Sam Jaffe

{{short description|American actor, teacher, musician and engineer (1891-1984)}}

{{about|the actor|the producer|Sam Jaffe (producer)}}

{{Infobox person

| name = Sam Jaffe

| image = Sam Jaffe David Zorba Ben Casey.jpg

| caption = Jaffe as David Zorba in Ben Casey, 1961

| birth_name = Shalom Jaffe

| birth_date = {{birth date|1891|03|10}}

| birth_place = New York City, U.S.

| death_date = {{death date and age|1984|03|24|1891|03|10}}

| death_place = Beverly Hills, California, U.S.

| resting_place = Williston Cemetery in Williston, South Carolina

| othername = Sam C. Jaffe

| occupation = {{flatlist|

  • Actor
  • teacher
  • engineer}}

| education = City College of New York
(B.Sc. Engineering, 1912)

| yearsactive = 1918–1984

| spouse = {{plainlist|

  • {{marriage|Lillian Taiz|1926|1941|end=died}}
  • {{marriage|Bettye Ackerman
    |1956}}

}}

}}

Shalom "Sam" Jaffe (March 10, 1891 – March 24, 1984) was an American actor, teacher, musician, and engineer. In 1951, he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in The Asphalt Jungle (1950). He also appeared in The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951) and Ben-Hur (1959), and is additionally known for his roles as the titular character in Gunga Din (1939) and as the "High Lama" in Lost Horizon (1937).

Early life

Jaffe was born to Ukrainian Jewish parents Heida (Ada) and Barnett Jaffe at 97 Orchard Street (current location of the Lower East Side Tenement Museum){{cite web| date=February 5, 2021| title=Top 10 Secrets of the Tenement Museum| url=https://untappedcities.com/2021/02/05/secrets-tenement-museum-nyc/| access-date=2021-02-07| website=Untapped New York| language=en-US}}{{cite web| date=2016-08-30| title=Gettin' Schooled: A History Lesson| url=https://www.tenement.org/blog/gettin-schooled-a-history-lesson/|access-date=2021-02-07| website=Tenement Museum| language=en-US}} in New York City, New York. His mother was a Yiddish actress in Odesa, Ukraine, prior to moving to the United States; his father was a jeweller. He was the youngest of four children; his siblings were Abraham, Sophie, and Annie. As a child, he appeared in Yiddish theatre productions with his mother, who after moving to the United States became a prominent actress and vaudeville star. He graduated from Townsend Harris High School and studied engineering at City College of New York, graduating in 1912. He later attended Columbia University for graduate studies. He also worked for several years as a teacher, and then dean, of mathematics at the Bronx Cultural Institute, a college preparatory school, before returning to acting in 1915.

Career

File:Sam Jaffe & Ruth Foster 1965.jpg on set of Ben Casey]]

As a young man, he lived in Greenwich Village in the same apartment building as a young John Huston. The two men became good friends and remained so for life. Jaffe was later to star in two of Huston's films: The Asphalt Jungle and The Barbarian and the Geisha. Jaffe's closest friends included Zero Mostel, Edward G. Robinson, Ray Bradbury, and Igor Stravinsky. In 1923 he appeared in the Broadway premiere of God of Vengeance (Got fun Nekome) by Sholem Asch, as Reb Ali. The production became notorious after the cast, producer, and theatre owner were indicted and found guilty on charges of indecency in May 1923.{{cite web| url=https://blog.mcny.org/2012/06/19/the-god-of-vengeance-is-the-play-immoral/| title="The God of Vengeance": Is the Play Immoral?| date=19 June 2012| website=Museum of the City of New York blog}} Jaffe began to work in film in 1934, rising to prominence with his first role as the mad Tsar Peter III in The Scarlet Empress. In 1938, Jaffe was forty-seven years old when he played the title role of bhisti (waterbearer) Gunga Din.

Jaffe was blacklisted by the Hollywood movie studio bosses during the 1950s, supposedly for being a communist sympathizer. Despite being blacklisted, he was hired first by Robert Wise for The Day the Earth Stood Still and then by director William Wyler for his role in the 1959 Academy Award-winning version of Ben-Hur.

Jaffe co-starred in the ABC television series, Ben Casey, as Dr. David Zorba from 1961 to 1965, alongside Vince Edwards. He also had many guest-starring roles on other series, including Batman (as Mr. Zoltan Zorba) and in the western Alias Smith and Jones. In 1975, he co-starred as a retired doctor who is murdered by Janet Leigh in the Columbo episode "Forgotten Lady". He also appeared with an all-star cast in the TV pilot film of Rod Serling's Night Gallery and as Emperor Norton in one episode of Bonanza.{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1984/03/25/obituaries/sam-jaffe-a-character-actor-on-stage-and-film-dies-at-93.html |title=Sam Jaffe, A Character Actor On Stage and Film, Dies at 93 |first=Peter B. |last=Flint |newspaper=The New York Times |date=25 March 1984 |url-access=subscription|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150214223136/http://www.nytimes.com/1984/03/25/obituaries/sam-jaffe-a-character-actor-on-stage-and-film-dies-at-93.html |archive-date=February 14, 2015}}

Personal life and death

Jaffe was married to American operatic soprano and musical comedy star Lillian Taiz from 1926 until her death from cancer in 1941. In 1956, he married actress Bettye Ackerman, 33 years his junior, with whom he later co-starred in Ben Casey. She died on November 1, 2006. He had no children from either marriage.{{Citation needed |date=July 2023}}

A Democrat, Jaffe supported the campaign of Adlai Stevenson II during the 1952 presidential election.Motion Picture and Television Magazine. November 1952. page 33.

Jaffe died of cancer in Beverly Hills, California, in 1984, two weeks after his 93rd birthday.{{cite news| last=Pearson| first=Richard| date=March 26, 1984| title=Character Actor Sam Jaffe, 93, Dies of Cancer| url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/1984/03/26/character-actor-sam-jaffe-93-dies-of-cancer/db9743b9-8830-4d92-a9f8-e49878a6857c/| newspaper=The Washington Post}} He was cremated at the Pasadena Crematory in Altadena, California, and his ashes were given to his surviving wife, Bettye, and, upon her death in 2006, buried with her at Williston Cemetery in Williston, South Carolina.{{cite book| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FOHgDAAAQBAJ&q=Sam+Jaffe&pg=PA7| title=Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons| edition=3d| first=Scott| last=Wilson| date=19 August 2016| publisher=McFarland| isbn=978-1-4766-2599-7| via=Google Books}}

Filmography

File:1976 Sad Lonely Sundays Oath Jack Albertson Sam Jaffe.jpg in the 1976 TV special The Sad and Lonely Sundays.]]

class="wikitable sortable"
Year

! Film

! Role

! Director

! class="unsortable" | Notes

1916

| A Cheap Vacation

|

|

|

1934

| The Scarlet Empress

| Grand Duke Peter

| Josef von Sternberg

|

1934

| We Live Again

| Gregory Simonson

| Rouben Mamoulian

|

1937

| Lost Horizon

| High Lama

| Frank Capra

|

1938

| The Adventures of Robin Hood

| (uncredited) man who tells men to meet Robin at Gallows Oaks

|

|

1939

| Gunga Din

| Gunga Din

| George Stevens

|

1943

| Stage Door Canteen

| Sam Jaffe

| Frank Borzage

|

1946

| 13 Rue Madeleine

| Mayor Galimard

| Henry Hathaway

|

1947

| Gentleman's Agreement

| Professor Fred Lieberman

| Elia Kazan

|

1949

| The Accused

| Dr. Romley

| William Dieterle

|

1949

| Rope of Sand

| Dr. Francis Hunter

| William Dieterle

|

1950

| The Asphalt Jungle

| criminal mastermind Doc Erwin Riedenschneider

| John Huston

|

1951

| I Can Get It for You Wholesale

| Sam Cooper

| Michael Gordon

|

1951

| The Day the Earth Stood Still

| Professor Jacob Barnhardt

| Robert Wise

|

1953

| Main Street to Broadway

| First Nighter (uncredited)

| Tay Garnett

|

1957

| Les Espions

| head of the American spy network Sam Cooper

| Henri-Georges Clouzot

|

1958

| The Barbarian and the Geisha

| translator-secretary Henry Heusken

| John Huston

|

1959

| Ben-Hur

| merchant and loyal slave Simonides

| William Wyler

|

1967

| A Guide for the Married Man

| Technical Adviser (Shrink)

| Gene Kelly

|

1967

| Tarzan's Jungle Rebellion

| Dr. Singleton (archive footage)

|

|

1968

| La Bataille de San Sebastian

| Father Joseph

| Henri Verneuil

|

1969

| The Great Bank Robbery

| Brother Lilac Bailey (Art Forger)

| Hy Averback

|

1970

| The Dunwich Horror

| Old Whateley

| Daniel Haller

|

1970

| Quarantined

| Mr. Berryman

| Leo Penn

|

1970

| The Old Man Who Cried Wolf

| Abe Stillman

| Walter Grauman

|

1971

| Who Killed the Mysterious Mr. Foster?

| Toby

|

|

1971

| Bedknobs and Broomsticks

| Bookman

| Robert Stevenson

|

1971

| Enemies

| Gittelman

|

|

1971

| The Tell-Tale Heart

| The Old Man

|

|

1973

| Saga of Sonora

| Old Sam

|

|

1976

| The Sad and Lonely Sundays

| Dr. Sweeny

|

|

1980

| Gideon's Trumpet

| 1st Supreme Court Justice

|

|

1980

| Battle Beyond the Stars

| Dr. Hephaestus

| Jimmy T. Murakami

|

1984

| Nothing Lasts Forever

| Father Knickerbocker

| Tom Schiller

|

1984

| On the Line

| El Gabacho (final film role)

|

|

Television credits

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References

{{reflist|2}}

Further reading

  • {{cite book |last=Young |first=Jordan R. |title=Reel Characters: Great Movie Character Actors |chapter=Sam Jaffe

|pages=43–56 |year=1986 |edition=Sixth |orig-year=First published 1975 |type=softcover |publisher=Moonstone Press |location=Beverly Hills, Calif |isbn=978-0-940410-79-4}}