Shelley Berman(1925-2017)
- Actor
- Writer
- Producer
Shelley Berman began studying acting shortly after he was honorably
discharged from the US navy. He enrolled as a drama student at
Chicago's Goodman Theater, where he met Sarah Herman, another aspiring
thespian. They fell in love and were married in 1947. After graduating
from the Goodman Theater, Shelley joined the Woodstock Players, a stock
theater company in Woodstock, IL. It was here that he had the
opportunity to really develop and polish his acting skills, with the
support and encouragement of fellow players
Geraldine Page,
Betsy Palmer and
Tom Bosley. Leaving Woodstock in 1949,
Shelley and Sarah made their way across the country, with Shelley in
search of acting work. When those jobs were scarce, he worked as a
social director, a cab driver, a speech teacher, an assistant manager
at a drug store and an instructor at
Arthur Murray Dance Studios. While
in New York Shelley found work as a sketch writer for
The Steve Allen Show (1956),
and was doing well when he received an invitation to join an
improvisational troupe known as The Compass Players, which took him
back home to Chicago. With Compass (which later evolved into Second
City) Shelley worked with soon-to-be famous performers
Mike Nichols,
Elaine May,
Severn Darden and
Barbara Harris, among others.
While performing improvised sketches with the Compass Players, Shelley
began developing solo pieces, employing an imaginary telephone to take
the place of an onstage partner. While watching
Mort Sahl perform at Mr. Kelly's in Chicago in
1957, Shelley realized he didn't necessarily have to tell traditional
jokes, as other comedians of the day did, in order to work in
nightclubs and went on to audition at the club, performing his one-man
monologues and telephone routines with great success. Those first dates
at Mr. Kelly's led to other nightclub engagements around the country,
appearances on national television and a recording contract with Verve
Records. "Inside Shelley Berman", released in early 1959, became the
first comedy album to be awarded a gold record--for selling one million
copies--and the first non-musical recording to win a Grammy Award.
Shelley would eventually record a total of six albums for Verve,
including "Outside Shelley Berman" and "The Edge of Shelley Berman",
both of which also went gold. Shelley would go on to appear on numerous
TV specials, and all of the major variety shows, including those of
Ed Sullivan,
Steve Allen,
Jack Paar,
Dinah Shore,
Perry Como,
Andy Williams and
Dean Martin. Shelley's great success
as a comedian enabled him to continue with his first love, acting. He
starred on Broadway in "A Family Affair" and would continue to do stage
work in productions of "The Odd Couple", "Damn Yankees", "Where's
Charley?", "Fiddler On the Roof", "Two by Two", "I'm Not Rappaport",
"La Cage aux Folles", "Prisoner of Second Avenue" and "Guys & Dolls",
among others. Comedic and dramatic acting roles in what came to be
known as "The Golden Age of Television" began to come his way,
including memorable appearances on episodes of
Peter Gunn (1958),
The Twilight Zone (1959),
Rawhide (1959),
Bewitched (1964),
The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1964),
The Mary Tyler Moore Show (1970),
Adam-12 (1968),
Emergency! (1972),
CHiPs (1977),
St. Elsewhere (1982),
Night Court (1984),
MacGyver (1985),
L.A. Law (1986),
Friends (1994),
Arli$$ (1996),
Lizzie McGuire (2001),
Providence (1999),
Walker, Texas Ranger (1993),
The King of Queens (1998),
"The Bernie Mac Show"
(2001)_, "Grey's Anatomy" (2005)_
Entourage (2004)
Hannah Montana (2006),
CSI: NY (2004) and
Boston Legal (2004), the latter
of which he made numerous recurring guest -tar appearances as the
hilariously semi-senile Judge Robert Sanders. Since 2002 Shelley has
appeared as Nat David (Larry David's
father) on HBO's
Curb Your Enthusiasm (2000),
a role for which he received a 2008 Emmy Award nomination. With
dialogue entirely improvised by its cast, "Curb" has given Shelley the
opportunity to return to his improv roots, introduced him to a new
generation of TV viewers and brought him acclaim from critics and fans
alike. Among Shelley's film credits are
The Best Man (1964) with
Henry Fonda;
Divorce American Style (1967)
with Dick Van Dyke and
Debbie Reynolds;
Every Home Should Have One (1970)
with Marty Feldman; '80s cult favorite
Teen Witch (1989); with 'Burt
Reynolds' in
The Last Producer (2000);
Meet the Fockers (2004) with
Robert De Niro and
Ben Stiller;
The Aristocrats (2005);
The Holiday (2006) with
Cameron Diaz, and
You Don't Mess with the Zohan (2008)
(with Adam Sandler). Shelley
continues to do film and television work and make personal appearances
across the country year-round. He has authored three books, two plays,
several TV pilot scripts and numerous poems. For over 20 years he
taught humor writing in the Master of Professional Writing program at
USC, where he is now a Lecturer Emeritus. Shelley spends his (precious
little) free time volunteering for various charitable organizations and
indulging in his favorite hobby, knife collecting.