George Segal Movies
George Segal kicked off his performing career as a boy magician in his Long Island neighborhood. An accomplished banjoist, Segal played with Bruno Lynch and His Imperial Jazz before enrolling at Columbia University. After three years' military service, Segal resettled in New York in 1959, and that same year was cast in his first off-Broadway play. Entering films with 1961's
The Young Doctors, Segal quickly established himself as one of Hollywood's most accomplished young character actors; in 1967, he received an Oscar nomination for his portrayal of Nick in
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf. When one compiles a list of favorite films from the late 1960s-early 1970s, one usually spends a great deal of time exclaiming "Hey! Segal was in that, too." He played a hustling POW in
King Rat (1965), a Cagneyesque hood in
Saint Valentine's Day Massacre (1967), ulcerated homicide detective Mo Brummel in
No Way to Treat a Lady (1968), a neurotic New York Jewish intellectual in
Bye Bye Braverman (1968), a straight-laced bachelor in love with a foul-mouthed hooker in
The Owl and the Pussycat (1970), and a repressed lawyer saddled with an outrageously senile mother in
Where's Poppa? (1970). During this same period, Segal had an arrangement with the ABC TV network, permitting him to star in television adaptations of classic Broadway plays: he was cast as George opposite
Nicol Williamson's Lenny in Of Mice and Men, then switched gears as vicious escaped criminal Glenn Griffin in The Desperate Hours. Throughout this busy period in his life, Segal fronted the Beverly Hills Unlisted Jazz Band, cutting several records and making a number of memorable Tonight Show appearances. In 1973, Segal's successful screen teaming with
Glenda Jackson in
A Touch of Class enabled him to demand a much higher price for his film services; unfortunately, many of the films that followed--The Black Bird (1975) and
The Duchess and the Dirtwater Fox (1976) in particular--failed to justify Segal's seven-figure price tag. In the 1980s, Segal starred in two well-written but low-rated TV weeklies,
Take Five (1987) and
Murphy's Law (1989). His film career was lifted from the doldrums in the late 1980s with such plum roles as the pond-scum father of
Kirstie Alley's baby in
Look Who's Talking (1989) and the "pinko" comedy writer in
For the Boys (1991). Segal's projects of the 1990s have included the syndicated TV adventure series High Tide (1994) and such film roles as the bemused husband of abrasive Jewish mama
Mary Tyler Moore in the 1996
Ben Stiller vehicle
Flirting with Disaster. In 1996, Segal found renewed success on television playing a well-meaning but rather duplicitous publisher whose estranged daughter comes to work for him in the razor-sharp NBC sitcom
Just Shoot Me. Though he has yet to win an Oscar, Emmy, Tony or Obie,
George Segal has been honored with the 1990 Jewish Cultural Achievement Award. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide