Jack Klugman, the prolific, craggy-faced character
actor and regular guy who was loved by millions as the messy one in TV's
"The Odd Couple" and the crime-fighting coroner in "Quincy,
M.E.," died Monday, a son said. He was 90.
Klugman, who lost his voice to throat cancer in the 1980s
and trained himself to speak again, died with his wife at his side.
"He had a great life and he enjoyed every moment of
it and he would encourage others to do the same," son Adam Klugman said.
Adam Klugman said he was spending Christmas with his
brother, David, and their families. Their father had been convalescing for some
time but had apparently died suddenly and they were not sure of the exact
cause.
"His sons loved him very much," David Klugman
said. "We'll carry on in his spirit."
Never anyone's idea of a matinee idol, Klugman remained a
popular star for decades simply by playing the type of man you could imagine
running into at a bar or riding on a subway with — gruff, but down to earth,
his tie stained and a little loose, a racing form under his arm, a cigar in
hand during the days when smoking was permitted.
His was a city actor ideal for "The Odd
Couple," which ran from 1970 to 1975 and was based on Neil Simon's play
about mismatched roommates, divorced New Yorkers who end up living together.
The show teamed Klugman — the sloppy sports writer Oscar Madison — and Tony
Randall — the fussy photographer Felix Unger — in the roles played by Walter
Matthau and Art Carney on Broadway and Matthau and Jack Lemmon in the 1968
film. Klugman had already had a taste of the show when he replaced Matthau on
Broadway and he learned to roll with the quick-thinking Randall, with whom he
had worked in 1955 on the CBS series "Appointment with Adventure."
"There's nobody better to improvise with than
Tony," Klugman said. "A script might say, 'Oscar teaches Felix
football.' There would be four blank pages. He would provoke me into reacting
to what he did. Mine was the easy part."
They were battlers on screen, and the best of friends in
real life. When Randall died in 2004 at age 84, Klugman told CNN: "A world
without Tony Randall is a world that I cannot recognize."
In "Quincy, M.E.," which ran from 1976 to 1983,
Klugman played an idealistic, tough-minded medical examiner who tussled with
his boss by uncovering evidence of murder in cases where others saw natural
causes.
"We had some wonderful writers," he said in a
1987 Associated Press interview. "Quincy was a muckraker, like Upton
Sinclair, who wrote about injustices. He was my ideal as a youngster, my
author, my hero.
"Everybody said, 'Quincy'll never be a hit.' I said,
'You guys are wrong. He's two heroes in one, a cop and a doctor.' A coroner has
power. He can tell the police commissioner to investigate a murder. I saw the
opportunity to do what I'd gotten into the theater to do — give a message.
"They were going to do cops and robbers with
'Quincy.' I said, 'You promised me I could do causes.' They said, 'Nobody wants
to see that.' I said, 'Look at the success of "60 Minutes." They want
to see it if you present it as entertainment.'"
For his 1987 role as 81-year-old Nat in the Broadway
production of "I'm Not Rappaport," Klugman wore leg weights to learn
to shuffle like an elderly man. He said he would wear them for an hour before
each performance, "to remember to keep that shuffle."
"The guy is so vital emotionally, but physically he
can't be," Klugman said.
"We treat old people so badly. There is nothing easy
about 80."
KLUGMAN, Jack (Jacob Joachim Klugman)
Born: 4/27/1922, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.
Died: 12/25/2012, Northridge, Calfifornia, U.S.A.
Jack Klugman’s westerns – actor:
Grubstake – 1952
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1958 (Earl Ticks)
The Virginian (TV) – 1964 (Charles Mayhew)

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