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#1 |
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RIP, I'LL NEVER FORGET YOU :(
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Lou Jacobi, the mustachioed, scene-stealing Canadian-born actor and comedian who made a film and stage career playing comic ethnic characters but was lauded for serious dramatic roles as well, died on Friday at his home in Manhattan. He was 95. The death was confirmed by Leonie Nowitz, a social worker who had been overseeing his care for several years. Mr. Jacobi made his Broadway debut in 1955 in “The Diary of Anne Frank,” playing a less-than-noble occupant of the Amsterdam attic where the Franks were hiding, and reprised the role in the 1959 film version. When Bosley Crowther, reviewing the movie in The New York Times, described Mr. Jacobi as “irksomely sluggish and pathetically lax as the weakling Van Daan,” it was high praise. As his career continued in New York and Hollywood, spanning five decades, Mr. Jacobi became accustomed to favorable reviews, mostly in comic roles and often when the film or play itself was less than warmly received. When he starred in the short-lived Broadway comedy “Norman, Is That You?” in 1970, Clive Barnes of The Times did not care for the play, but took time to wax rhapsodic about Mr. Jacobi and his character. “Mr. Jacobi is a very funny actor who hardly needs lines to make his point,” Mr. Barnes wrote. He added: “He has a face of sublime weariness and the manner of a man who has seen everything, done nothing and is now only worried about his heartburn.” The 10 Broadway plays Mr. Jacobi appeared in also included Paddy Chayefsky’s “Tenth Man” (1959); Woody Allen’s “Don’t Drink the Water” (1966); and Neil Simon’s “Come Blow Your Horn” (1961), in which he portrayed the playboy protagonist’s disappointed father. His reading of the line “Aha!” stuck with the Times columnist William Safire so vividly that he cited it when writing about the meaning of the word 36 years later. Mr. Jacobi also made two dozen feature films. His supporting roles included the philosophical bartender in “Irma la Douce” (1963), the young hero’s unsophisticated uncle in “My Favorite Year” (1982), a lucky florist in the Dudley Moore comedy “Arthur” (1981) and a middle-aged transvestite who gets caught with his hostess’s clothes on in “Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex” (1972). In Barry Levinson’s “Avalon” (1990), he played a dramatic role, one of four Russian brothers trying to build a future in Baltimore in the early 20th century. Louis Harold Jacobovitch was born on Dec. 28, 1913, in Toronto. He began acting as a boy, making his stage debut in 1924 at a Toronto theater, playing a violin prodigy in “The Rabbi and the Priest.” He did play the violin, then and for most of his life. After working as the drama director of a Toronto Y.M.H.A., the social director at a summer resort, a stand-up comic in Canada’s equivalent of the Borscht Belt, and the entertainment at various weddings and bachelor parties, Mr. Jacobi tried his luck in London. There he appeared in shows including the American musicals “Guys and Dolls” and “Pal Joey,” and was part of a command performance at the London Palladium in 1952. He made his film debut in “Is Your Honeymoon Really Necessary?” (1953), a British comedy with the country’s blond sex symbol of the moment, Diana Dors. In the United States, he began making guest appearances on a variety of television series, ranging from “Playhouse 90” to “’The Man From U.N.C.L.E.”’ to “That Girl,” and appeared on series and in television movies until he was in his late 70s. In the summer of 1976, he was the star of a CBS comedy series, “Ivan the Terrible,” in which he played a Russian headwaiter living with nine other people in a small Moscow apartment. He was a regular on “The Dean Martin Show” on NBC for two seasons in the early 1970s. Mr. Jacobi made successful comedy recordings with titles like “Al Tijuana and His Jewish Brass” and “The Yiddish Are Coming! The Yiddish Are Coming!” In his last film, “I.Q.” (1994), he played the logician Kurt Gödel, one of Albert Einstein’s professor friends at Princeton. His last Broadway play was “Cheaters,” a 1978 comedy about two adulterous middle-aged couples. But he continued to do theater elsewhere. When he appeared in a 1988 Connecticut production of Clifford Odets’s “Rocket to the Moon,” at the age of 74, his reviews were as positive as ever. Mr. Jacobi married Ruth Ludwin in 1957. She died in 2004. He is survived by a brother, Avrom Jacobovitch, and a sister, Rae Gold, both of Toronto. “As you make your way through life, sometimes you happen upon people who know how to be happy,” the film critic Roger Ebert wrote in The Chicago Sun-Times in 1999. He was interviewing Mr. Jacobi on the occasion of the dedication of his star on Canada’s Walk of Fame. “I look at Lou, and I’m not afraid to be 85, if I can get there in Lou’s style.” |
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#2 |
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God Bless Val
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"Jesus loves you and He approves this message." "I'm alive. I'm feeling good. I'm trying to live every moment as much as I can." - Valerie Harper, March 2013
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#3 |
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R.I.P.
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#4 |
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Accept No Substitutes
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He was also at least partly the template for the character of Dr. Zoidberg on Futurama.
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Alex Reiger :[Trying to convince Louie not to antagonize Bobby] "It's not hard to make people feel bad about their lives. What's hard is making people feel good about their lives." |
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#5 |
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Lou will be missed
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#6 |
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I'm NOT a Blockhead!
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Lou Jacobi
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Only a life lived for others is worth living. Albert Einstein A life isn't worth living unless it has impact on other lives. Jackie Robinson Be always at war with your vices, at peace with your neighbors, and let each new year find you a better man. Benjamin Franklin |
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#7 |
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Another case of death before birthday. He should have been 96 instead of 95.
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#8 |
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In God's Arms Now
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He was a great character actor. I remember him in Erma La Deuce and Everything You Wanted To Know About Sex (him prancing in front of a full length mirror in drag is burned into my memory!!! LOL)
Glad he made it to 95 - good for him! May he rest in peace (and men's clothing). You rocked Lou!
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