Peter Falk biography
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Peter Falk filmography
[h3]Peter Michael Falk, who descends from Eastern European Jewish heritage, had his right eye removed at the age of three after a malignant tumour was diagnosed. It is his glass eye that has come to represent the trademark squint people so commonly associate him with today.[/h3]
After graduating, Falk joined the United States Merchant Marines as a cook and then went on to complete a BA in Political Science in 1951, following this with a Masters degree in public administration in 1953.
After failing to get a job at the CIA, Falk became a management analyst at Connecticut State Budget Bureau. In his spare time, Falk studied at the White Barn Theatre and it wasn’t long before his hobby began to inspire aspirations to become a professional actor.
Aged 29, Falk resigned from his analyst position and moved to Greenwich Village in New York to pursue the acting dream. Falk made his debut on the boards in Molière's Don Juan in 1956 and swiftly moved onto Broadway heights in Saint Joan the same year. For the next three years, Falk was never to be out of work and switched from one theatre production to the next, earning acclaim from critics and soon making his big screen debut in Wind Across The Everglades (1958).
In his early screen roles, Falk often played the thug but his part in 1960’s Murder Inc. was a major turning point by earning him a Best Supporting Actor Academy Award nomination, coupled with an Emmy nomination for a TV episode of The Law and Mr Jones.
Remaining on a high, Falk notched up a second Oscar nomination just a year later for his role as a sarcastic bodyguard in Pocketful of Miracles (1961). His praise was rewarded with an Emmy win for Outstanding Performance by an Actor in the TV drama, The Price of Tomatoes (1961).
The steady stream of accolades established Falk as hot property and a string of film roles followed over the next few years, although the ultimate A-list level of fame still seemed to elude him.
In 1968, Falk first assumed the role of Lt. Columbo, the disheveled police lieutenant in the TV movie Prescription: Murder. The character was an immediate hit and after a second TV film, Ransom for a Dead Man, the first series of Columbo premiered in 1979. The initial series ran for seven years and in this time it earned Falk seven Emmy nominations and three wins for Best Lead Actor.
Falk also continued his film career, most notably with the late independent director John Cassavetes, appearing in his films Husbands (1970), A Woman Under the Influence (1974), and a cameo appearance at the end of Opening Night (1977). Cassavetes himself also guest starred in a Columbo episode in 1972.
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In 1971, Falk made a return to his roots back on Broadway for Neil Simon’s play The Prisoner of Second Avenue in which he received a Tony award. The play was directed by Mike Nichols and Falk went on to work with him in three more film roles, Murder by Death (1976) with Peter Sellers, The Cheap Detective (1978) with [urlnew=http://www.thebiographychannel.co.uk/biography_home/399:0/Stockard_Channing.htm]Stockard Channing[/urlnew] and The Sunshine Boys (1995) with [urlnew=http://www.thebiographychannel.co.uk/biography_home/41:0/Woody_Allen.htm]Woody Allen[/urlnew].
Falk is a rarity in that his acting career has seemingly never suffered any quiet spells, nor has he hit the headlines for any dubious personal scandals. He married Alyce Fayo on 17th April 1960 and the couple had two daughters, Catherine (who is a real life private investigator) and Jackie. After divorcing in 1976, Falk married actress Shera Danese a year later and the pair are still together. Danese is known to have guest-starred in Columbo numerous times.
After touring in David Mamet’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play Glengarry Glen Ross in 1986, Falk returned once again to the New York stage in 1998 for an off-Broadway production of Arthur Miller’s Mr Peter’s Connections. The play sold out for its entire run within two weeks of announcement.
Falk’s flair for comedy is evident from one of his personal favourite films, The In-Laws (1979) and his most recent high profile role was providing the voice of Don Brizzi in 2003’s Sharktale, also starring many other notable actors such as [urlnew=http://www.thebiographychannel.co.uk/biography_home/108:0/Will_Smith.htm]Will Smith[/urlnew] and [urlnew=http://www.thebiographychannel.co.uk/biography_home/1012:0/Angelina_Jolie.htm]Angelina Jolie[/urlnew].
Away from acting, Falk is also a practicing artist. His passion for drawing was sparked years ago when he began sketching as a way to pass time between scenes while filming on location. Aside from numerous gallery shows and exhibits of his art, including a 2004 exhibition at Bulgari’s in Rome, Peter shares several of his drawings on this website.
Though the first series of Columbo ended in 1977, it began shooting again in 1988 in the format of 2-hour TV movies and still continues to this day. Falk won his fourth Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actor in 1990 and has since been nominated for the famed role two more times.
In January 2003 the 69th episode, Columbo Likes The Nightlife, was shown on ABC and there will no doubt be more chances to see that famous overcoat for a few more years to come.
[i]Sarah Barnard[/i]
Peter Falk biography
- Falk is a Certified Public Accountant.
- Falk puts damper on a rumour that his trademark Columbo raincoat has been placed in the Smithsonian Institution: he instead says it's in his upstairs closet.
- Harry Cohn, head of Columbia Pictures and renowned for his vulgarity, rejected Falk, declaring, "For the same money, I can get an actor with two eyes!".
- Once when Falk was playing in a Little League game, the umpire called him out. Falk thought that he was safe. He pulled his glass eye out of its socket and handed it to the umpire, telling him, "Here, I think you might need this."
- Columbo's first name is never mentioned in the series. Though it was reported to be Philip Columbo by Fred Worth in his book 'Super Trivia' (1977) and later copied by the makers of Trivial Pursuit in 1984, Worth admitted to having fabricated the name as a means of proof of copyright in case someone were to have pirated his book (which someone did). The case went all the way to the Supreme Court, but was thrown out in the end.
- Columbo's wife, who he speaks of often, is never seen in the series.
- Falk had a street renamed after him in his hometown of Ossining, New York. To unveil the Peter Falk Place street sign, he pulled off a trademark Columbo raincoat covering the sign.
- Falk has inspired at least two Hanna-Barbera cartoon characters. Muttley in Wacky Races (1968) was based on Falk's Max Meen from The Great Race (1965), and Mumbly, the detective dog on The New Tom & Jerry Show (1975) was loosely based on Columbo.
- In 1961, he became the first actor nominated for an Oscar and an Emmy in the same year.
Peter Falk biography
Next (2007)
Three Days to Vegas (2007)
The Thing About My Folks (2005)
Checking Out (2005)
When Angels Come to Town (TV) (2004)
Shark Tale (2004) (voice)
Finding John Christmas (TV) (2003)
Wilder Days (TV) (2003)
Three Days of Rain (2003)
Undisputed (2002)
The Lost World (TV) (2001)
A Town Without Christmas (TV) (2001)
Corky Romano (2001)
Made (2001)
Hubert's Brain (2001) (voice)
Enemies of Laughter (2000)
Lakeboat (2000)
A Storm in Summer (TV) (2000)
From Where I Sit (TV) (2000)
Vig (1998) (voice)
Pronto (TV) (1997)
Roommates (1995)
Cops n Roberts (1995)
The Sunshine Boys (TV) (1995)
Tune in Tomorrow... (1990)
In the Spirit (1990)
Cookie (1989)
Vibes (1988)
The Princess Bride (1987)
Happy New Year (1987)
Himmel über Berlin, Der (1987)
Big Trouble (1986)
...All the Marbles (1981)
The Great Muppet Caper (1981) (uncredited)
The In-Laws (1979)
The Brink's Job (1978)
The Cheap Detective (1978)
Opening Night (1977) (uncredited)
Mikey and Nicky (1976)
Murder by Death (1976)
Griffin and Phoenix: A Love Story (TV) (1976)
A Woman Under The Influence (1974)
A Step Out of Line (TV) (1971)
The Name of the Game (TV) (1971)
Husbands (1970)
Rosolino Paternò, soldato... (1970)
Castle Keep (1969)
Columbo (1968-1978, 1989 to present)
Intoccabili, Gli (1968)
Sbarco di Anzio, Lo (1968)
A Hatful of Rain (TV) (1968)
Luv (1967)
Penelope (1966)
Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre (TV) (1963-1966)
Brigadoon (TV) (1966)
The Trials of O'Brien (TV) (1965-1966)
Too Many Thieves (1966)
The Great Race (1965)
Italiani brava gente (1965)
Ben Casey (1964)
The DuPont Show of the Week (TV) (1962-1964)
Ambassador at Large (TV) (1964)
Robin and the 7 Hoods (1964)
It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World (1963)
Wagon Train (TV) (1963)
Dr. Kildare (TV) (1963)
The Balcony (1963)
The Dick Powell Show (TV) (1962-1963)
The Alfred Hitchcock Hour (TV) (1962)
Pressure Point (1962)
Naked City (TV) (1958-1962)
87th Precinct (TV) (1962)
Pocketful of Miracles (1961)
The Twilight Zone (TV) (1961)
The Untouchables (TV) (1960-1961)
The Barbara Stanwyck Show (TV) (1961)
Alfred Hitchcock Presents (TV) (1961)
The Million Dollar Incident (TV) (1961)
Cry Vengeance! (TV) (1961)
The Aquanauts (TV) (1961)
The Law and Mr. Jones (TV) (1961)
The Witness (TV) (1960)
The Secret of the Purple Reef (1960)
Have Gun - Will Travel (TV) (1960)
The Islanders (TV) (1960)
Murder, Inc. (1960)
Play of the Week (TV) (1959-1960)
Pretty Boy Floyd (1960)
Decoy (TV) (1959)
New York Confidential (TV) (1959)
The Bloody Brood (1959)
Wind Across the Everglades (1958)
Kraft Television Theatre (TV) (1958)
Armstrong Circle Theatre (TV) (1958)
Studio One (1957)
Robert Montgomery Presents (1957)
Peter Falk biography
