appeared in the original Robert Stack ABC/Desilu crime drama, The Untouchables episode "Jack 'Legs' Diamond," giving a compelling, cold, evil performance as the eponymous character, and a similar sinister role as a bedridden (following an accident), ruthlessly manipulative millionaire in "The White Knight," a 1966 black-and-white, third-season episode of The Fugitive, which starred David Janssen.[7]

Hill's early screen credits include The Goddess and A Child Is Waiting.[7]

Mission: Impossible Edit

Hill was the original leader of the Impossible Missions Force, Dan Briggs, in the series Mission: Impossible beginning in 1966. The phrase "Good morning, Mr. Briggs..." was a fixture early in each episode, where a sound or film recording he retrieved detailed the task he must accomplish. However, he was replaced in the show in 1967 after the end of the first season. As one of the few Orthodox Jewish actors working in Hollywood, he made it clear in advance of production that he was not able to work on the Sabbath (i.e., sundown Friday to dusk Saturday), and that he would leave the set every Friday before sundown.[7] However, despite Hill's advance warnings, the show's producers were unprepared for his rigid adherence to the Sabbath, and on at least one occasion, Hill left the set while an episode was still in the midst of filming. The producers used a number of ways of reducing the role of Hill's character, Dan Briggs, whereby he would only obtain and hand out the mission details at the start of certain episodes, being unable to take further part in the mission as he was known to people they would encounter (used at least three times), or Briggs would need to don a disguise and another actor would then play his role incognito until the conclusion of the mission (and episode) when Briggs would peel off a face mask. On other occasions, Briggs was waiting to pick up the team at the end. Usually, Martin Landau's character (Rollin Hand) took over as the team leader for missions in Briggs' absence, Landau being initially a "special guest star" for the first season, not even included in the show's original opening credits.[7]

According to Desilu executive Herb Solow, William Shatner once burst into his office, claiming "Steve asked me how many Jews worked on Star Trek. He was recruiting a minyon, a prayer group of 10 men, to worship together on top of the studio's highest building and only had six Jews so far from Mission. He asked if I would come and bring Nimoy and Justman and you."[19]

Hill was briefly suspended from the show near the end of the season, during the production of episode 23, titled "Action!" In it, for the only time, Barbara Bain's character Cinnamon Carter obtained the mission details through the taped instructions, even though Landau's character, Rollin Hand, then actually led the team. The suspension was imposed after he refused to climb the rafters via a sound stage staircase, as was called for in the script.[20] This incident was ostensibly unrelated to any religious observances of Hill's. Consequently, Hill was written out of that episode and when he returned to Mission: Impossible for the five remaining episodes of the season, his role was severely reduced. Hill was not asked to return for season two, and was replaced as the show's star by Peter Graves.[21]

Hiatus and return to acting Edit

After appearing in Mission: Impossible, Hill did no acting work for the following 10 years. Hill had what he calls "tremendous periods of unemployment" in his career.[5] "What we have here is a story of profound instability and impermanence," he said of his own career.[5] "This is what you learn at the beginning in show business; then it gets planted in you forever."[5] Hill left acting in 1967 and moved to a Jewish community in Rockland County, New York, where he worked in writing and real estate.[22] Patrick J. White, in The Complete "Mission: Impossible" Dossier, quoted Hill as having said later, "I don't think an actor should act every single day. I don't think it's good for the so-called creative process. You must have periods when you leave the land fallow, let it revitalize itself."[22]

Hill returned to work in the 1980s and 1990s, playing parental and authority-figure roles in such films as Yentl (1983), Garbo Talks (1984), Neil Simon's Brighton Beach Memoirs, Heartburn (1986), Running on Empty (1988), The Boost (1988), Billy Bathgate (1991), and The Firm (1993). Hill also appeared as a mob kingpin in Raw Deal (1986), an action vehicle for Arnold Schwarzenegger. Hill played New York District Attorney Bower in the 1986 comedy-drama Legal Eagles, foreshadowing his appearance as Adam Schiff in Law & Order.[7]

Law & Order Edit

Hill became best known, to an even greater degree than from his role in Mission: Impossible, as Adam Schiff in the NBC TV drama series Law & Order, a part that he played for 10 seasons, from 1990 to 2000. Hill's character was loosely modeled on the real former district attorney of New York City, Robert Morgenthau,[23] and Morgenthau reportedly was a fan of the character.[24][25] Hill admitted that he found the character of Adam Schiff his most difficult role because of all the legal jargon he had to learn.[5] "It's like acting in a second language," said Hill.[5] Hill added that he agreed with the show's philosophy, saying that "there's a certain positive statement in this show. So much is negative today. The positive must be stated to rescue us from pandemonium. To me it lies in that principle: law and order."[5] Hill earned an Emmy nomination for Best Supporting Actor in a Dramatic Series in 1999 for his work on Law & Order.[26]

Personal life Edit

Family Edit

Hill and his first wife, Selma Stern, were married in 1951 and had four children before divorcing in 1964. Hill married his second wife, Rachel Schenker, in 1967 and they had five children. He resided in Monsey, New York for many years.[27][28][29][30]

Orthodox Judaism Edit

In a 1969 interview with The Jewish Press, Hill said: "I used to ask myself, 'Was I born just to memorize lines?' I knew there had to be more to life than that. I was searching—trying to find the answers—to find myself—and I did." Hill said that he had gone home to Seattle ten years earlier and was "feeling depressed because I seemed to be leading an aimless existence. Oh sure, I was a star with all the glamour and everything. But something was missing. My life seemed empty—meaningless."[27]

Appearing as Sigmund Freud in the play A Far Country in 1961 had a profound effect on Hill. In one scene, a patient screams at Freud, "You are a Jew!" This caused Hill to think about his religion.[14] "In the pause that followed I would think, 'What about this?' I slowly became aware that there was something more profound going on in the world than just plays and movies and TV shows. I was provoked to explore my religion."[14]

Hill began to study Torah with Rabbi Yakov Yosef Twersky (1899–1968), the late Skverrer Rebbe,[31] and started adhering to Orthodox Judaism. He observed a kosher diet, prayed three times a day, wore a tallit katan (four-cornered fringed garment) beneath his clothes, and strictly observed Shabbat.[14][27] Hill's Shabbat observance made him unavailable for Friday night or Saturday matinee performances, effectively ending his stage career; it also made many film roles—most notably a role in The Sand Pebbles—impractical for him.[14]

Letters from Hill sent in 1965 to an Orthodox Jewish friend, describing this challenging period in his life were recently found.[32]

Death Edit

Hill died of cancer in a New York hospital on August 23, 2016, at the age of 94.[27][28][29][30]

Filmography Edit

Film Edit

Year Title Role Notes
1950 A Lady Without Passport Jack
1955 Storm Fear Benjie
1958 The Goddess John Tower Credited as Steve Hill
1959 Kiss Her Goodbye Ed Wilson
1963 A Child Is Waiting Ted Widdicombe
1965 The Slender Thread Mark Dyson
1970 Miracle of Survival: Israel's Heroic Battle for Life Narrator[33]
1980 It's My Turn Dr. Jacob Gunzinger
1981 Eyewitness Lieutenant Jacobs
Rich and Famous Jules Levi
1983 Yentl Reb Alter Vishkower
1984 Teachers Sloan
Garbo Talks Walter Rolfe
1986 On Valentine's Day George Tyler
Raw Deal Martin 'The Hammer' Lamanski
Legal Eagles Bower
Heartburn Rachel's Father
Brighton Beach Memoirs Mr. Stroheim
1987 Courtship George Tyler
1988 Running on Empty Mr. Patterson
The Boost Max Sherman
1990 White Palace Sol Horowitz
1991 Billy Bathgate Otto Berman
1993 The Firm US Attorney F. Denton Voyles

Television Edit

Year Title Role Notes
1949 Suspense Guest Star Episode: "The Serpent Ring" (S 2:Ep 7)
Actors Studio Guest Star 4 episodes
1950 Suspense Dolph Romano
  • Episode: "My Old Man's Badge" (S 2:Ep 29)
  • Credited as Steve Hill
1952 Schlitz Playhouse of Stars Guest Star Episode: "The Man that I Marry" (S 1:Ep 16)
Danger Guest Star Episode: "The Hero" (S 2:Ep 28)
Lux Video Theatre Hank Episode: "A Legacy For Love" (S 3:Ep 7)
1953 The Philco Television Playhouse Guest Star Episode: "The Long Way Home" (S 5:Ep 17)
1954 Goodyear Television Playhouse Mr. Frank Episode: "The Inward Eye" (S 3:Ep 11)
1954 Goodyear Television Playhouse Guest Star Episode: "The Arena" (S 3:Ep 21)
The Philco Television Playhouse George Episode: "Middle of the Night" (S 7:p 1)
The Philco Television Playhouse Horace Mann Borden Episode: "Man on the Mountain" (S 7:Ep 3)
1956 Playwrights '56 Walter Uhlan Episode: "Lost" (S 1:Ep 9)
1957 Studio One 'Slim' Breedlove Episode: "The Traveling Lady" (S 9:Ep 28)
Alfred Hitchcock Presents Joe Kedzie Season 3 Episode 7: "Enough Rope for Two"
1958 DuPont Show of the Month Guest Star Episode:"The Bridge of San Luis Rey" (S 1:Ep 5)
1959 Playhouse 90 Agustin Episodes:
  • "For Whom the Bell Tolls, part 1" (S 3:Ep 23)
  • "For Whom the Bell Tolls, part 2" (S 3:Ep 24)
1960 Playhouse 90 Dr. Edward Gutera Episode: "Journey to the Day" (S 4:Ep 14)
Sacco-Vanzetti Story Bartolomeo Vanzetti Presented on 'NBC Sunday Showcase (1960), nominated for Primetime Emmy Awards as "program of the year"
The Untouchables Jack "Legs" Diamond Episode: "Jack "Legs" Diamond" (S 2:Ep 2)
1961 Adventures in Paradise B.E. Langard Episode: "Act of Piracy" (S 2:Ep 18)
1962 Route 66 Frank Madera Episode: "A City of Wheels" (S 2:Ep 17)
The Untouchables Joseph December Jr. Episode: "Downfall" (S 3:Ep 22)
The Eleventh Hour Guest Star Episode: "There Are Dragons in This Forest" (S 1:Ep 2)
Ben Casey Ollie Episode: "Legacy From A Stranger" (S 2:Ep 4)
1962 Dr. Kildare Dr. Chandra Ramid Episode: "The Cobweb Chain" (S 2:Ep 8)
1963 Ben Casey Dr. Keith Bernard Episode: "I'll Be Alright In The Morning" (S 2:Ep 14)
Naked City Stanley Episode: "Barefoot on a Bed of Coals" (S 4:Ep 34)
Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre Ruben Fare Episode: "Something About Lee Wiley" (S 1:Ep 2)
Espionage Andrew Evans Episode: "The Incurable One" (S 1:Ep 3)
1964 The Greatest Show on Earth Guest Star Episode: "Corsicans Don't Cry" (S 1:Ep 16)
The Alfred Hitchcock Hour Charlie Osgood Episode: "Who Needs an Enemy?"" (S 2:Ep 28)
1965 The Alfred Hitchcock Hour Robert Manners Episode: "Thanatos Palace Hotel" (S 3:Ep 15)
Kraft Suspense Theatre Guest Star Episode: "The Safe House" (S 2:Ep 26)
Rawhide Marty Brown Episode: "The Gray Rock Hotel" (S 7:Ep 30)
1966 The Fugitive Glenn Madison Episode: "The White Knight" (S 3:Ep 26)
1966–67 Mission: Impossible Dan Briggs Main cast
1977 The Andros Targets Ed Conway Episode: "In The Event of my Death" (S 1:Ep 4)[34]
1978 King Stanley Levison TV miniseries
1984–85 One Life to Live Aristotle Descamedes Recurring[35][36]
1986 Between Two Women Teddy Petherton TV movie
1988 Thirtysomethng Leo Steadman Episode: "Business as Usual" (S 1:Ep 15)
1989 Columbo Mr. Marosco Episode: "Murder, Smoke and Shadows" (S 8:Ep 2)
1990–2000 Law & Order Adam Schiff Main cast, (final appearance)
2000 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Adam Schiff Episode: "Entitled" (S 1:Ep 15)
2003 E's 101: Most Shocking Moments in Entertainment Himself Interview

References Edit

  1. ^ Law & Order: The Unofficial Companion
  2. ^ Joseph F. Clarke (1977). Pseudonyms. BCA. p. 84.
  3. ^ Adrian Room (1 July 2010). Dictionary of Pseudonyms: 13,000 Assumed Names and Their Origins (5th ed.). McFarland. p. 229. ISBN 978-0-7864-5763-2.
  4. ^ 1940 Census, Accessed via Ancestry Library Edition[verification needed]
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Signoff; On 'Law and Order,' a Real Idealist", The New York Times, February 2, 1996.
  6. ^ a b "Steven Hill Biography". biography.com. Retrieved February 1, 2015.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Gates, Anita (August 23, 2016). "Steven Hill, Who Starred on 'Law & Order' and 'Mission: Impossible,' Dies at 94". New York Times. Retrieved 23 August 2016.
  8. ^ "Monsey actor Steven Hill dies, starred in 'Law & Order'". lohud.com. Retrieved 2020-04-26.
  9. ^ "Sol Krakovsky, Junior," listing with photograph, US School Yearbooks, University of Washington, 1942, Ancestry Library Edition[verification needed]
  10. ^ Koseluk, Chris (23 August 2016). "Steven Hill, District Attorney Adam Schiff on 'Law & Order,' Dies at 94". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2020-04-26.
  11. ^ a b c Purdum, Todd (March 6, 2005), "Mister Roberts' Goes to Washington", The New York Times.
  12. ^ Robert Lewis (1996) [1984]. "Actors Studio, 1947". Slings and Arrows: Theater in My Life. New York: Applause Books. p. 183. ISBN 1-55783-244-7. At the end of the summer, on Gadget's return from Hollywood, we settled the roster of actors for our two classes in what we called the Actors Studio - using the word 'studio' as we had when we named our workshop in the Group, the Group Theatre Studio... My group, meeting three times a week, consisted of Marlon Brando, Montgomery Clift, Maureen Stapleton, Eli Wallach, Mildred Dunnock, Jerome Robbins, Herbert Berghof, Tom Ewell, John Forsythe, Anne Jackson, Sidney Lumet, Kevin McCarthy, Karl Malden, E.G. Marshall, Patricia Neal, Beatrice Straight, David Wayne, and - well, I don't want to drop names, so I'll stop there. In all, there were about fifty.
  13. ^ Dick Kleiner: "The Actors Studio: Making Stars Out of the Unknown," The Sarasota Journal (Friday, December 21, 1956), p. 26. "That first year, they interviewed around 700 actors and picked 50. In that first group were people like Marlon Brando, Montgomery Clift, Tom Ewell, John Forsythe, Julie Harris, Kim Hunter, Karl Malden, E.G. Marshall, Margaret Phillips, Maureen Stapleton, Kim Stanley, Jo Van Fleet, Eli Wallach, Ray Walston, and David Wayne."
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Sobiski, John, Steven Hill: Hollywood's Most Talented Curmudgeon.
  15. ^ . Time. April 14, 1961. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved May 24, 2010.
  16. ^ Zolotow, Sam (December 22, 1960), "Co-Stars Named for 'Far Country'", The New York Times.
  17. ^ a b c d "'Far Country' Not Given", The New York Times, April 12, 1961.
  18. ^ Esterow, Milton (April 13, 1962), "Director with Actor Complex Replaces Ill Star in Freud Role", The New York Times.
  19. ^ Solow, H; Justman, R (1996), Inside Star Trek: The Real Story, Pocket Books, p. 99.
  20. ^ White 1991, pp. 98–99.
  21. ^ White 1991, pp. 60–61, 100.
  22. ^ a b "New Play on Broadway", The New Times, April 14, 1961.
  23. ^ Kitman, Marvin (2000-08-02). . CNN.com. CNN. Archived from the original on 2006-12-05. Retrieved 2008-07-01.
  24. ^ "Robert Morgenthau". jewishvirtuallibrary.org. AICE. Retrieved March 15, 2022.
  25. ^ Kolker, Robert (July 16, 2004). "Happy 85th Birthday, Bob Morgenthau". New York. Retrieved March 15, 2022 – via NYMag.com.
  26. ^ "Nominees / Winners 1999". emmys.com. Television Academy.
  27. ^ a b c d Zalman, Jonathan (2016-08-25). "The Moment Steven Hill Knew He Had to Become Closer to Judaism". Tablet Magazine. Retrieved 2020-04-25.
  28. ^ a b Gates, Anita (2016-08-23). "Steven Hill, Who Starred on 'Law & Order' and 'Mission: Impossible,' Dies at 94". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-04-25.
  29. ^ a b "Petira of R' Shlomo (Steven) Hill Z'L [UPDATED]". Retrieved 2016-10-22.
  30. ^ a b Dagan, Carmel (2016-08-23). "Steven Hill, D.A. Adam Schiff on 'Law & Order,' Dies at 94". Variety. Retrieved 2016-10-22.
  31. ^ BENSOUSSAN, Barbara (June 30, 2010), "The Master Storyteller: Rabbi Yehoshua Leib Hill Tells His Story", Mishpacha (315).
  32. ^ IMPROBABLE MISSION: With his future at stake, actor Steven Hill clung to Shabbos
  33. ^ Barnes & Noble, Miracle of Survival: Israel's Heroic Battle for Life.
  34. ^ The Classic TV Archive, The Andros Targets (1977).
  35. ^ Schemering, Christopher (September 1985). "One Life to Live". The Soap Opera Encyclopedia. Ballantine Books. pp. 158–166. ISBN 0-345-32459-5.
  36. ^ Waggett, Gerard J. (November 1997). "One Life to Live". The Soap Opera Encyclopedia. Harper Paperbacks. pp. 163–188. ISBN 0-06-101157-6.

Bibliography Edit

  • White, Patrick J. (1991), The Complete Mission: Impossible Dossier, Avon Books, ISBN 978-0380758777, OCLC 60270697

External links Edit

steven, hill, other, people, named, steven, steve, stephen, hill, stephen, hill, born, solomon, krakovsky, yiddish, שלמה, קרא, קא, ווסקי, february, 1922, august, 2016, american, actor, best, known, television, roles, district, attorney, adam, schiff, televisio. For other people named Steven Steve or Stephen Hill see Stephen Hill Steven Hill born Solomon Krakovsky Yiddish שלמה קרא קא ווסקי February 24 1922 August 23 2016 was an American actor He is best known for his television roles as district attorney Adam Schiff on the NBC television drama series Law amp Order 1990 2000 and Dan Briggs on the CBS action television series Mission Impossible 1966 1967 For the former he received two nominations for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series Steven HillHill in 1966BornSolomon Krakovsky 1922 02 24 February 24 1922Seattle Washington U S DiedAugust 23 2016 2016 08 23 aged 94 Monsey New York U S Other namesSteve HillEducationUniversity of WashingtonOccupationActorYears active1928 1967 1977 2000SpousesSelma Stern m 1951 div 1964 wbr Rachel Schenker m 1967 wbr Children9His film roles include The Goddess 1958 A Child Is Waiting 1963 The Slender Thread 1965 Yentl 1983 Raw Deal 1986 Running on Empty 1988 Billy Bathgate 1991 and The Firm 1993 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Debut 2 2 Actors Studio member 2 3 Early screen work 2 4 TV s Golden Age 2 5 Mission Impossible 2 6 Hiatus and return to acting 2 7 Law amp Order 3 Personal life 3 1 Family 3 2 Orthodox Judaism 4 Death 5 Filmography 5 1 Film 5 2 Television 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksEarly life EditHill was born Solomon Krakovsky 1 2 3 4 in Seattle Washington to Russian Jewish immigrants 5 6 His father owned a furniture store 7 He decided to become an actor at age six when he played the lead in The Pied Piper of Hamelin 8 After graduating from Garfield High School in 1939 Hill known at the time as Sol Krakovsky attended the University of Washington 9 and served four years in the United States Navy during World War II 10 He graduated from the University of Washington and moved first to Chicago 7 and then to New York City to pursue an acting career 6 Career EditDebut Edit Hill made his first Broadway stage appearance in Ben Hecht s A Flag Is Born in 1946 which also featured a young Marlon Brando 5 Hill said that his big break came when he landed a small part in the hit Broadway show Mister Roberts 5 The director Joshua Logan thought I had some ability and he let me create one of the scenes said Hill 5 So I improvised a dialog and it went in the show That was my first endorsement It gave me tremendous encouragement to stay in the business 5 Hill said this was a thrilling time in his life when fresh out of the Navy he played the hapless sailor Stefanowski 11 You could almost smell it from the very first reading that took place this is going to be an overwhelming hit said Hill 11 We all felt it and experienced it and were convinced of it and we were riding the crest of a wave from the very first day of rehearsals 11 Actors Studio member Edit In 1947 Hill joined Brando Montgomery Clift and Julie Harris among others as one of the 50 applicants out of about 700 interviewed to be accepted by the newly created Actors Studio 12 13 Early screen work Edit Hill made his film debut in 1950 in A Lady Without Passport 14 He then re enlisted in the Navy in 1952 for two years and when he completed his service resumed his acting in earnest 14 Strasberg later said Steven Hill is considered one of the finest actors America has ever produced 14 When he was starting out as an actor Hill sought out roles that had a social purpose 5 Later I learned that show business is about entertaining he said 5 So I ve had to reconcile my idealistic feelings with reality 5 TV s Golden Age Edit Main article Golden Age of Television Hill was particularly busy in the so called Golden Age of live TV drama appearing in such offerings as The Trial of Sacco and Vanzetti in 1960 where he portrayed Bartolomeo Vanzetti 14 When I first became an actor there were two young actors in New York Marlon Brando and Steven Hill said Martin Landau 14 who later became Hill s castmate in the first season of Mission Impossible Landau went on to admit A lot of people said that Steven would have been the one not Marlon He was legendary nuts volatile mad and his work was exciting 14 In 1961 Hill had an unusual experience when he was cast as Sigmund Freud on Broadway in Henry Denker s A Far Country 15 portraying Freud at the age of 35 16 For on April 12 1961 the night of a sold out performance for the Masters Children s Center of Dobbs Ferry Hill was stricken with a virus 17 which incapacitated him so severely that as a direct result just as the curtain was about to rise the producers decided to cancel the performance 17 Among the notables in the audience were Joseph P Kennedy Jack Benny and Richard Rodgers 17 The audience was invited to exchange their ticket stubs for other performances 17 The understudy was not ready to replace Hill so Alfred Ryder the play s director stepped into the role of Freud for one performance 18 In 1961 he was cast as B E Langard in the episode Act of Piracy of the ABC series Adventures in Paradise which starred Gardner McKay He appeared in the original Robert Stack ABC Desilu crime drama The Untouchables episode Jack Legs Diamond giving a compelling cold evil performance as the eponymous character and a similar sinister role as a bedridden following an accident ruthlessly manipulative millionaire in The White Knight a 1966 black and white third season episode of The Fugitive which starred David Janssen 7 Hill s early screen credits include The Goddess and A Child Is Waiting 7 Mission Impossible Edit Hill was the original leader of the Impossible Missions Force Dan Briggs in the series Mission Impossible beginning in 1966 The phrase Good morning Mr Briggs was a fixture early in each episode where a sound or film recording he retrieved detailed the task he must accomplish However he was replaced in the show in 1967 after the end of the first season As one of the few Orthodox Jewish actors working in Hollywood he made it clear in advance of production that he was not able to work on the Sabbath i e sundown Friday to dusk Saturday and that he would leave the set every Friday before sundown 7 However despite Hill s advance warnings the show s producers were unprepared for his rigid adherence to the Sabbath and on at least one occasion Hill left the set while an episode was still in the midst of filming The producers used a number of ways of reducing the role of Hill s character Dan Briggs whereby he would only obtain and hand out the mission details at the start of certain episodes being unable to take further part in the mission as he was known to people they would encounter used at least three times or Briggs would need to don a disguise and another actor would then play his role incognito until the conclusion of the mission and episode when Briggs would peel off a face mask On other occasions Briggs was waiting to pick up the team at the end Usually Martin Landau s character Rollin Hand took over as the team leader for missions in Briggs absence Landau being initially a special guest star for the first season not even included in the show s original opening credits 7 According to Desilu executive Herb Solow William Shatner once burst into his office claiming Steve asked me how many Jews worked on Star Trek He was recruiting a minyon a prayer group of 10 men to worship together on top of the studio s highest building and only had six Jews so far from Mission He asked if I would come and bring Nimoy and Justman and you 19 Hill was briefly suspended from the show near the end of the season during the production of episode 23 titled Action In it for the only time Barbara Bain s character Cinnamon Carter obtained the mission details through the taped instructions even though Landau s character Rollin Hand then actually led the team The suspension was imposed after he refused to climb the rafters via a sound stage staircase as was called for in the script 20 This incident was ostensibly unrelated to any religious observances of Hill s Consequently Hill was written out of that episode and when he returned to Mission Impossible for the five remaining episodes of the season his role was severely reduced Hill was not asked to return for season two and was replaced as the show s star by Peter Graves 21 Hiatus and return to acting Edit After appearing in Mission Impossible Hill did no acting work for the following 10 years Hill had what he calls tremendous periods of unemployment in his career 5 What we have here is a story of profound instability and impermanence he said of his own career 5 This is what you learn at the beginning in show business then it gets planted in you forever 5 Hill left acting in 1967 and moved to a Jewish community in Rockland County New York where he worked in writing and real estate 22 Patrick J White in The Complete Mission Impossible Dossier quoted Hill as having said later I don t think an actor should act every single day I don t think it s good for the so called creative process You must have periods when you leave the land fallow let it revitalize itself 22 Hill returned to work in the 1980s and 1990s playing parental and authority figure roles in such films as Yentl 1983 Garbo Talks 1984 Neil Simon s Brighton Beach Memoirs Heartburn 1986 Running on Empty 1988 The Boost 1988 Billy Bathgate 1991 and The Firm 1993 Hill also appeared as a mob kingpin in Raw Deal 1986 an action vehicle for Arnold Schwarzenegger Hill played New York District Attorney Bower in the 1986 comedy drama Legal Eagles foreshadowing his appearance as Adam Schiff in Law amp Order 7 Law amp Order Edit Hill became best known to an even greater degree than from his role in Mission Impossible as Adam Schiff in the NBC TV drama series Law amp Order a part that he played for 10 seasons from 1990 to 2000 Hill s character was loosely modeled on the real former district attorney of New York City Robert Morgenthau 23 and Morgenthau reportedly was a fan of the character 24 25 Hill admitted that he found the character of Adam Schiff his most difficult role because of all the legal jargon he had to learn 5 It s like acting in a second language said Hill 5 Hill added that he agreed with the show s philosophy saying that there s a certain positive statement in this show So much is negative today The positive must be stated to rescue us from pandemonium To me it lies in that principle law and order 5 Hill earned an Emmy nomination for Best Supporting Actor in a Dramatic Series in 1999 for his work on Law amp Order 26 Personal life EditFamily Edit Hill and his first wife Selma Stern were married in 1951 and had four children before divorcing in 1964 Hill married his second wife Rachel Schenker in 1967 and they had five children He resided in Monsey New York for many years 27 28 29 30 Orthodox Judaism Edit In a 1969 interview with The Jewish Press Hill said I used to ask myself Was I born just to memorize lines I knew there had to be more to life than that I was searching trying to find the answers to find myself and I did Hill said that he had gone home to Seattle ten years earlier and was feeling depressed because I seemed to be leading an aimless existence Oh sure I was a star with all the glamour and everything But something was missing My life seemed empty meaningless 27 Appearing as Sigmund Freud in the play A Far Country in 1961 had a profound effect on Hill In one scene a patient screams at Freud You are a Jew This caused Hill to think about his religion 14 In the pause that followed I would think What about this I slowly became aware that there was something more profound going on in the world than just plays and movies and TV shows I was provoked to explore my religion 14 Hill began to study Torah with Rabbi Yakov Yosef Twersky 1899 1968 the late Skverrer Rebbe 31 and started adhering to Orthodox Judaism He observed a kosher diet prayed three times a day wore a tallit katan four cornered fringed garment beneath his clothes and strictly observed Shabbat 14 27 Hill s Shabbat observance made him unavailable for Friday night or Saturday matinee performances effectively ending his stage career it also made many film roles most notably a role in The Sand Pebbles impractical for him 14 Letters from Hill sent in 1965 to an Orthodox Jewish friend describing this challenging period in his life were recently found 32 Death EditHill died of cancer in a New York hospital on August 23 2016 at the age of 94 27 28 29 30 Filmography EditFilm Edit Year Title Role Notes1950 A Lady Without Passport Jack1955 Storm Fear Benjie1958 The Goddess John Tower Credited as Steve Hill1959 Kiss Her Goodbye Ed Wilson1963 A Child Is Waiting Ted Widdicombe1965 The Slender Thread Mark Dyson1970 Miracle of Survival Israel s Heroic Battle for Life Narrator 33 1980 It s My Turn Dr Jacob Gunzinger1981 Eyewitness Lieutenant JacobsRich and Famous Jules Levi1983 Yentl Reb Alter Vishkower1984 Teachers SloanGarbo Talks Walter Rolfe1986 On Valentine s Day George TylerRaw Deal Martin The Hammer LamanskiLegal Eagles BowerHeartburn Rachel s FatherBrighton Beach Memoirs Mr Stroheim1987 Courtship George Tyler1988 Running on Empty Mr PattersonThe Boost Max Sherman1990 White Palace Sol Horowitz1991 Billy Bathgate Otto Berman1993 The Firm US Attorney F Denton VoylesTelevision Edit Year Title Role Notes1949 Suspense Guest Star Episode The Serpent Ring S 2 Ep 7 Actors Studio Guest Star 4 episodes1950 Suspense Dolph Romano Episode My Old Man s Badge S 2 Ep 29 Credited as Steve Hill1952 Schlitz Playhouse of Stars Guest Star Episode The Man that I Marry S 1 Ep 16 Danger Guest Star Episode The Hero S 2 Ep 28 Lux Video Theatre Hank Episode A Legacy For Love S 3 Ep 7 1953 The Philco Television Playhouse Guest Star Episode The Long Way Home S 5 Ep 17 1954 Goodyear Television Playhouse Mr Frank Episode The Inward Eye S 3 Ep 11 1954 Goodyear Television Playhouse Guest Star Episode The Arena S 3 Ep 21 The Philco Television Playhouse George Episode Middle of the Night S 7 p 1 The Philco Television Playhouse Horace Mann Borden Episode Man on the Mountain S 7 Ep 3 1956 Playwrights 56 Walter Uhlan Episode Lost S 1 Ep 9 1957 Studio One Slim Breedlove Episode The Traveling Lady S 9 Ep 28 Alfred Hitchcock Presents Joe Kedzie Season 3 Episode 7 Enough Rope for Two 1958 DuPont Show of the Month Guest Star Episode The Bridge of San Luis Rey S 1 Ep 5 1959 Playhouse 90 Agustin Episodes For Whom the Bell Tolls part 1 S 3 Ep 23 For Whom the Bell Tolls part 2 S 3 Ep 24 1960 Playhouse 90 Dr Edward Gutera Episode Journey to the Day S 4 Ep 14 Sacco Vanzetti Story Bartolomeo Vanzetti Presented on NBC Sunday Showcase 1960 nominated for Primetime Emmy Awards as program of the year The Untouchables Jack Legs Diamond Episode Jack Legs Diamond S 2 Ep 2 1961 Adventures in Paradise B E Langard Episode Act of Piracy S 2 Ep 18 1962 Route 66 Frank Madera Episode A City of Wheels S 2 Ep 17 The Untouchables Joseph December Jr Episode Downfall S 3 Ep 22 The Eleventh Hour Guest Star Episode There Are Dragons in This Forest S 1 Ep 2 Ben Casey Ollie Episode Legacy From A Stranger S 2 Ep 4 1962 Dr Kildare Dr Chandra Ramid Episode The Cobweb Chain S 2 Ep 8 1963 Ben Casey Dr Keith Bernard Episode I ll Be Alright In The Morning S 2 Ep 14 Naked City Stanley Episode Barefoot on a Bed of Coals S 4 Ep 34 Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre Ruben Fare Episode Something About Lee Wiley S 1 Ep 2 Espionage Andrew Evans Episode The Incurable One S 1 Ep 3 1964 The Greatest Show on Earth Guest Star Episode Corsicans Don t Cry S 1 Ep 16 The Alfred Hitchcock Hour Charlie Osgood Episode Who Needs an Enemy S 2 Ep 28 1965 The Alfred Hitchcock Hour Robert Manners Episode Thanatos Palace Hotel S 3 Ep 15 Kraft Suspense Theatre Guest Star Episode The Safe House S 2 Ep 26 Rawhide Marty Brown Episode The Gray Rock Hotel S 7 Ep 30 1966 The Fugitive Glenn Madison Episode The White Knight S 3 Ep 26 1966 67 Mission Impossible Dan Briggs Main cast1977 The Andros Targets Ed Conway Episode In The Event of my Death S 1 Ep 4 34 1978 King Stanley Levison TV miniseries1984 85 One Life to Live Aristotle Descamedes Recurring 35 36 1986 Between Two Women Teddy Petherton TV movie1988 Thirtysomethng Leo Steadman Episode Business as Usual S 1 Ep 15 1989 Columbo Mr Marosco Episode Murder Smoke and Shadows S 8 Ep 2 1990 2000 Law amp Order Adam Schiff Main cast final appearance 2000 Law amp Order Special Victims Unit Adam Schiff Episode Entitled S 1 Ep 15 2003 E s 101 Most Shocking Moments in Entertainment Himself InterviewReferences Edit Law amp Order The Unofficial Companion Joseph F Clarke 1977 Pseudonyms BCA p 84 Adrian Room 1 July 2010 Dictionary of Pseudonyms 13 000 Assumed Names and Their Origins 5th ed McFarland p 229 ISBN 978 0 7864 5763 2 1940 Census Accessed via Ancestry Library Edition verification needed a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Signoff On Law and Order a Real Idealist The New York Times February 2 1996 a b Steven Hill Biography biography com Retrieved February 1 2015 a b c d e f g Gates Anita August 23 2016 Steven Hill Who Starred on Law amp Order and Mission Impossible Dies at 94 New York Times Retrieved 23 August 2016 Monsey actor Steven Hill dies starred in Law amp Order lohud com Retrieved 2020 04 26 Sol Krakovsky Junior listing with photograph US School Yearbooks University of Washington 1942 Ancestry Library Edition verification needed Koseluk Chris 23 August 2016 Steven Hill District Attorney Adam Schiff on Law amp Order Dies at 94 The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 2020 04 26 a b c Purdum Todd March 6 2005 Mister Roberts Goes to Washington The New York Times Robert Lewis 1996 1984 Actors Studio 1947 Slings and Arrows Theater in My Life New York Applause Books p 183 ISBN 1 55783 244 7 At the end of the summer on Gadget s return from Hollywood we settled the roster of actors for our two classes in what we called the Actors Studio using the word studio as we had when we named our workshop in the Group the Group Theatre Studio My group meeting three times a week consisted of Marlon Brando Montgomery Clift Maureen Stapleton Eli Wallach Mildred Dunnock Jerome Robbins Herbert Berghof Tom Ewell John Forsythe Anne Jackson Sidney Lumet Kevin McCarthy Karl Malden E G Marshall Patricia Neal Beatrice Straight David Wayne and well I don t want to drop names so I ll stop there In all there were about fifty Dick Kleiner The Actors Studio Making Stars Out of the Unknown The Sarasota Journal Friday December 21 1956 p 26 That first year they interviewed around 700 actors and picked 50 In that first group were people like Marlon Brando Montgomery Clift Tom Ewell John Forsythe Julie Harris Kim Hunter Karl Malden E G Marshall Margaret Phillips Maureen Stapleton Kim Stanley Jo Van Fleet Eli Wallach Ray Walston and David Wayne a b c d e f g h i j Sobiski John Steven Hill Hollywood s Most Talented Curmudgeon Theater New Play on Broadway Time April 14 1961 Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved May 24 2010 Zolotow Sam December 22 1960 Co Stars Named for Far Country The New York Times a b c d Far Country Not Given The New York Times April 12 1961 Esterow Milton April 13 1962 Director with Actor Complex Replaces Ill Star in Freud Role The New York Times Solow H Justman R 1996 Inside Star Trek The Real Story Pocket Books p 99 White 1991 pp 98 99 White 1991 pp 60 61 100 a b New Play on Broadway The New Times April 14 1961 Kitman Marvin 2000 08 02 Another crime perpetrated on Law amp Order CNN com CNN Archived from the original on 2006 12 05 Retrieved 2008 07 01 Robert Morgenthau jewishvirtuallibrary org AICE Retrieved March 15 2022 Kolker Robert July 16 2004 Happy 85th Birthday Bob Morgenthau New York Retrieved March 15 2022 via NYMag com Nominees Winners 1999 emmys com Television Academy a b c d Zalman Jonathan 2016 08 25 The Moment Steven Hill Knew He Had to Become Closer to Judaism Tablet Magazine Retrieved 2020 04 25 a b Gates Anita 2016 08 23 Steven Hill Who Starred on Law amp Order and Mission Impossible Dies at 94 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 04 25 a b Petira of R Shlomo Steven Hill Z L UPDATED Retrieved 2016 10 22 a b Dagan Carmel 2016 08 23 Steven Hill D A Adam Schiff on Law amp Order Dies at 94 Variety Retrieved 2016 10 22 BENSOUSSAN Barbara June 30 2010 The Master Storyteller Rabbi Yehoshua Leib Hill Tells His Story Mishpacha 315 IMPROBABLE MISSION With his future at stake actor Steven Hill clung to Shabbos Barnes amp Noble Miracle of Survival Israel s Heroic Battle for Life The Classic TV Archive The Andros Targets 1977 Schemering Christopher September 1985 One Life to Live The Soap Opera Encyclopedia Ballantine Books pp 158 166 ISBN 0 345 32459 5 Waggett Gerard J November 1997 One Life to Live The Soap Opera Encyclopedia Harper Paperbacks pp 163 188 ISBN 0 06 101157 6 Bibliography EditWhite Patrick J 1991 The Complete Mission Impossible Dossier Avon Books ISBN 978 0380758777 OCLC 60270697External links EditSteven Hill at IMDb Steven Hill at the Internet Broadway Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Steven Hill amp oldid 1177564163, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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