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Eddie albert jr last photo
Eddie albert jr last photo





eddie albert jr last photo

Other memorable roles have included as the aged statesman in "Benjamin Franklin: The Ambassador" (CBS, 1974), a plantation owner in "Beulah Land" (NBC, 1980) and the unscrupulous judge in "Dress Grey" (NBC, 1984). He made his TV-movie debut in "See the Man Run" (ABC, 1971) and later starred in the 1973 NBC production of "The Borrowers," based on the children's classic about a family of tiny people living in the cracks and crevasses of a home. The actor has remained a staple on the small screen as a guest actor and in longforms well into the 90s. Albert returned to the weekly format as Robert Wagner's con-man father on "Switch" (CBS, 1975-78) (CBS).

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(During the sitcom's first season, Albert also made appearances on another CBS sitcom "Petticoat Junction" which was set in the same fictional town of Hooterville.) Although CBS dumped "Green Acres" in 1971 when it was clearing house of series with rural appeal, some TV historians now consider the show to have been an astute, if somewhat low content, social satire. Perhaps his best-remembered role, however, was on "Green Acres" (CBS, 1965-71), as Oliver Douglas, the Manhattan attorney who, with his socialite wife (Eva Gabor), leaves the city behind to become a farmer. The following year, Albert hosted the NBC variety series "Nothing But the Best" and later handled hosting chores on the CBS game show "On Your Account" (1954-56).

eddie albert jr last photo

A former circus performer, Albert broke into the medium appearing in numerous live broadcasts during the so-called "Golden Age of Television." He landed his first series berth as a man working for his father-in-law (Ed Begley) in the short-lived "Leave It to Larry" (CBS, 1952). The small screen has also proven hospitable to the actor's wide-ranging talents. While Albert continued to appear in features into the 1980s, few of his later roles were memorable, with the exception of his turn as the prison warden blackmailing inmate Burt Reynolds in "The Longest Yard" (1974). Albert earned a second Best Supporting Oscar nomination as Cybill Shepherd's cool, WASP father who wants to keep her away from the Jewish Charles Grodin in Elaine May's "The Heartbreak Kid" (1972). Other memorable roles included the reformed alcoholic in "I'll Cry Tomorrow" and the itinerant peddler in love with Ado Annie (Gloria Grahame) in "Oklahoma!" (both 1955), the psychiatrist in "The Teahouse of the August Moon" (1956) and the psychologically fragile army colonel haunted by the deaths of his men in "Captain Newman, M.D." (1963). He was a traveling salesman who encounters Jennifer Jones' "Carrie" (1952) and had one of his most memorable roles as a photographer who snaps a shot of a runaway princess in William Wyler's "Roman Holiday" (1953), a role that earned him his first Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination. Despite solid work throughout the 40s, it wasn't until the 50s that Albert began to garner breakout roles. He reprised his turn as Bing Edwards in the sequel "Brother Rat and a Baby" (1940). Once in Hollywood, Albert quickly became established as a stalwart character player. Throughout his career, he would venture back to the stage with memorable turns in Rodgers and Hart's "The Boys from Syracuse" (1938), Irving Berlin's ill-fated "Miss Liberty" (1949), Harold Hill in "The Music Man" (1960) and an all-star revival of "You Can't Take It With You" (1983). "O Evening Star" (1935-36) marked his Broadway debut and in 1936 he had a co-starring role in "Brother Rat," the role which brought him to Hollywood. By the mid-1930s, he had toured the USA with the singing group Threesome and had begun to work on radio. Raised in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Albert began his career as a singer and stage manager in local theater. This personable character actor from radio and the stage entered films in 1938, reprising his stage role as the star pitcher for a military college's baseball team in "Brother Rat." In his long and varied stage, screen and television career, Eddie Albert has had roles that have ranged from amiable best friend of the romantic lead to charming con men to outright villains.







Eddie albert jr last photo