Marvin Wilbur Kaplan

Is your surname Kaplan?

Research the Kaplan family

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Marvin Wilbur Kaplan

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, Kings County, New York, United States
Death: August 25, 2016 (89)
Burbank, Los Angeles County, California, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Isador C Kaplan, MD and Ruth Kaplan
Ex-husband of Rosa Kaplan
Brother of Private and Rene Kaplan

Occupation: Actor; in the show Alice
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:
view all

Immediate Family

About Marvin Wilbur Kaplan

From the Washington Post:

Marvin Kaplan, character actor who won laughs in ‘Adam’s Rib’ and ‘Alice,’ dies at 89

By Emily Langer August 26

Marvin Kaplan, a comedic character actor — immediately recognizable for his thick glasses, thicker eyebrows and Brooklyn accent — who had been a fixture of TV and movies since his scene-stealing film debut in “Adam’s Rib” with Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn, died Aug. 25 at a hospital in Los Angeles. He was 89.

He had a heart ailment, said his business manager, Elizabeth Holt.

Mr. Kaplan endeared himself to millions of CBS viewers in the 1970s and 1980s as Henry Beesmeyer, the telephone repairman who frequented Mel’s Diner in the sitcom “Alice.” It was one of scores of roles he played in nearly seven decades as an actor — a career that he jokingly described as a “detour” from his plan to be a playwright. He credited the change of plans almost wholly to a kindly intervention by Hepburn.

Mr. Kaplan had struck out in the late 1940s for Los Angeles, where he happened upon an acting role in a play by the French comedic master Molière. One night, after attending the show, Hepburn stopped backstage to greet the cast. Mr. Kaplan had incongruously played his part, he later told the Star-News of Wilmington, N.C., as “a peasant with a Brooklyn accent.”

“You’re Marvin Kaplan, aren’t you?” Hepburn inquired, according to an account on Mr. Kaplan’s website. “Have you done a lot of work?”

Ravished by her presence, Mr. Kaplan somehow found the wherewithal to admit that the part was his first.

“Well, you were awfully good,” she replied.

“Changed my whole life,” Mr. Kaplan later told an interviewer, Kliph Nesteroff. “I didn’t think I’d ever get a job as an actor because I’m not a very handsome person. I didn’t think I wanted to be an actor. She decided I should be.”

Soon after, Mr. Kaplan was called to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios for a meeting with director George Cukor, who offered him a role in Hepburn’s latest movie, “Adam’s Rib” (1949). She and Tracy co-starred as married lawyers who spar in the case of a woman who has shot her husband, and the witty script was supplied by screenwriters Ruth Gordon and Garson Kanin. Mr. Kaplan was cast as a court reporter.

“You repeat this very emotional testimony in a dull, flat voice,” Cukor instructed.

“I have a dull, flat voice,” Mr. Kaplan replied.

“I noticed,” he said Cukor responded.

In his scene, Mr. Kaplan blankly requests the spelling of “Pinky,” a term of endearment between the prominent lawyers that they allow to slip out in court.

Thereafter, despite being uncredited in the film, Mr. Kaplan became ubiquitous on the large and small screens. In director Stanley Kramer’s “It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World” (1963), he and actor Arnold Stang play gas station attendants in a memorable sequence in which Jonathan Winters’s character destroys a service station.

Mr. Kaplan had parts in films including “Francis” (1950), a comedy about a talking Army mule, the baseball comedy “Angels in the Outfield” (1951), “The Nutty Professor” (1963) starring Jerry Lewis, “A New Kind of Love” (1963) with Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward, “The Great Race” (1965) with Tony Curtis, Natalie Wood, Jack Lemmon and Peter Falk, and “Freaky Friday” (1976) with Barbara Harris and Jodie Foster.

His earliest television roles included the part of Alfred Prinzmetal, an aspiring poet and composer, on “Meet Millie,” the 1950s CBS sitcom that began as a radio show. In the 1960s and 1970s, he appeared on “Petticoat Junction,” “Gomer Pyle: USMC,” “I Dream of Jeannie” and “Mod Squad.” More recently, he cropped up on shows such as “ER” and “Becker.”

Marvin Wilbur Kaplan was born in Brooklyn on Jan. 24, 1927. His father was a doctor.

The younger Mr. Kaplan received a bachelor’s degree in English from Brooklyn College in 1947, then studied theater at the University of Southern California. Knowing that Mr. Kaplan hoped to be a writer, department head William C. de Mille (brother of filmmaker Cecil B. DeMille) advised Mr. Kaplan to drop out and seek work as an assistant stage manager.

“See what actors do to writers’ lines!” said de Mille, who also had long experience in theater and moviemaking.

The radius of his job search was limited by his lack of an automobile, Mr. Kaplan told Nesteroff. But he found work as the stage manager of a Los Angeles staging of the melodrama “Rain,” directed by Charlie Chaplin. Mr. Kaplan’s first acting role was in the Molière play that led him to Hepburn.

Mr. Kaplan did extensive voice acting work, including as Choo Choo in the 1960s series “Top Cat” and as several characters in “Garfield and Friends” in the 1990s.

He never retired. In recent years he wrote the screenplay for a comedic film, “Watch Out for Slick” (2010), and executive produced “Lookin’ Up,” a comedy starring Steve Guttenberg now in production.

He was a past president of the Los Angeles chapter of the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists and advocated on behalf of aging actors who must contend with Hollywood’s fascination with youth.

“They portray us two steps from humility and five steps from the grave,” he told the Associated Press in 2001. “It’s a vicious slander and we don’t deserve it.”

His marriage to Rosa Felsenburg ended in divorce. Survivors include a sister. Mr. Kaplan credited Hepburn not only with starting his career, but also with rescuing it from an early death. Once, on the set of “Adam’s Rib,” he realized that he was wearing the wrong clothes for a required shot. As he raced back to his faraway dressing room, he crossed paths with Hepburn. She later spoke up for him when the director demanded to know where the young man had gone.

“He probably dropped dead,” she said. “He was running so fast to his dressing room.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/marvin-kaplan-characte...



From Entertainment Weekly:

Posted August 25 2016 — 11:08 PM EDT

Marvin Kaplan, the veteran character actor known for appearing in the sitcom Alice and performing voice work on the animated series Top Cat, died in his sleep Thursday morning in Burbank, California. He was 89.

Theatre West announced the news and said in a statement, “We loved Marvin. He will truly be missed.”

Kaplan played Henry Beesmeyer, a phone company employee who frequented Mel’s Diner, on Alice, which ran from 1976 to 1985. In the early ’60s he voiced the turtleneck-clad pink feline Choo-Choo in Top Cat, a role he would also reprise for a 1987 TV movie.

A native of Brooklyn, New York, Kaplan came to Hollywood in 1947 and studied theater at USC. He was discovered by Katherine Hepburn two years later and landed his first film role in Adam’s Rib, opposite Hepburn, Spencer Tracy, and Judy Holliday.

Kaplan’s other screen credits included The Nutty Professor; It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World; Freaky Friday; Wild at Heart; Meet Millie; Garfield and Friends; and The Smurfs.

http://www.ew.com/article/2016/08/25/marvin-kaplan-dead-alice-top-c...

view all

Marvin Wilbur Kaplan's Timeline

1927
January 24, 1927
Brooklyn, New York, Kings County, New York, United States
1930
April 2, 1930
Age 3
US, NY, Kings, Brooklyn (537 Beford Ave.)
April 2, 1930
Age 3
US, NY, Kings, Brooklyn (ED 32 Sht 1B)
2016
August 25, 2016
Age 89
Burbank, Los Angeles County, California, United States