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Actors - Al Lewis


Al Lewis (30 April 1923 or 1910 - 3 February 2006) was an American restaurant owner, political candidate, and radio broadcaster, but was best known as the actor who played the role of "Grandpa" on the television series The Munsters.

Parents

In a 1998 interview with Walt Shepperd, Al Lewis said:
My mother was a worker, worked in the garment trades. My mother was an indomitable spirit. My grandfather had no sons. He had six daughters. They lived in Poland or Russia, every five years it would change. My mother being the oldest daughter, they saved their money, and when she was about 16 they sent her to the United States, not knowing a word of English. She went to work in the garment center, worked her back and rear-end off and brought over to the United States her five sisters and two parents. I remember going on picket lines with my mother. My mother wouldn't back down to anyone (see ).
He stated the same information in an 10 April 1997 interview with correspondents Amy Goodman and Bernard White (see ).

Birth

Few facts about Lewis are known with any certainty; most of the information comes from interviews he gave, and there are inconsistencies in his testimonies. Some times he gave his birth year as 1910 and other times 1923. Ted Lewis, his son, said his father was born in 1923. Dan Barry of the New York Times writes: "Actors who lie about their age usually subtract, not add, years, and few would have the nerve to fudge those years by more than a decade." Al may have been born under the name Albert Meister or Alexander Meister (see) to a Jewish family in Brooklyn, New York (see ). Other sources place his birth in Wolcott, New York (see ), but no official record of his birth has been published to date, and officials in Wolcott say they have no record of any Meister. The Times wrote: "Lewis was born Albert Meister, probably in 1923, although he insisted that he was born in 1910. This, and Lewis’s many other questionable stories, means that much of the actor’s life is a broth of conjecture that his fans will no doubt squabble over for years to come."

As to why Lewis might have lied about his age, the most common theory is that in 1963 (at age 40, had he been born in 1923), trying to land the role of Grandpa, he might have been concerned about being actually younger than Yvonne De Carlo
, who was cast to play his daughter.

Education

He said he moved to Brooklyn, New York with his family as a child and attended Thomas Jefferson High School, from which he left in his junior year. He later attended Oswego State Teachers College (now SUNY Oswego). He also claimed he earned a Ph.D. in child psychology from Columbia University in 1941. The university, though, has no record of this. (see ). In other interviews he also claimed he joined the Merchant Marines prior to World War II and spent time in Italy.

Career

In interviews he said he worked as a circus performer and as a hot dog vendor at Ebbets Field, the former ballpark for the Brooklyn Dodgers. In 1987 he opened an Italian restaurant called "Grampa's Bella Gente" at 252 Bleecker Street in Greenwich Village, New York City.

He was also a recurring guest on The Howard Stern Show. In 1987 during a rally against the FCC, Howard Stern held a live rally on the air, and when Al took the stage, he repeatedly yelled obscenities about the FCC until Howard was able to take the microphone away from him.

Acting

His acting career begins the well documented portion of his life. He worked in burlesque and vaudeville theaters, then on Broadway in the dramas The Night Circus (1958) and One More River (1960), and as the character Moe Shtarker in the musical comedy Do Re Mi (1962). His earliest television work includes two episodes of The Phil Silvers Show in 1959, and four episodes of Naked City from 1959 to 1963. His first well-known television role was as Officer Leo Schnauser on Car 54, Where Are You? from 1961 to 1963, although he is best remembered as Grandpa on The Munsters, which ran on American television from 1964 to 1966 and for years later in re-runs. His first role in a movie was playing Machine Gun Manny in Pretty Boy Floyd (1960). He also played the character Turkey in They Shoot Horses, Don't They?
(1969). His last role in a movie was Father Hanlon in Night Terror (2002).

Political life

Lewis has claimed that he was member of the Sacco and Vanzetti Defense Committee in 1927, and that he worked in the 1930s to free the Scottsboro Boys. However, both of these would be impossible if he had been born in 1923.

In a 1997 interview, Lewis also claimed that he was an organizer in the Food, Agricultural and Tobacco Workers Union in North Carolina in the 1930s. Once on his WBAI-FM radio program Lewis said "If anything I consider myself an anarchist." As an activist, he hosted a politically oriented radio program on WBAI, and ran as Green Party candidate for Governor of New York in 1998. In that race he sought to be listed on the ballot as "Grandpa Al Lewis," arguing that he was most widely known by that name. His request was rejected by the Board of Elections, a decision upheld in court against his challenge. Despite this setback, he achieved one of his campaign objectives. His total of 52,533 votes exceeded the threshold of votes set by New York law (50,000), and hence guaranteed the Green Party an automatic ballot line for the next four years. (See Election results, New York governor) He said that with "no machine and no money" backing him, the likelihood of winning the governorship would be "like climbing Mount Everest barefooted".

[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Al Lewis ]



Some related entries: Ian McFadyen | Jeremy Kissner | Will Clark | Nicholas Turturro | Don't Sit Down | Mary Lu Zahalan | Mark Hildreth | Jim Boeven | Daniel Morrison | Arsinée Khanjian | Will Rothhaar

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Al Lewis; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

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