George Grizzard

Bucks County Playhouse productions

The School For Scandal - Charles Surface - 1961

The Tavern - The Vagabond - 1961

Twelfth Night - Sebastian, brother to Viola - 1961

The Headhunters (World Premiere) - Pavel Andreyev - 1971

 

Internet Movie Database - George Grizzard

Internet Broadway Database - George Grizzard

 

George Grizzard

(1928 - )

A celebrated stage actor with numerous Broadway and stock company plays to his credit, GEORGE GRIZZARD has generally been seen as a supporting player in TV and films. The light-haired actor was often cast as politicians and men of authority, most memorably as John Adams in "The Adams Chronicles" (PBS, 1976), the ruthless Senator van Ackerman in "Advise and Consent" (1962) and the forceful defense attorney Arthur Gold in more or less annual appearances on NBC's "Law & Order". Born in North Carolina and raised in Washington, DC, Grizzard began his acting career in a production of The Corn Is Green at the Crossroads Theatre in Virginia in 1945, before working at the Arena Stage. He headed to NYC to study with Sanford Meisner and soon made his Broadway debut in The Desperate Hours (1955) playing Paul Newman's younger brother who joins in taking Karl Malden and his family hostage. The next year he won a Theatre World Award for his work in The Happiest Millionaire, earned a Tony nomination for his turn in The Disenchanted and created the role of Nick in Edward Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1962). Grizzard went on to play numerous classical roles, including several at Minneapolis' Guthrie Theater, before returning to the Great White Way in a 1965 revival of The Glass Menagerie. By 1970, he was playing Julius Rosenberg in Donald Freed's "Inquest" and two years later co-starred with Jason Robards in a revival of Clifford Odets' The Country Girl. Throughout the 70s, he worked in plays by many of America's best writers including Arthur Miller (The Creation of the World and Other Business 1972), George S Kaufman and Edna Ferber (the 1975 revival of The Royal Family) and Neil Simon (California Suite 1976). In 1986, Grizzard tackled the role of Tobias in Albee's A Delicate Balance at the Berkshire Theatre Festival and a decade later capped his long stage career with a Tony Award as Best Actor in the Broadway revival. Despite his extensive stage credits, Grizzard managed to find occasional film and TV roles. Throughout the small screen's so-called 'Golden Age', he appeared in numerous anthology series and such prestigious offerings as "Teacher, Teacher", a 1969 NBC "Hallmark Hall of Fame" offering in which he was cast as the father of a retarded youth. His work alongside Henry Fonda in the live presentation of "The Oldest Living Graduate" (NBC, 1980), earned him a well-deserved Emmy Award. Grizzard has often played real-life figures in TV shows such as journalist Tom Wicker in "Attica" (ABC, 1980), John Siegenthaler in "Robert Kennedy and His Times" (CBS, 1985) and US President Jimmy Carter in "Iran: Days of Crisis" (TNT, 1991). More recently, he returned to his Southern roots in two CBS miniseries 1993's "Queen" and 1994's "Scarlett". Grizzard and Elaine Stritch (with whom he also co-starred in "A Delicate Balance") offered delicious comic turns as the battling parents of Jane Curtin in a 1997 episode of the NBC sitcom "3rd Rock From the Sun".

 

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