VideoDetective.com

Harold Gould

Harold Gould
Harold Gould
Born: Dec 10, 1923 in Schenectady, New York
Occupation: Actor
Active: '60s-'80s
Major Genres: Comedy, Drama
Career Highlights: Love and Death, The Scarlett O'Hara War, Seems Like Old Times
First Major Screen Credit: The Twilight Zone: Probe 7-Over and Out (1963)
13 Videos for Harold Gould
This Is England (2006) Get Smart, Again! (1989) Love and Death (1975)
Master of Disguise (2002) Romero (1989) The Front Page (1974)
Brown's Requiem (1998) Playing for Keeps (1986) The Sting (1973)
My Giant (1998) Actor: The Paul Muni Story (1978) The Arrangement (1969)
Patch Adams (1998)
Photos


There are currently no photos.

Biography:

Possibly in defiance of the old adage those that can't do, teach, American actor Harold Gould gave up a comfortable professorship in the drama department of the University of California to become a performer himself. Building up stage and TV credits from the late '50s onward, Gould made his first film, Two for the Seesaw, in 1962.

He divided his time between stage and screen for the rest of the '60s, winning an Obie Award for the off-Broadway production {~Difficulty of Concentration}. Gould was prominently cast in such slick '70s products as The Sting (1973), Woody Allen's Love and Death (1975), and Mel Brooks' Silent Movie (1976) (as a classically gesticulating villain).

Often nattily attired and usually comporting himself like a wealthy self-made businessman, Gould was generously employed on TV for three decades. He co-starred with Daniel J. Travanti in the 1988 American Playhouse production of I Never Sang for My Father, played WASP-ish Katharine Hepburn's ageing Jewish lover in the TV movie Mrs.

Delafield Wants to Marry
(1986), and had regular stints on such series as The Long Hot Summer (1965), He and She (1967), Rhoda (1974) (as Rhoda's father), The Feather and Father Gang (1977), Washington: Behind Closed Doors (1977), Park Place (1981) Foot in the Door (1983), Spencer (1984) and Singer and Sons (1990).

However, when the time came in 1974 to make a series out of the pilot film for Happy Days, an unavailable Harold Gould was replaced by Tom Bosley. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide.