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Biography for Walter Matthau

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Gangster Story (1959)
as Director
Hanging Up (2000)
as Lou Mozell
Life and Times of Hank Greenberg, The (2000)
as Himself
Neil Simon's Odd Couple II (1998)
as Oscar Madison
Out to Sea (1997)
as Charlie
I'm Not Rappaport (1996)
as Nat
Grass Harp, The (1996)
as Judge Charlie Cool
Jack Lemmon: America's Everyman (1996)
as Interviewee
Grumpier Old Men (1995)
as Max Goldman
I.Q. (1994)
as Albert Einstein
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 WALTER MATTHAU
AKA: Mr. And Mrs. Walter Matthau;
Walter Matuschanskayasky;
Born: 1920-10-01
Birth place: New York City, New York, USA
Death: 2000-07-01
Death cause: heart attack
Profession: director, soda vendor, producer, actor
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Biography

Once described by a British critic as looking like "a bloodhound with a head cold", the magnificently rumpled Walter Matthau parlayed his marvelous character face, drooping posture, ungainly walk and growling voice into a prolific screen career, first as a villain, later as a comedic and sometimes romantic leading man, and finally as the quintessential (but adorable) grumpy old man. Despite making his professional stage debut at age 11 in the musical "The Dishwasher" (1931), he did not begin acting in earnest until after WWII in a 1946 summer stock production of "Ten Nights in a Bar Room" in Erie, Pennsylvania. Two years later he bowed on Broadway as the aged Bishop Fisher in Maxwell Anderson's "Anne of the Thousand Days", the first of 18 plays in which he would act on the Great White Way. Matthau's Broadway successes included "The Liar" (1950), the 1955 revival of "Guys and Dolls" (as Nathan Detroit), "Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?" (also 1955) and "A Shot in the Dark" (1961), which earned him his first Tony. He is best remembered, however, for originating the role of Oscar Madison opposite Art Carney's Felix Unger in Neil Simon's "The Odd Couple" (1965), a performance netting him that year's Tony Award as Actor in a Play.

After playing an evil saloon keeper who bullwhips Burt Lancaster in his feature debut, "The Kentuckian" (1955), Matthau got typed as a villain and subsequently essayed a steady diet of reprehensible characters like the cynical newsman investigating 'Lonesome' Rhodes (Andy Griffith) in "A Face in the Crowd" (1957), the violent crime boss at odds with Elvis Presley in "King Creole" (1958), the comically harassed sheriff in "Lonely Are the Brave" (1962) and the Machiavellian advisor (a precursor of Henry Kissinger) in Sidney Lumet's "Fail-Safe" (1964). His only foray to directing came with "Gangster Story" (1959), which he self-deprecatingly calls the "worst film ever made." He also worked frequently during the Golden Age of TV on such classic live shows as "Studio One", "Playhouse 90" (both CBS), "Philco TV Playhouse" and "Kraft Television Theater" (both NBC). It is amazing that he never worked with Jack Lemmon when both young actors were alternating between stage and live TV, though they were both briefly in the Broadway cast of "Room Service" (1953) until Matthau had to withdraw. When they finally did team together in Billy Wilder's caustic comedy "The Fortune Cookie" (1966), it was Matthau's sharp portrayal of unethical lawyer 'Whiplash' Willie that drew all the raves and a Best Supporting Actor Oscar while Lemmon's role as the bedridden victim offered him few chances to shine.

Gene Kelly's "A Guide for the Married Man" (1967) cast Matthau as the lovely Inger Stevens' husband (no wonder he was so loathe to stray), but it was his Oscar-nominated leading turn as the sloppy Oscar to Lemmon's fastidious Felix in Gene Saks' screen adaptation of "The Odd Couple" (1968) that firmly established him as a comedic leading man. Kelly then gave him his chance as a romantic leading man (who sings) opposite Barbra Streisand's Dolly Levi in "Hello, Dolly!" (1968), after which he reteamed with Saks on the mildly amusing "Cactus Flower" (1969), featuring an Oscar-winning supporting performance by Goldie Hawn in her first significant role. Continuing their collaboration, Lemmon directed Matthau to a second Academy Award nod as Best Actor in "Kotch" (1971). They also reteamed in Wilder's uneven remake of "The Front Page" (1974), with Matthau as editor Walter Burns and Lemmon as reporter Hildy Johnson, and Wilder's last film, the slapstick black comedy "Buddy Buddy" (1981). Matthau also got to face off against the formidable comic talents of Elaine May in May's "A New Leaf" (also 1971) and Carol Burnett in Martin Ritt's "Pete 'n' Tillie" (1972), wooing and winning his woman in both.

In addition to "The Odd Couple", Matthau has acted in a number of film comedies scripted by Neil Simon from his plays. He appeared in all three vignettes of "Plaza Suite" (1971), directed by Arthur Hiller, scoring particularly well in the last one as the flustered father of a reluctant bride. He then embarked on the first of three films directed by Herbert Ross from Simon scripts, "The Sunshine Boys" (1975), which paired him with George Burns (a Best Supporting Actor winner for his role) as cranky vaudeville partners coaxed out of retirement for a TV special. He worked again with Ross on "California Suite" (1978), reuniting with Elaine May as her cheating husband, and the listless "I Ought to Be in Pictures" (1981), portraying a screenwriter visited by his teenage daughter (Dinah Manoff). Matthau's lovable gruffness also served him well as coach of "The Bad News Bears" (1976), a motley assortment of little leaguers headed by Tatum O'Neal, and he was equally memorable in several dramatic roles, including the bank robber hero of Don Siegel's "Charley Varrick" (1973) and the embittered protagonist of the ironically-titled thriller "The Laughing Policeman" (1974). His established New Yorker persona abetted one of his strongest performances as a harried NYC cop out to snare a subway hijacker in Joseph Sargent's "The Taking of Pelham One Two Three" (1974).

At the height of his big screen success, Matthau made a rare TV appearance in the PBS adaptation of Clifford Odets' "Awake and Sing" (1972) and returned to the stage for the first (and final) time in nearly a decade in a 1974 Los Angeles production of "Juno and the Paycock". The 80s, however, were not kind to him. His turn as a Supreme Court justice in "First Monday in October" (1981) and his peg-leg portrayal of a Cockney-speaking Captain Red for Roman Polanski's commercially unsuccessful "Pirates" (1986) represented his best work of the decade, and, fed up with the kinds of scripts he was getting, he turned to the small screen for renewal. Reteaming with Sargent, Matthau acted for the first time in a made-for-television movie, playing Harmon Cobb, a small-town attorney during World War II who must defend a German POW accused of murder in the Emmy-winning "The Incident" (CBS, 1990). He later reprised the Cobb role in two well-received sequels, "Against Her Will: An Incident in Baltimore" (CBS, 1992) and "Incident in a Small Town" (CBS, 1994). He also appeared opposite Ellen Burstyn in "Mrs. Lambert Remembers Love" (CBS, 1991) and later reteamed with Carol Burnett in "The Marriage Fool" (CBS, 1998), both helmed by his son Charles.

Matthau returned to leading feature roles as the long-suffering Mr. Wilson in John Hughes' "Dennis the Menace", reaching a whole new audience of pre-adolescents, and dusted off the ol' chemistry with Lemmon to score a major hit with "Grumpy Old Men" (both 1993). Suddenly, the curmudgeonly basset hound was hot again. He teamed with Meg Ryan and Tim Robbins for the would-be modern screwball comedy "I.Q." (1994), garnering the film's best notices for his pleasingly cute and corny portrayal of Albert Einstein, and reunited with Lemmon as "Grumpier Old Men" in 1995. Son Charles cast him against type as the very sweet, very kind and loving Judge Cool in "The Grass Harp" (also 1995), a thoughtful drama based on Truman Capote's evocative memoir of his boyhood in the South featuring one scene between Matthau and Lemmon. He then played a feisty elderly Jew who forms an unlikely friendship with a black boxer (Ossie Davis) in Herb Gardner's "I'm Not Rappaport" (1996). He was back with Lemmon as grumpy old men "Out to Sea" (1997), but "The Odd Couple II" (1998), unfortunately, was once too often to the well for the Simon, Matthau, Lemmon triumvirate. Two years later he was a perfect fit as the irascible father of Diane Keaton, Meg Ryan and Lisa Kudrow in Keaton's "Hanging Up", recycling the tried-and-true shtick that made him a legend.



Family

BROTHER: Henry Matthau.

STEP-SON: Aram Saroyan. Writer. Born in 1944.

STEP-DAUGHTER: Lucy Saroyan. Actor. Born in January 1946.

SON: David Matthau. Radio announcer. Mother, Grace Johnson.

DAUGHTER: Jenny Matthau. Gourmet-cooking teacher. Mother, Grace Johnson.

SON: Charles Matthau. Actor, director, producer. Born on December 10, 1965; mother, Carol Marcus; acted with father in "Charley Varrick" (1973) and "House Calls" (1978); credited as associate producer on three 1981 films starring father, "I Ought to Be in Pictures", "Buddy Buddy" and "First Monday in October".



Companion

WIFE: Grace Geraldine Johnson. Divorced; has two children with Matthau.

WIFE: Carol Marcus. Actor, writer. Met while both were acting on Broadway in "Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter" (1955); married on August 17, 1959; previously married to William Saroyan, with whom she had two children; wrote memoir, "Among the Porcupines" (1992); mother of Matthau's son Charles; died July 2003.



Milestone

1931: Professional stage debut at age 11 in "The Dishwasher", a musical comedy (date approximate)

Played bit parts in local Yiddish theater productions as child

1942 - 1945: Served in US Army Air Force as radio operator and cryptographer; stationed in England, France and Germany

1945: Upon Army discharge went to Reno, Nevada, to work for Railway Express; eventually moved back to NYC

1946: Appeared in summer stock with Erie County Playhouse (Pennsylvania) in "Ten Nights in a Bar Room"

1947: Was stock player with Orange County Playhouse (New York)

1948: Hired as an understudy for the Broadway production of "Anne of the Thousand Days"; eventually made Broadway debut as the 85-year-old Bishop Fisher

Appeared in 18 plays on Broadway

1950: TV debut in "Last Cruise", an episode of "Studio One" (CBS)

1953: Played Iago in "Philco Television Playhouse" (NBC) presentation of "Othello"

1955: Film acting debut as an evil saloon keeper in "The Kentuckian", directed by and co-starring Burt Lancaster

1955: Appeared in first hit show, as co-star of Broadway production of "Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?"

1956: Played James Mason's family friend in the underrated "Bigger Than Life", a forceful, realistic tale exposing both the good and bad of the wonder drug cortisone; produced by Mason

1957: Played a cynical newsman investigating Andy Griffith's character in "A Face in the Crowd"

1957: Starred in short-lived syndicated TV series, "Tallahassee 7000"

1958: Portrayed evil crime boss in Michael Curtiz's "King Creole", starring Elvis Presley

1959: Sole film as director, "The Gangster Story"; also co-starred

1963: Turned in another fine, villainous turn in Stanley Donen's "Charade", starring Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn

1965: Originated role of Oscar Madison on Broadway in Neil Simon's "The Odd Couple" opposite Art Carney as Felix Unger

1965: Slowed down by a serious heart attack; would have a quadruple by-pass operation in 1977

1966: First film with Jack Lemmon and first collaboration with writer-director Billy Wilder, "The Fortune Cookie"; won Best Supporting Actor Oscar

1967: Reteamed with Carney in Gene Kelly's "A Guide for the Married Man"

1968: Reprised "Odd Couple" role opposite Lemmon's Felix in film version directed by Gene Saks

1969: Reteamed with Saks for "Cactus Flower", acting opposite Ingrid Bergman and Goldie Hawn (who won a Best Supporting Actress Oscar in her first significant film role)

1969: Played romantic lead in Kelly's film version of the musical "Hello, Dolly!"; Barbra Streisand played Dolly Levi

1971: Starred as "Kotch", directed by Lemmon; earned first Oscar nomination as Best Actor

1971: Portrayed "gold digger" with murder on his mind in Elaine May's "A New Leaf"

1971: Second film version of a Neil Simon play, "Plaza Suite"

1972: Acted opposite Carol Burnett in Martin Ritt's "Pete 'n' Tillie"

1972: Made rare TV appearance in "Awake and Sing" (PBS)

1974: Reunited with Wilder, Lemmon and Burnett for the uneven remake of "The Front Page"

1974: Billed as Walter Matuschanskavasky for his cameo in "Earthquake", adding fuel to a flame he had fanned by jokingly telling a writer a few years before that it was his "real" name

1974: First stage appearance in almost a decade (and to date last stage role), "Juno and the Paycock" in Los Angeles

1975: First of three films directed by Herbert Ross and scripted by Simon from his plays, "The Sunshine Boys", co-starring George Burns; earned another Oscar nod as Best Actor

1976: Made a fine, irascible coach of "The Bad News Bears", directed by Michael Ritchie

1978: Reteamed with Ross, Simon and Elaine May on "California Suite"

1978: "House Calls", his first film with Glenda Jackson, teamed him again with Carney who offered an hysterical turn as the addle-brained head of surgery at Matthau's hospital; also acted in Ritt's "Casey's Shadow"

1980: Executive produced and starred in Walter Bernstein's remake of "Little Miss Marker"

1980: Reteamed with Jackson on "Hopscotch"

1981: Third and last collaboration with Wilder, "Buddy Buddy", co-starring Lemmon

1981: Reunited with Ross and Simon for "I Ought to be in Pictures"; first film with Ann-Margret

1983: Reteamed with Ritchie on "The Survivors", co-starring Robin Williams

1986: Played peg-leg Captain Red in Roman Polanski's "Pirates"

1988: Again collaborated with Ritchie on "The Couch Trip"; also played a priest who exorcises the devil out of a woman in Roberto Begnini's "The Little Devil" (never released in USA)

1990: Returned to the small screen as star of "The Incident" (CBS), directed by Joseph Sargent; appeared in two sequels, "Against Her Will: An Incident in Baltimore" (1992) and "Incident in a Small Town" (1994), both helmed by Delbert Mann

1991: Acted in "Mrs. Lambert Remembers Love" (CBS), directed by son Charles Matthau

1993: Portrayed the original grumpy old man, Mr. Wilson, in feature version of "Dennis the Menace"

1993: Co-starred with Jack Lemmon in "Grumpy Old Men", which reteamed him with Ann-Margret

1994: Essayed Albert Einstein for Fred Schepisi's "I.Q.", which reteamed him with Gene Saks playing one of his cronies

1995: Reprised role opposite Lemmon in sequel, "Grumpier Old Men", which again featured Ann-Margret; also co-starred Sophia Loren

1995: Reteamed with son, acting in Charles' sophomore feature as director, "The Grass Harp", based on the novel by Truman Capote; in addition to Lemmon, Roddy McDowell, Sissy Spacek, Piper Laurie and Joe Don Baker acted in film

1996: Played angry, aging Jewish radical in Herb Gardner's film version of his play "I'm Not Rappaport"; co-starred Ossie Davis

1997: Twelfth acting collaboration with Lemmon, "Out to Sea"

1998: Reprised role of Oscar to Lemmon's Felix in the ill-advised "The Odd Couple II", scripted by Simon

1998: Starred opposite Burnett in "The Marriage Fool" (CBS), directed by son Charles

2000: Cast as the ailing father in Diane Keaton's "Hanging Up", scripted by Delia and Nora Ephron; when a case of pneumonia forced him to leave the production early, son Charles stepped in and played his father's character in a few flashback scenes



Education

I S 64 - New York, New York P S 25 - New York, New York School of Journalism, Columbia University - New York, New York Seward Park High School - New York, New York Dramatic Workshop of the New School for Social Research - New York, New York - studied with Erwin Piscator; among fellow students were Tony Curtis, Marlon Brando, Gene Saks and Rod Steiger


Bibliography

"Walter Matthau" Allan Hunter



Citizenship

United States


Notes

On directing: "Too much work. Anyway, I have no talent for telling people what to do. Once when I was a staff sergeant in the army, I told some corporal what to do and he said, 'fuck you, do it yourself.' And I said, 'Alright, I will.' So much for my authority." --Walter Matthau quoted in Interview, January 1996

"Years ago Carol [Matthau's wife] talked Walter into going to Dachau [a Nazi death camp]. They started fighting on the train about something or other. They went through Dachau, still not speaking. They were still arguing when they got back to the hotel. When they got up to their rooms, Walter said to her, absolutely straight-faced, 'I just want you to know that you ruined my trip to Dachau!'

"Now that's funny. And I'm sure underneath, whether Walter was serious or not, he knew it was funny." --Jack Lemmon to Jess Cagle in Entertainment Weekly, January 28, 1994

"My wife is a depraved spender and I'm a degenerate gambler. For 'Grumpy Old Men', I'm gonna make $3 million. You know how long that lasts? Six months. Money is flowing like Niagara Falls into the s---house. And if I get lucky I'll die before I go broke." --Matthau in Entertainment Weekly, January 28, 1994

"My father was a Catholic priest, Greek Orthodox, but I think he started out as a Jew, then he became a Catholic priest. Then he preached papal supremacy of the Vatican, so they kicked him out of Russia. He was from Kiev. Then he saw my mother and fell madly in love with her tits, and so he became a Jew again. Then, when he heard my mother's screaming, he left town. . . [I grew up] between First Street and Tenth Street, Second Avenue bordering First Avenue. My mother paid eight dollars a month for rent. When she had it. Mostly we were evicted, because she couldn't afford to pay the eight dollars a month. So they'd throw us out on the street, and then we'd find another place or we'd sleep in the hallways." --Matthau to Interview, December 1994

"When I did 'The Odd Couple', I would do it a different way each night. On Monday I'd be Jewish, Tuesday Italian, Wednesday Irish-German--and I would mix them up. I did that to amuse myself, and it always worked." --Walter Matthau in Interview, December 1994

"That's where I was good--on the stage. In the movies . . . Passable. But on the stage I could move with freedom and ease. And I had something: presence. Something you're either born with or you're not. On screen, all the power is in the hands of the director or the editor." --Matthau to Frank Thompson, The Hollywood Reporter Salute to Walter Matthau, November 1, 1996

On working with Elvis Presley in "King Creole": "The first thing Elvis said to me was, 'Mr. Matthau, I sure would appreciate it if you could help me out with this acting thing.'

"Elvis, I've seen you act and I don't think you need any help from me," Matthau told him.

"Then the next thing I remember we were having this fight scene. I hit him over the head with a chair--naturally they substitute the balsa-wood chair--and I'm left with a leg. I smashed him across the back as he was down on the floor. And he threw up."

"It was just after lunch and it was warm in the studio and then all this activity and that final thing of me smacking him in the back."

"We couldn't use that shot." --Matthau to Stephen Schaefer in New York Post, January 6, 1997

"I don't think it's good for actors when someone says, 'Oh, there goes so-and-so. He does those grumpy parts.' When you try to do parts that are not grumpy, a part that's Mozart, say, instead of the Beatles, then they're not happy. Neither are the producers and studio heads. They want recognizable characters that people will go see more than once. It's limiting." --Matthau to Eric Harrison in Los Angeles Times, February 21, 2000


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