Charles Grodin, Star of ‘Beethoven’ and ‘Heartbreak Kid,’ Dies at 86
A familiar face who was especially adept at deadpan comedy, he also
appeared on Broadway in “Same Time, Next Year,” wrote books and had his
own talk show.
The
actor Charles Grodin with the title dog in the hit 1992 family movie
“Beethoven.” “I don’t complain,” he said, “when the editor chooses my
worst take because it’s the dog’s best take.”Credit...via Photofest
Charles Grodin,
the versatile actor familiar from “Same Time, Next Year” on Broadway,
popular movies like “The Heartbreak Kid,” “Midnight Run” and “Beethoven”
and numerous television appearances, died on Tuesday at his home in
Wilton, Conn. He was 86.
His son, Nicholas, said the cause was bone marrow cancer.
With
a great sense of deadpan comedy and the kind of Everyman good looks
that lend themselves to playing businessmen or curmudgeonly fathers, Mr.
Grodin found plenty of work as a supporting player and the occasional
lead. He also had his own talk show for a time in the 1990s and was a
frequent guest on the talk shows of others, making 36 appearances on
“The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson” and more than 40 on David
Letterman’s NBC and CBS shows combined.
Mr.
Grodin with his co-star, Ellen Burstyn, and his director, Gene Saks, in
1975 at the first rehearsal for the Broadway comedy “Same Time, Next
Year.” The play was a hit and a turning point in Mr. Grodin’s career.Credit...Bettmann, via Getty Images
Mr.
Grodin was a writer as well, with a number of plays and books to his
credit. Though he never won a prestige acting award, he did win a
writing Emmy for a 1977 Paul Simon television special, sharing it with
Mr. Simon and six others.
Mr.
Grodin, who dropped out of the University of Miami to pursue acting,
had managed to land a smattering of stage and television roles when, in
1962, he received his first big break, landing a part in a Broadway
comedy called “Tchin-Tchin,” which starred Anthony Quinn and Margaret
Leighton.
“Walter Kerr called me impeccable,” Mr. Grodin wrote years later,
recalling a review of the show that appeared in The New York Times. “It
took a trip to the dictionary to understand he meant more than clean.”
Another Broadway appearance came in 1964 in “Absence of a Cello.” Mr.
Grodin’s next two Broadway credits were as a director, of “Lovers and
Other Strangers” in 1968 and “Thieves” in 1974. Then, in 1975, came a
breakthrough Broadway role opposite Ellen Burstyn in Bernard Slade’s
“Same Time, Next Year,” a durable two-hander about a man and woman, each
married to someone else, who meet once a year in the same inn room.
“The
play needs actors of grace, depth and accomplishment, and has found
them in Ellen Burstyn and Charles Grodin,” Clive Barnes wrote
in a rave in The Times. “Miss Burstyn is so real, so lovely and so
womanly that a man wants to hug her, and you hardly notice the exquisite
finesse of her acting. It is underplaying of sheer virtuosity. Mr.
Grodin is every bit her equal — a monument to male insecurity,
gorgeously inept, and the kind of masculine dunderhead that every decent
man aspires to be.”
"I have known the joy and pain of friendship. I have served and been served. I have made some good enemies for which I am not a bit sorry. I have loved unselfishly, and I have fondled hatred with the red-hot tongs of Hell. That's living."
— Zora Neale Hurston
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