米俳優のマーティン・ランドー氏死去=「スパイ大作戦」出演
マーティン・ランドー氏(米俳優)米メディアによると、15日、合併症のためロサンゼルスの病院で死去、89歳。
ニューヨーク出身。風刺画家から演劇に転身し、ヒチコック監督の「北北西に進路を取れ」(59年)に出演。66~69年に日本でも放送されたテレビドラマシリーズ「スパイ大作戦」の変装名人ローラン・ハンド役で人気を博した。「エド・ウッド」(94年)で落ちぶれた俳優ベラ・ルゴシ役を演じ、アカデミー賞助演男優賞を受賞した。(2017/07/17-13:03)
http://www.jiji.com/jc/article?k=2017071700273&g=int
Landau was born in Brooklyn, New York, on June 20, 1928, the son of Selma (née Buchman) and Morris Landau.[1] His family was Jewish; his father, an Austrian-born machinist, scrambled to rescue relatives from the Nazis.[2]
He attended James Madison High School and the Pratt Institute.[3] At the age of seventeen he found work at the New York Daily News, where he spent the next five years as an editorial cartoonist and worked alongside Gus Edson to produce the comic strip, The Gumps.[4][5][6] He quit the Daily News when he was 22, to concentrate on theater acting.
The series follows the exploits of the Impossible Missions Force (IMF), a small team of secret agents used for covert missions against dictators, evil organizations and (primarily in later episodes) crime lords. On occasion, the IMF also mounts unsanctioned, private missions on behalf of its members.
The leader of the IMF is initially Dan Briggs, played by Steven Hill. As an Orthodox Jew, Hill had to leave on Fridays at 4 p.m. to be home before sundown and was not available until after dark the next day. Although his contract allowed for filming interruptions due to religious observances, the clause proved difficult to work around due to the production schedule and as the season progressed, an increasing number of episodes featured little of Briggs. Hill had other problems as well. After cooperatively crawling through dirt tunnels and repeatedly climbing a rope ladder in the episode "Snowball in Hell," in the following episode ("Action!") he balked at climbing a stairway with railings and locked himself in his dressing room. Unable to come to terms with Hill, the producers re-shot the episode without him (another character, Cinnamon Carter, listened to the taped message, the selected operatives' photos were displayed in "limbo", and the team meeting was held in Rollin Hand's apartment), and reduced Briggs' presence in the five episodes left to be filmed to a minimum.[3] As far as Hill's religious requirements were concerned, line producer Joseph Gantman simply had not understood what had been agreed to. He told author Patrick J. White, "'If someone understands your problems and says he understands them, you feel better about it. But if he doesn't care about your problems, then you begin to really resent him. Steven Hill may have felt exactly the same way
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