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Eli Wallach

Eli Wallach
Eli Wallach
Born: Dec 07, 1915 in Brooklyn, New York City, New York
Occupation: Actor
Active: '60s-2000s
Major Genres: Drama, Comedy
Career Highlights: The Executioner's Song, The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, The Misfits
First Major Screen Credit: Baby Doll (1956)
26 Videos for Eli Wallach
Tickling Leo (2009) Legacy of Lies (1992) The Deep (1977)
New York, I Love You (2008) Mistress (1992) Nasty Habits (1976)
Ken Burns' The War [TV Documentary Series] (2007) Night and the City (1992) The Sentinel (1976)
Mama's Boy (2007) The Godfather Part III (1990) The Angel Levine (1970)
The Hoax (2007) The Two Jakes (1990) MacKenna's Gold (1969)
The Holiday (2006) Nuts (1987) The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966)
King of the Corner (2004) The Impossible Spy (1987) How the West Was Won (1962)
Mystic River (2003) Something in Common (1986) The Magnificent Seven (1960)
Article 99 (1992) The Hunter (1980)
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Biography:

Long before earning his B.A. from the University of Texas and his M.A. in Education from C.C.N.Y., Eli Wallach made his first on-stage appearance in a 1930 amateur production. After World War II service and intensive training at New York's {~Neighborhood Playhouse}, the bumpy-nosed, gravel-voiced Wallach debuted on Broadway in {+Skydrift} (1945).

In 1951, he won a Tony award for his portrayal of Alvaro Mangiaco in Tennessee Williams' {+The Rose Tattoo}. Though a staunch advocate of The Method, Wallach could never be accused of being too introspective on-stage; in fact, his acting at times was downright ripe -- but deliciously so. He made his screen debut in Baby Doll (1956) playing another of Tennessee Williams' abrasive Latins, in this instance the duplicitous Silva Vaccaro; this performance earned Wallach the British equivalent of the Oscar.

He spent the bulk of his screen time indulging in various brands of villainy, usually sporting an exotic accent (e.g., bandit leader Calvera in The Magnificent Seven [1960]). Perhaps his most antisocial onscreen act was the kidnapping of Hayley Mills in The Moon-Spinners (1965). Even when playing someone on our side, Wallach usually managed to make his character as prickly as possible: a prime example is Sgt.

Craig in The Victors (1963), who manages to be vituperative and insulting even after his face is blown away. Busy on stage, screen, and TV into the 1990s, Wallach has played such unsavory types as a senile, half-blind hitman in Tough Guys (1986) and candy-munching Mafioso Don Altobello in The Godfather III (1990).

His television work has included an Emmy-winning performance in the 1967 all-star TV movie The Poppy Is Also a Flower and the continuing role of mob patriarch Vincent Danzig in Our Family Honor. Married since 1948 to actress Anne Jackson, Wallach has appeared on-stage with his wife in such plays as {+The Typists and the Tiger}, {+Luv}, and {+Next}, and co-starred with her in the 1967 comedy film The Tiger Makes Out.

Eli Wallach and Anne Jackson are the parents of special effects director Peter Wallach. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide.