Norman Lloyd

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Norman Lloyd

Born November 8, 1914 (1914-11-08) (age 93)
Jersey City, New Jersey, United States

Norman Lloyd (born November 8, 1914) is an American veteran actor, producer and director with a career in entertainment spanning more than seven decades. Lloyd has appeared in over 60 films and television shows. Lloyd is married and resides in Los Angeles.

Contents

[edit] Career

[edit] Theatre

Lloyd was born in Jersey City, New Jersey. He attended high school and college in New York City and began his acting career in theater, first at Eva Le Gallienne's Civic Repertory Theatre in New York then joining the original company of the Orson WellesJohn Houseman Mercury Theatre. Lloyd had a significant role with the first Mercury Theatre production as Cinna the poet, in Julius Caesar (1937). The death of Cinna had great resonance with the audience because of the political events of the day combined with the set, lighting and costume design referencing the fascist threats of the time. The audience applauded for an astounding three minutes after the mob descends on Cinna for no reason other than his name is Cinna. [1] The 1938 Broadway role, playing Johnny Appleseed in "Everywhere I Roam," was selected as one of the ten best Broadway performances of the year.

[edit] Film acting

Lloyd came to Hollywood to play a supporting part in Alfred Hitchcock's Saboteur (1942), starting a long friendship and professional association with Hitchcock. As the villainous Nazi spy "Fry", Lloyd got to fall off the Statue of Liberty in the film's climactic ending.

After a few more villainous film roles, Lloyd also worked behind the camera as an assistant on Lewis Milestone's Arch of Triumph (1948). A friend of John Garfield, he appeared with him in He Ran All the Way, Garfield's last film before the Hollywood blacklist ended his film career.

[edit] Postwar career

A marginal victim of the blacklist, Lloyd was rescued professionally by Hitchcock, who had previously used the actor in Saboteur and Spellbound. Hitchcock made Lloyd an associate producer and a director on the television series Alfred Hitchcock Presents in 1958.

He continued directing and producing episodic television throughout the 1960s and 1970s, being the first-season producer of Roald Dahl's Tales of the Unexpected in 1979. In the 1980s, Lloyd played Dr. Auschlander in the TV drama St. Elsewhere (1982) for six seasons. His numerous TV guest-star appearances include Murder, She Wrote, The Twilight Zone, Wiseguy, Star Trek: The Next Generation, Wings, The Practice, Seven Days and Civil Wars.

Lloyd's most recent part was in the film In Her Shoes (2005). He is the subject of the documentary Who is Norman Lloyd? which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on September 1, 2007.

[edit] Filmography

  • Young Widow (1946)
  • FM (1978)
  • Seven Days as Dr. Isaac Mentnor (1998-2000) TV series
  • Who is Norman Lloyd?[2] (documentary, 2007)


[edit] External links

Persondata
NAME Norman Lloyd
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION American actor
DATE OF BIRTH November 8, 1914
PLACE OF BIRTH Jersey City, New Jersey, United States
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH
Languages