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Louis Harold "Lou" Jacobi
(December 28, 1913 – October 23, 2009) was a Canadian character actor.
Jacobi was born Louis Harold Jacobovitch in
Toronto, Ontario to Joseph and Fay Jacobivitch. He began acting as a boy, making
his stage debut in 1924 at a Toronto theater, playing a violin prodigy in The
Rabbi and the Priest. After working as the drama director of a Toronto Y.M.H.A.,
the social director at a summer resort, a stand-up comic in Canada’s equivalent
of the Borscht Belt, and the entertainment at various weddings and bachelor
parties, Jacobi moved to London to work on the stage, appearing in Guys and
Dolls and Pal Joey. Jacobi made his Broadway debut in 1955 in The Diary of Anne
Frank as Hans van Daan, a role he reprised in the 1959 film version. Other
Broadway performances included Paddy Chayefsky’s The Tenth Man (1959); Woody
Allen’s Don’t Drink the Water (1966); and Neil Simon’s debut play Come Blow Your
Horn (1961).
Jacobi made his film debut in the 1953 British
comedy Is Your Honeymoon Really Necessary?, alongside Diana Dors. Other notable
film roles include Uncle Morty in My Favorite Year; Moustache in Irma La Douce;
Penelope (1966), which starred Natalie Wood; a transvestite husband in Woody
Allen's Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex (But Were Afraid to Ask);
Barry Levinson's Avalon; and Amazon Women on the Moon. His final film role was
in 1994's I.Q., playing philosopher/mathematician Kurt Gödel.
Jacobi was a guest star in a variety of
television shows, including Playhouse 90, That Girl and The Man From U.N.C.L.E.,
and was a regular on The Dean Martin Show. In 1976, he starred in the short
lived television series Ivan the Terrible, a sitcom about a family living in the
Soviet Union.
He made a spoof record album for Capitol
Records called Al Tijuana and his Jewish Brass in he which he acted as a master
of ceremonies/bandleader of dance band that plays songs such as "Downtown." He
also was part of a group that made the comic shtick records You Don't Have to Be
Jewish and When You're in Love, the Whole World Is Jewish.
In 1999, Jacobi was inducted into Canada's
Walk of Fame.
Jacobi was married to Ruth Ludwin from 1957
until her death in 2004. Jacobi died on October 23, 2009, aged 95.
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