Cliff Gorman | |
Birth Name: | Joel Joshua Goldberg |
Birth Date: | 13 October 1936 |
Birth Place: | Queens, New York City, U.S. |
Death Place: | Manhattan, New York City, U.S. |
Occupation: | Actor |
Years Active: | 1968–2002 |
Joel Joshua Goldberg (October 13, 1936 – September 5, 2002), known professionally as Cliff Gorman, was an American actor.[1] He won an Obie Award in 1968 for the stage presentation of The Boys in the Band,[1] and went on to reprise his role in the 1970 film version.[2]
Gorman was born Joel Joshua Goldberg in Queens, New York, the son of Jewish parents, Ethel (née Kaplan) and Samuel Goldberg, who later changed their surname to Gorman.[3] [4] He attended the High School of Music & Art in Manhattan.[1]
Gorman won a Tony Award in 1972 for playing Lenny Bruce in the play Lenny.[1] Although the film version, directed by Bob Fosse, featured Dustin Hoffman, Gorman was recruited to portray a Dustin Hoffman-like character portraying Lenny Bruce in a side-story in Fosse's autobiographical film All That Jazz (1979).[5] [6]
He played Joseph Goebbels in the 1981 television film The Bunker, and co-starred as Lt. Andrews in the film Angel (1984). He had roles in the films Cops and Robbers (1973), Rosebud (1975), (1976), An Unmarried Woman (1978) with Jill Clayburgh, Night of the Juggler (1980), Hoffa (1992) with Jack Nicholson and Danny DeVito, and Night and the City (1992). His TV work included performances in the series Law and Order, Murder, She Wrote, , and the 1970s drama Police Story, written by former LAPD Detective Sergeant Joseph Wambaugh.
On the September 13, 1965 episode of To Tell The Truth, Gorman sat in seat #1 as an imposter for game #3 of the evening. He received two votes, one from Orson Bean, and one from Kitty Carlisle. When asked what he actually did for a living, he responded that he sold room air conditioners for the Republic Water Heater Company.[7]
Gorman and his wife cared for his fellow The Boys in the Band cast member Robert La Tourneaux in the last few months of his battle against AIDS, until La Tourneaux's death on June 3, 1986.[8] [9]
On September 5, 2002, Gorman died of leukemia at the age of 65 at his home in Manhattan.[1]
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1969 | Justine | "Toto" | ||
1970 | The Boys in the Band | Emory | ||
1973 | Cops and Robbers | Tom | ||
1975 | Rosebud | Hamlekh | ||
1975 | The Silence | Stanley Greenberg | TV film | |
1976 | Danny Conforti | TV film | ||
1977 | Having Babies II | Arthur Magee | TV film | |
1978 | An Unmarried Woman | Charlie | ||
1979 | All That Jazz | Davis Newman | ||
1980 | Night of the Juggler | Gus Soltic | ||
1981 | The Bunker | TV film | ||
1984 | Angel | Lieutenant Andrews | ||
1992 | Night and the City | Phil Nasseros | ||
1992 | Hoffa | Soloman "Solly" Stein | ||
1999 | Sonny Valerio | |||
2000 | King of the Jungle | Jack | ||
2003 | Kill the Poor | Yakov | Posthumous release |