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Not every blacklistee spent his or
her life as a victim -- some of
them, such as Lionel Stander and
Selena Royale, ended up pursuing
successful second careers, and a
few, including Stander and Jeff
Corey, went on to very busy
late-in-life acting careers. Allan
Rich fits into both categories. Born
in New York in 1926, he aspired to a
performing career at an early age,
and came of age in the midst of the
Second World War. Rich got to work
on-stage with the likes of Edward G.
Robinson, Ralph Bellamy, Kim Hunter,
and Henry Fonda, and seemed poised
to make the jump to movies when the
Red Scare swept over Hollywood. Like
a lot of other New York-based actors
who had made no secret of their
belief in liberal values, Rich was
blacklisted from the end of the
1940s. He followed a route, which
was also followed by Lionel Stander,
to Wall Street; though he was too
"Red" to work in movies, Rich was
sufficiently capitalist to succeed
as a stock broker, and he eventually
opened his own firm. He was
successful enough to pursue his
other great love -- contemporary art
-- by opening a gallery on New
York's Upper East Side.
By the early '70s, however, Rich was
drawn back into acting, in a stage
production of Journey of the Fifth
Horse, with Dustin Hoffman. In 1973,
he made his long-delayed screen
debut as District Attorney Herman
Tauber in Sidney Lumet's "Serpico."
The following year, he was in The
Gambler, and in 1975, he appeared in
episodes of Baretta and Kojak. Over
the decades since, Rich has appeared
in movies as different as "The
Frisco Kid" (1979), "Frances"
(1982), "Betsy's Wedding" (1990),
"Highlander II: The Quickening"
(1991), "Quiz Show," "Disclosure"
(both 1994), and "Amistad" (1997),
and in television productions
ranging from "Kojak" and "CHiPs" in
the 1970s through "Hill Street
Blues" and "Barney Miller" in the
1980s, "The Nanny" and "CSI" in the
1990s to "NYPD Blue" and "The
Division" in the 21st century.
Playing featured and supporting
roles as desk sergeants, attorneys
(crooked and honest), judges
(crooked and honest), college
professors, doctors, and other
professionals, Rich has used his
resonant voice and skilled
portrayals to evoke respect,
contempt, cynicism, and laughter
from audiences. Fans of "Happy Days"
who lingered to the late seasons may
remember Rich best for his role in
the episode "Potsie Quits School,"
as the mean-tempered, cynical Prof.
Thomas. He showed something more of
his full range, however, in the 2004
"NYPD Blue" episode "You Da Bomb,"
portraying an aging Russian
immigrant. Rich has also authored
more than a half-dozen screenplays
and had a film about Salvador Dali
(based on his own friendship with
the artist), in production as of
2008. Equally adept at comedic and
sinister roles, Rich is one of the
busiest character actors of his
generation, which is poetic justice
of a sort -- he was still earning a
good living in his chosen profession
(after having proved to be a better
capitalist than most of his
political foes), decades after those
foes were in the ground and
all-but-forgotten. ~
Allan Rich Biography by Bruce Eder,
Yahoo All Movie Guide
More information about Allan Rich at
his web site:
www.allanrich.com.
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