MatthauMatthau
a Life
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Book, 2002
Current format, Book, 2002, 1st Taylor Trade Pub. ed, Available .Book, 2002
Current format, Book, 2002, 1st Taylor Trade Pub. ed, Available . Offered in 0 more formatsAn extensively researched portrait of the accomplished late actor traces his childhood in the New York Yiddish theater, service in World War II, work on Broadway, and television and film credits.
For most people, he was best known as Oscar Madison, the unkempt, curmudgeonly yin to the yang of his prim and proper housemate, Felix Unger. But that role was just one of many sterling performances from the always outspoken Walter Matthau (1920-2000), a great comic actor and on-screen grouch extraordinaire.
Born Walter Matthow in the Jewish tenements of New York's Lower East Side, he was a child actor in New York's Yiddish theater, and later a World War II link-trainer instructor. For ten years he paid his dues on Broadway, in summer stock, and on television before landing his film debut in The Kentuckian in 1955. By the time of his 1968 casting as cantankerous but lovable slob Oscar Madison in the film version of Neil Simon's The Odd Couple, Matthau had won major Hollywood stardom.
Matthau also offers unflinching examination of the legend's impoverished but culturally rich upbringing; his gambling addiction (that he once estimated had cost him $5 million); his repeated health scares (including a tumor, coronary bypass surgery, and a prolonged bout with double pneumonia); and his personal and professional partnersip with fellow talent Jack Lemmon. Matthau offers a definitive portrait of the man whose mischievous eyes, loose gait, and droll way with a deadpan line delighted audiences for over fifty years.
Based on dozens of interviews and extensive research, this book covers the breadth of Walter Matthau's often-complicated personal life and multi-faceted career.
For most people, he was best known as Oscar Madison, the unkempt, curmudgeonly yin to the yang of his prim and proper housemate, Felix Unger. But that role was just one of many sterling performances from the always outspoken Walter Matthau (1920-2000), a great comic actor and on-screen grouch extraordinaire.
Born Walter Matthow in the Jewish tenements of New York's Lower East Side, he was a child actor in New York's Yiddish theater, and later a World War II link-trainer instructor. For ten years he paid his dues on Broadway, in summer stock, and on television before landing his film debut in The Kentuckian in 1955. By the time of his 1968 casting as cantankerous but lovable slob Oscar Madison in the film version of Neil Simon's The Odd Couple, Matthau had won major Hollywood stardom.
Matthau also offers unflinching examination of the legend's impoverished but culturally rich upbringing; his gambling addiction (that he once estimated had cost him $5 million); his repeated health scares (including a tumor, coronary bypass surgery, and a prolonged bout with double pneumonia); and his personal and professional partnersip with fellow talent Jack Lemmon. Matthau offers a definitive portrait of the man whose mischievous eyes, loose gait, and droll way with a deadpan line delighted audiences for over fifty years.
Based on dozens of interviews and extensive research, this book covers the breadth of Walter Matthau's often-complicated personal life and multi-faceted career.
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- Lanham, Md. : Taylor Trade Pub. : Distributed by National Book Network, 2002.
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