Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Zero Mostel

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Cause of death
  
Aortic aneurysm

Role
  
Actor

Name
  
Zero Mostel

Years active
  
1941–1977

Occupation
  
Actor, Comedian


Zero Mostel httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons22

Full Name
  
Samuel Joel Mostel

Born
  
February 28, 1915 (
1915-02-28
)
Brooklyn, New York, U.S.

Died
  
September 8, 1977, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

Children
  
Josh Mostel, Tobias Mostel

Spouse
  
Kathryn Harkin (m. 1944–1977), Clara Sverd (m. 1939–1944)

Albums
  
A Funny Thing Happened, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (1962 original Broadway cast)

Movies
  
The Producers, A Funny Thing Happene, The Front, Rhinoceros, The Enforcer

Similar People
  
Gene Wilder, Josh Mostel, Jack Gilford, Mel Brooks, Maria Karnilova

Dean martin zero mostel tommy tune me my shadow


Samuel Joel "Zero" Mostel (February 28, 1915 – September 8, 1977) was an American actor and comedian of stage and screen, best known for his portrayal of comic characters such as Tevye on stage in Fiddler on the Roof, Pseudolus on stage and on screen in A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, and Max Bialystock in the original film version of The Producers. Mostel was a student of Don Richardson, using an acting technique based on muscle memory. He was blacklisted during the 1950s, and his testimony before the House Un-American Activities Committee was well-publicized. He was an Obie Award and three-time Tony Award winner.

Contents

Zero Mostel FileZero Mostel stilljpg Wikimedia Commons

Zero mostel in a rare tv appearance 1962 directed by david pressman


Early life

Zero Mostel image Zero Mostel FamousDudecom Famous people photo

Mostel was born in Brooklyn, to Israel Mostel, who was of Eastern European Jewish origin, and Cina "Celia" Druchs, a Polish Jew who was raised in Vienna. The two immigrated to the United States separately – Israel in 1898 and Cina in 1908 – where they met and married. Israel already had four children from his first wife; he had four more children with Cina. Samuel, later known as Zero, was Israel's seventh child.

Zero Mostel Zero Mostel Theater Actor Actor Film Actor Biographycom

According to his brother, Bill Mostel, their mother coined the nickname "Zero", noting that if he continued to do poorly at school, he would amount to a Zero.

Zero Mostel Zero Mostel Are You Now Or Have You Ever Been Legacycom

Initially living in the Brownsville section of Brooklyn, the family moved to Moodus, Connecticut, where they bought a farm. The family's income in those days came from a winery and a slaughterhouse. The farm did not do well. When, according to Zero, an unyielding bank president with fierce mustache and long whip foreclosed the mortgage on the farm, the ten Mostels trekked back to New York and settled on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, where the boy attended public school, his character was shaped, and his father was employed as a wine chemist. While not at poverty level, the family struggled financially. As a child, Mostel was described by his family as outgoing and lively, and with a developed sense of humor. He showed an intelligence and perception that convinced his father he had the makings of a rabbi; however, Mostel preferred painting and drawing, a passion he was to retain for life. According to Roger Butterfield, his mother made a practice of dressing the boy in a velvet suit and sending him to the Metropolitan Museum of Art to copy masterpieces. Zero had a favorite painting, John White Alexander's Study in Black and Green, which he copied every day, to the delight of the gallery crowds. One afternoon, while a crowd was watching over his velvet-clad shoulder, he solemnly copied the whole painting upside down, delighting his audience.

Zero Mostel zero page

Already at a young age he developed the duality of character that baffled critics years later: when alone he was studious and quiet, but when observed he felt he had to be the center of attention, which he invariably did through use of humor. The fact that at home he spoke English, Yiddish, Italian and German helped him reach out to audiences of many ethnicities in New York.

Zero Mostel zero tribute

He attended Public School 188, where he was an A student. He also received professional training as a painter through The Educational Alliance. He completed his high school education at Seward Park High School, where his yearbook noted: "A future Rembrandt... or perhaps a comedian?".

Zero Mostel Zero Mostel 1915 1977 Find A Grave Memorial

Mostel attended the City College of New York, a public college that allowed many poor students to pursue higher education. He later claimed that he was on the swimming team and the Reserve Officers Training Corps, though the claim is dubious. As only beginner classes were available in art, Mostel took them repeatedly to be able to paint and receive professional feedback. During that time he worked odd jobs, and graduated in 1935 with a bachelor's degree. He then continued studying towards an MA, and also joined the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP), which paid him a stipend to teach art.

In 1939 he married Clara Sverd, and the couple moved to an apartment in Brooklyn. The marriage did not last, however, since Clara could not accept the many hours Mostel spent in his studio with his fellow artists, and he did not seem to be able to provide for her at the level to which she had been accustomed. They separated in 1941 and divorced in 1944, Clara only agreeing to the divorce in return for a percentage of Mostel's earnings for the rest of his life. The arrangement lasted until the mid-1950s.

Early comic routines

Part of Mostel's duty with the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP) was to give gallery talks at New York's museums. Leading groups of students through the many paintings, Mostel could not suppress his comedic nature, and his lectures were noted less for their artistic content than for his sense of humor. As his reputation grew, he was invited to entertain at parties and other social occasions, earning three to five dollars per performance. Labor union social clubs followed, where Mostel mixed his comic routine with social commentary. These performances would play a large role in his eventual blacklisting in the next decade.

In 1941, the Café Society—a downtown Manhattan nightclub—approached Mostel with an offer to become a professional comedian and play a regular spot. Mostel accepted, and in the next few months he became the Café Society's main attraction. It was here that he adopted the stage name Zero (Zee to his friends), created by press agent Ivan Black at the behest of Barney Josephson, the proprietor, who felt that "Sam Mostel" was not appropriate for a comic.

Thus, at the age of 27, Mostel dropped every other job and occupation to start his show business career.

Rise

Mostel's rise from this point on was rapid. In 1942 alone his salary at the Café Society went up from $40 a week to $450; he appeared on radio shows, opened in two Broadway shows (Keep Them Laughing, Top-Notchers), played at the Paramount Theatre, appeared in an MGM movie (Du Barry Was a Lady), and booked into La Martinique at $4,000 a week. He also made cameo appearances at the Yiddish theatre, the style of which influenced his own. In 1943 Life magazine described him as "just about the funniest American now living".

In March 1943, Mostel was drafted by the Army. Although Mostel gave varying accounts of his Army service, records show he was honorably discharged in August 1943 because of an unspecified physical disability. He subsequently entertained servicemen through the USO until 1945.

Mostel married Kathryn (Kate) Cecilia Harkin, a Rockette, on July 2, 1944, after two years of courtship. Mostel first met Harkin at a performance by the Rockettes. Harkin was a former actress and ballet dancer at the Littlefield Ballet Company in Philadelphia. The pair met when she worked as a Rockette as part of the infamous Rockettes at Radio City Music Hall in New York.

The marriage caused problems in his relationship with his Orthodox Jewish parents as his new wife was a gentile. The marriage was shaky at times, again mostly due to Mostel's spending most of his time in his art studio. Their relationship was described by friends of the family as complicated, with many fights but having mutual adoration. The couple stayed together until Mostel's death and had two children: film actor Josh Mostel in 1946 and Tobias in 1948.

After Mostel's discharge from the army, his career took off again. He appeared in a series of plays, musicals, operas, and movies. In 1946 he even made an attempt at serious operatic acting in The Beggar's Opera, but received lukewarm reviews. Critics saw him as a versatile performer, who was as adept at a Molière play as he was on the stage of a night club.

Mostel made notable appearances on New York City television in the late 1940s. He had his own show in 1948 called Off The Record on WABD with comedian partner Joey Faye. Simultaneously, Mostel had a live TV show on WPIX called "Channel Zero." He also appeared in the May 11, 1949 Toast of the Town broadcast hosted by Ed Sullivan.

Blacklist years and HUAC testimony

Mostel was a leftist as a college student, and his nightclub routine included political jabs at right-wingers. His MGM contract was terminated, and his role in Du Barry Was a Lady was truncated, because studio executives were upset that he participated in protests against another MGM film, Tennessee Johnson, which protesters believed had soft-pedaled the racism of former U.S. President Andrew Johnson. According to biographer Arthur Sainer, "MGM blacklisted Zero Mostel way before the days of the blacklist".

During his Army service he was under investigation for alleged Communist Party membership. The Military Intelligence Division of the U.S. War Department said it was "reliably reported" that he was a Communist Party member. The Post Intelligence Officer at the Army's Camp Croft, where Mostel served, believed that Mostel was "definitely a Communist." As a result of that, his application to be an entertainment director with the U.S. Army Special Services unit was denied. Mostel had lobbied hard to transfer to Special Services, at one point traveling to Washington to request a transfer.

It was not until 1950 that Mostel again acted in movies, for a role in the Oscar-winning film Panic in the Streets, at the request of its director, Elia Kazan. Kazan describes his attitude and feelings during that period, where

Each director has a favorite in his cast, . . . my favorite this time was Zero Mostel—but not to bully. I thought him an extraordinary artist and a delightful companion, one of the funniest and most original men I'd ever met. . . I constantly sought his company. . . He was one of the three people whom I rescued from the "industry's" blacklist. . . For a long time, Zero had not been able to get work in films, but I got him in my film."

Mostel played supporting roles in five movies for Twentieth Century Fox in 1950, all in films released in 1951. Fox then abruptly cancelled his contract. Mostel learned this after he was loaned out to Columbia for a film role but not permitted on the set. The studio may have received word that he was about to be named as a Communist in Congressional testimony.

On January 29, 1952, Martin Berkeley identified Mostel to the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) as having been a member of the Communist party. After the testimony he was effectively blacklisted. He was subpoenaed to appear before HUAC on August 14, 1955. Mostel declined to name names and jousted with the members of Congress, invoked the Fifth Amendment, while standing up for his right to the privacy of his personal political beliefs.

His testimony won him admiration in the blacklisted community, and in addition to not naming names he also confronted the committee on ideological matters, something that was rarely done. Among other things, he referred to Twentieth Century Fox as "18th Century Fox" (due to their collaboration with the committee), and manipulated the committee members to make them appear foolish.

The admiration he received for his testimony did nothing to take him out of the blacklist, however, and the family had to struggle throughout the 1950s with little income. Mostel used this time to work in his studio. Later he would say that he cherished those years for the time it had afforded him to do what he loved most. Mostel's appearance before the HUAC (as well as others') was incorporated into Eric Bentley's 1972 play Are You Now or Have You Ever Been...?

Ulysses in Nighttown and career revival

In 1957, Toby Cole, a New York theatrical agent who strongly opposed the blacklist, contacted Mostel and asked to represent him. Mostel agreed, and the partnership led to the revival of Mostel's career and made him a household name. Mostel accepted the role of Leopold Bloom in Ulysses in Nighttown, a play based on the novel Ulysses, which he greatly admired in his youth. It was an Off-Off-Broadway play produced in a small Houston Street theater, but the reviews Mostel received were overwhelmingly favorable. Most notably, Newsweek's Jack Kroll compared him to Laurence Olivier, writing, "Something unbelievable happened. A fat comedian named Zero Mostel gave a performance that was even more astonishing than Olivier's." Mostel received the Obie award for best Off Broadway performance of the 1958–59 season.

After the success of Ulysses, Mostel received many offers to appear in classic roles, especially abroad; however, he declined the offers because of artistic differences with the directors and the low salaries associated with the roles. By this time the effects of the blacklist were lessening, and in 1959 he appeared twice on TV's The Play of the Week.

1960s and height of career

On January 13, 1960, while exiting a taxi on his way back from rehearsals for the play The Good Soup, Mostel was hit by a number 18 (now the M86) 86th Street crosstown bus, and his leg was crushed. The doctors wanted to amputate the leg, which would have effectively ended his stage career. Mostel refused, accepting the risk of gangrene, and remained hospitalized for four months. The injury took a huge toll; for the rest of his life, the massively-scarred leg gave him pain and required frequent rests and baths. He sought compensation for the injury by retaining the famous Harry Lipsig (the 5'3" self-described "King of Torts") as his attorney. The case was settled for an undisclosed sum. From this time forward Mostel would carry a cane whenever he attended the Metropolitan Opera, to go along with the cape that he also favored.

Later that year Mostel took on the role of Estragon in a TV adaptation of Waiting for Godot. In 1961, he played Jean in Rhinoceros to very favorable reviews. The New Republic's Robert Brustein said that he had "a great dancer's control of movement, a great actor's control of voice, a great mime's control of facial expressions." His transition onstage from man to rhinoceros became a thing of legend; he won his first Tony Award for Best Actor, even though he was not in the lead role.

In 1962 Mostel began work on the role of Pseudolus in the Broadway musical A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, which was to be one of his best-remembered roles. The role of Pseudolus was originally offered to Phil Silvers, who declined it, saying he did not want to do this "old shtick". Mostel did not originally want to do the role either, which he thought below his capabilities, but was convinced by his wife and agent. The reviews were excellent, and, after a few slow weeks after which the play was partially rewritten with a new opening song, "Comedy Tonight", which became the play's most popular piece, the show became a great commercial success, running 964 performances and conferring star status on Mostel (he also won a Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical for this role). A film version was produced in 1966, also starring Mostel—and Silvers.

On September 22, 1964, Mostel opened as Tevye in the original Broadway production of Fiddler on the Roof. Because of Mostel's respect for the works of Sholem Aleichem he insisted that more of the author's mood and style be incorporated into the musical, and he made major contributions to its shape. He also created the cantorial sounds made famous in the song "If I Were a Rich Man". The New York Times said, "Zero Mostel's Tevye is so penetrating and heartwarming that you all but forget that it is a performance." In later years, the actors who followed Mostel in the role of Tevye invariably followed his staging. The show received rave reviews and was a great commercial success, running 3242 performances, a record at the time. Mostel received a Tony Award for it and was invited to a reception in the White House, officially ending his political pariah status.

In 1967, Mostel appeared as Potemkin in Great Catherine, and in 1968 he took the role of Max Bialystock in The Producers. Mostel refused to accept the role at first, but director Mel Brooks persuaded him to show the script to his wife, who then talked Mostel into doing it. His performance received mixed reviews, and was not a great success at first, but the film has since achieved classic status. Of it, the critic Roger Ebert said: "This is one of the funniest movies ever made".

He lived in a large rented apartment in The Belnord on the Upper West Side of Manhattan and built a summer house on Monhegan Island in Maine.

Last years

In his last decade, Mostel's star dimmed as he appeared in movies that were received with indifference by both critics and the general audience. These titles include The Great Bank Robbery and Once Upon a Scoundrel. In the 1970s, he would often play supporting rather than lead roles.

His more notable films in these years include the movie version of Rhinoceros (appearing with his Producers costar Gene Wilder), The Hot Rock and The Front (where he played Hecky Brown, a blacklisted performer whose story bears a similarity to Mostel's own, and for which he was nominated for a BAFTA Award for Best Supporting Actor). On Broadway, he starred in revivals of Ulysses in Nighttown (receiving a Tony nomination for Best Actor) and Fiddler on the Roof. He also made memorable appearances in children's shows such as Sesame Street, The Electric Company (for which he performed the Spellbinder in the Letterman cartoons), and gave voice to the boisterous seagull Kehaar in the animated film Watership Down. He also appeared as a guest star during Season 2 of The Muppet Show, taped during mid-1977. Mostel would have the distinction of being the only guest in the show's history to die before his appearance was broadcast.

Death

In the last four months of his life, Mostel took on a nutritionally unsound diet (later described by his friends as a starvation diet) that reduced his weight from 304 to 215 pounds. During rehearsals for Arnold Wesker's new play The Merchant (in which Mostel played a re-imagined version of Shakespeare's Shylock) in Philadelphia, he collapsed in his dressing room and was taken to Thomas Jefferson University Hospital. He was diagnosed with a respiratory disorder and it was believed he was in no danger and would be released soon. However, on September 8, 1977, Mostel complained of dizziness and lost consciousness. The attending physicians were unable to revive him, and he was pronounced dead that evening. It is believed that he suffered an aortic aneurysm. Wesker wrote a book chronicling the out-of-town tribulations that beset the play and culminated in Zero's death called The Birth of Shylock and the Death of Zero Mostel.

In accordance with his final requests, his family did not stage any funeral or other memorial service. Mostel was cremated following his death; the location of his ashes is not publicly known.

Professional relationships

Mostel had often collided with directors and other performers in the course of his professional career. He was described as irreverent, believing himself to be a comic genius (many critics agreed with him) and showed little patience for incompetence. He often improvised, which was received well by audiences but which often left other performers (who were not prepared for his ad-libbed lines) confused and speechless during live performances. He often dominated the stage whether or not his role called for it. Norman Jewison stated this as a reason for preferring Chaim Topol for the role of Tevye in the movie version of Fiddler on the Roof. Mostel took exception to these criticisms: "There's a kind of silliness in the theater about what one contributes to a show. The producer obviously contributes the money… but must the actor contribute nothing at all? I’m not a modest fellow about those things. I contribute a great deal. And they always manage to hang you for having an interpretation. Isn’t [the theater] where your imagination should flower? Why must it always be dull as shit?"

Other producers, such as Jerome Robbins and Hal Prince, preferred to hire Mostel on short contracts, knowing that he would become less faithful to the script as time went on. His exuberant personality, though largely responsible for his success, had also intimidated others in his profession and prevented him from receiving some important roles.

In his autobiography, Kiss Me Like A Stranger, actor Gene Wilder describes being initially terrified of Mostel. However, just after being introduced, Mostel got up, walked over to Wilder, hugged him, and planted a big kiss on his lips. Wilder claims to be grateful to Mostel for teaching him such a valuable lesson, and for picking Wilder up every day so that they could ride to work together. He also tells the story of a dinner celebrating the release of The Producers. Mostel switched Wilder's place card with Dick Shawn's, allowing Wilder to sit at the main table. Mostel and Wilder would later go on to work together in Rhinoceros and the Letterman cartoons for the children's show The Electric Company. The two remained close friends until Mostel's death.

T.V.

  • The Little Drummer Boy, Book II - Brutus (TV special) (1976) - Brutus (voice)
  • The Muppet Show (Season 2 Episode 2, aired posthumously) (1977) - Himself - Special Guest Star
  • Stage

  • Cafe Crown (1942) (made some impromptu appearances on stage, but was not officially part of cast)
  • Keep 'em Laughing (1942)
  • Top-Notchers (1942)
  • Concert Varieties (1945)
  • Beggar's Holiday (1946)
  • Flight Into Egypt (1952)
  • Lunatics and Lovers (1954) (replaced Buddy Hackett during his vacation)
  • Good as Gold (1957)
  • Ulysses in Nighttown (1958)
  • The Good Soup (1960) (was replaced before opening by Jules Munshin due to an accident which broke his leg)
  • Rhinoceros (1961)
  • A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (1962) *Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical*
  • Fiddler on the Roof (1964) *Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical*
  • A Pray by Blecht (1969) (opening eventually cancelled)
  • Fiddler on the Roof (1971)
  • A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (1973)
  • Ulysses in Nighttown (1974)
  • Fiddler on the Roof (1976)
  • Book

  • Zero Mostel's Book of Villains [with Israel Shenker, photographs by Alex Gotfryd] (Doubleday, 1976)
  • Filmography

    Actor
    1978
    Watership Down as
    Kehaar (voice)
    1972
    The Electric Company (TV Series) as
    Spell Binder
    - 130B (1977) - Spell Binder (voice)
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    - 105A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 104A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 103A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 102A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 101A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 100A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 99A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 98A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 97A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 96A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 95A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 94A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 93A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 92A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 91A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 90A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 89A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 88A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 87A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 86A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 85A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 84A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 83A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 82A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 81A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 80A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 79A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 78A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 77A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 76A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 75A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 74A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 73A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 72A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 71A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 70A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 69A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 68A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 67A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 66A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 65A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 64A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 63A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 62A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 61A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 60A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 59A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 58A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 57A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 56A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 55A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 54A (1976) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 53A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 52A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 51A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 50A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 49A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 48A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 47A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 46A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 45A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 44A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 43A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 42A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 41A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 40A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 39A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 38A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 37A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 36A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 35A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 34A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 33A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 32A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 31A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 30A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 29A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 28A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 27A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 26A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 25A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 24A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 23A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 22A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 21A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 20A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 19A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 18A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 17A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 16A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 15A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 14A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 13A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 12A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 11A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 10A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 9A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 8A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 7A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 6A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 5A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 4A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 3A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 2A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 1A (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 520 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 519 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 518 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 517 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 516 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 515 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 514 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 513 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 512 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 511 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 510 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 509 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 508 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 507 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 506 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 505 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 504 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 503 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 502 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 501 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 500 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 499 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 498 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 497 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 496 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 495 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 494 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 493 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 492 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 491 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 490 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 489 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 488 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 487 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 486 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 485 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 484 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 483 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 482 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 481 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 480 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 479 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 478 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 477 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 476 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 475 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 474 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 473 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 472 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 471 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 470 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 469 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 468 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 467 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 466 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 465 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 464 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 463 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 462 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 461 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 460 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 459 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 458 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 457 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 456 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 455 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 454 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 453 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 452 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 451 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 450 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 449 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 448 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 447 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 446 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 445 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 444 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 443 (1975) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 442 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 441 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 440 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 439 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 438 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 437 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 436 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 435 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 434 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 433 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 432 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 431 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 430 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 429 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 428 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 427 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 426 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 425 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 424 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 423 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 422 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 421 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 420 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 419 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 418 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 417 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 416 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 415 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 414 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 413 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 412 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 411 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 410 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 409 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 408 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 407 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 406 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 405 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 404 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 403 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 402 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 401 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 400 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 399 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 398 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 397 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 396 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 395 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 394 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 393 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 392 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 391 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 390 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 389 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 388 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 387 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 386 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 385 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 384 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 383 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 382 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 381 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 380 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 379 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 378 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 377 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 376 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 375 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 374 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 373 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 372 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 371 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 370 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 369 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 368 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 367 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 366 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 365 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 364 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 363 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 362 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 361 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 360 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 359 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 358 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 357 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 356 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 355 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 354 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 353 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 352 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 351 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 350 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 349 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 348 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 347 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 346 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 345 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 344 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 343 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 342 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 341 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 340 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 339 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 338 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 337 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 336 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 335 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 334 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 333 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 332 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 331 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 330 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 329 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 328 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 327 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 326 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 325 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 324 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 323 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 322 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 321 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 320 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 319 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 318 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 317 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 316 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 315 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 314 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 313 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 312 (1974) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 311 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 310 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 309 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 308 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 307 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 306 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 305 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 304 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 303 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 302 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 301 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 300 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 299 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 298 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 297 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 296 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 295 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 294 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 293 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 292 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 291 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 290 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 289 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 288 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 287 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 286 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 285 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 284 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 283 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 282 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 281 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 280 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 279 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 278 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 277 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 276 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 275 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 274 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 273 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 272 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 271 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 270 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 269 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 268 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 267 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 266 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 265 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 264 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 263 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 262 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 261 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 260 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 259 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 258 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 257 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 256 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 255 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 254 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 253 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 252 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 251 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 250 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 249 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 248 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 247 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 246 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 245 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 244 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 243 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 242 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 241 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 240 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 239 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 238 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 237 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 236 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 235 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 234 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 233 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 232 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 231 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 230 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 229 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 228 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 227 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 226 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 225 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 224 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 223 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 222 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 221 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 220 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 219 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 218 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 217 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 216 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 215 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 214 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 213 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 212 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 211 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 210 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 209 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 208 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 207 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 206 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 205 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 204 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 203 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 202 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 201 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 200 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 199 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 198 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 197 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 196 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 195 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 194 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 193 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 192 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 191 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 190 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 189 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 188 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 187 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 186 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 185 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 184 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 183 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 182 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 181 (1973) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 180 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 179 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 178 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 177 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 176 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 175 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 174 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 173 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 172 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 171 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 170 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 169 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 168 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 167 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 166 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 165 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 164 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 163 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 162 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 161 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 160 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 159 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 158 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 157 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 156 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 155 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 154 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 153 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 152 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 151 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 150 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 149 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 148 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 147 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 146 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 145 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 144 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 143 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 142 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 141 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 140 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 139 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 138 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 137 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 136 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 135 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 134 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 133 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 132 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    - 131 (1972) - Spell Binder (voice)
    1976
    The Little Drummer Boy Book II (TV Movie) as
    Brutus (voice)
    1976
    The Front as
    Hecky Brown
    1976
    Mastermind as
    Inspector Hoku Ichihara
    1975
    The CBS Festival of Lively Arts for Young People (TV Series) as
    Gianni Schicchi
    - Gianni Schicchi (1975) - Gianni Schicchi
    1975
    Journey Into Fear as
    Kopelkin
    1975
    Foreplay as
    President / Don Pasquale
    1974
    Rhinoceros as
    John
    1973
    Marco as
    Kublai Khan
    1973
    Once Upon a Scoundrel as
    Carlos del Refugio
    1973
    Saga of Sonora (TV Movie) as
    Heavy Harry
    1973
    Old Faithful (TV Movie) as
    Ranger Zeppel
    1972
    The Hot Rock as
    Abe Greenberg
    1970
    Laugh-In (TV Series) as
    Guest Performer
    - William F. Buckley Jr. (1970) - Guest Performer (uncredited)
    - Guest Starring Zero Mostel (1970) - Guest Performer
    1970
    The Angel Levine as
    Morris Mishkin
    1969
    The Great Bank Robbery as
    Rev. Pious Blue
    1968
    Great Catherine as
    Potemkin
    1967
    Children of the Exodus (Short) as
    Narrator
    1967
    Ride of the Valkyrie (Short) as
    Hire car chauffeur
    1967
    The Producers as
    Max Bialystock
    1966
    A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum as
    Pseudolus
    1959
    Play of the Week (TV Series) as
    Estragon / Melamed
    - Waiting for Godot (1961) - Estragon
    - World of Sholom Aleichem (1959) - Melamed
    1959
    The World of Sholom Aleichem (TV Movie) as
    Melamud ('A Tale of Chelm')
    1959
    Zero Mostel (TV Movie) as
    Various Characters
    1951
    The Model and the Marriage Broker as
    George Wixted
    1951
    The Guy Who Came Back as
    Boots Mullins
    1951
    Mr. Belvedere Rings the Bell as
    Emmett
    1951
    Sirocco as
    Balukjiaan
    1951
    The Enforcer as
    Big Babe Lazick
    1950
    Panic in the Streets as
    Raymond Fitch
    1949
    The Ford Theatre Hour (TV Series) as
    Banjo
    - The Man Who Came to Dinner (1949) - Banjo
    1948
    Off the Record (TV Series)
    - Final Show (1948)
    - Premiere (1948)
    1943
    Du Barry Was a Lady as
    Rami - the Swami / Taliostra
    Soundtrack
    2007
    ShowBusiness: The Road to Broadway (Documentary) (performer: "Sunrise, Sunset", "Tradition")
    2003
    Great Performances (TV Series) (performer - 1 episode)
    - Broadway's Lost Treasures (2003) - (performer: "If I Were a Rich Man")
    1982
    Hollywood: The Gift of Laughter (TV Movie documentary) (performer: "Comedy Tonight" - uncredited)
    1979
    Best Boy (Documentary) (performer: "If I Were a Rich Man")
    1977
    The Muppet Show (TV Series) (performer - 1 episode)
    - Zero Mostel (1977) - (performer: "What Do the Simple Folk Do?")
    1976
    The Little Drummer Boy Book II (TV Movie) (performer: "Money, Money, Money")
    1976
    The Front (performer: "Anything for a Laugh", "Come on Daisy")
    1976
    Hollywood on Trial (Documentary) (performer: "I'm an Old Vaudevillian" - uncredited)
    1971
    The 25th Annual Tony Awards (TV Special) (performer: "Comedy Tonight", "If I Were a Rich Man")
    1971
    The Dean Martin Show (TV Series) (performer - 2 episodes)
    - Episode #6.23 (1971) - (performer: "Brush Up Your Shakespeare", "Me and My Shadow", "Do You Love Me?")
    - Episode #6.20 (1971) - (performer: "Sunrise, Sunset")
    1967
    The Producers (performer: "By The Light Of The Silvery Moon")
    1966
    A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (performer: "Comedy Tonight", "Everybody Ought to Have a Maid", "Bring Me My Bride", "Lovely" (reprise), "Comedy Tonight" (reprise))
    1966
    Carol + 2 (TV Special) (performer: "If I Were A Rich Man", "Bye Bye")
    1943
    Du Barry Was a Lady (performer: "Friendship" (1939))
    Self
    1979
    Best Boy (Documentary) as
    Self
    1977
    The Muppet Show (TV Series) as
    Self - Special Guest Star
    - Zero Mostel (1977) - Self - Special Guest Star
    1977
    Arena (TV Series documentary) as
    Self - Interviewee
    - Cinema (1977) - Self - Interviewee
    1976
    The Mike Douglas Show (TV Series) as
    Self - Actor
    - Episode #16.16 (1976) - Self - Actor
    1968
    The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (TV Series) as
    Self - Guest
    - Episode dated 31 May 1976 (1976) - Self - Guest
    - Episode dated 6 February 1968 (1968) - Self - Guest
    1976
    Hollywood on Trial (Documentary) as
    Self - Interviewee
    1976
    Love, Life, Liberty & Lunch (TV Special) as
    The General (ep.: 'A Quet War')
    1976
    2nd House (TV Series) as
    Self
    - The Story of the W.P.A (1976) - Self
    1976
    The Making of 'the Front' (TV Movie documentary) as
    Self
    1975
    Dinah! (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Episode #1.98 (1975) - Self
    1975
    American Guild of Variety Artists 5th Annual Entertainer of the Year Awards (TV Special) as
    Self - Presenter
    1974
    The 28th Annual Tony Awards (TV Special) as
    Self - Nominee
    1972
    The Dick Cavett Show (TV Series) as
    Self - Actor
    - Episode dated 9 February 1972 (1972) - Self - Actor
    1971
    The 25th Annual Tony Awards (TV Special) as
    Self - Perfomer
    1968
    The Dean Martin Show (TV Series) as
    Self / Self - Guest
    - Episode #6.23 (1971) - Self
    - Episode #6.20 (1971) - Self
    - Episode #6.9 (1970) - Self - Guest
    - Episode #4.1 (1968) - Self
    1971
    Flip (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Episode #1.16 (1971) - Self
    1970
    This Is Tom Jones (TV Series documentary) as
    Self
    - Episode #3.2 (1970) - Self
    1969
    The 23rd Annual Tony Awards (TV Special) as
    Self - Presenter
    1967
    Stars for Israel (TV Special) as
    Self - Host
    1967
    Zero Hour: ABC Television Special (TV Movie) as
    Self
    1967
    The 21st Annual Tony Awards (TV Special) as
    Self - Presenter
    1967
    The Eamonn Andrews Show (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Episode #3.23 (1967) - Self
    1966
    Hollywood in Spanien (TV Movie documentary) as
    Self
    1966
    Carol + 2 (TV Special) as
    Self
    1966
    Tempo (TV Series documentary) as
    Self
    - A Guided Tour of Zero Mostel (1966) - Self
    1965
    The Merv Griffin Show (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Zero Mostel, Vi Velasco, David Merrick, Howard Storm (1965) - Self
    1965
    The 19th Annual Tony Awards (TV Special) as
    Self - Winner
    1964
    Eye on New York (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Angel on Broadway (1964) - Self
    1963
    The 17th Annual Tony Awards (TV Special) as
    Self - Winner
    1961
    Main Event (TV Series) as
    Self - Guest
    1961
    The 15th Annual Tony Awards (TV Special) as
    Self - Winner
    1959
    Chelsea at Nine (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Episode dated 15 October 1959 (1959) - Self
    1949
    Cavalcade of Stars (TV Series) as
    Self - Guest Comic
    - Vivian Blaine, Zero Mostel (1949) - Self - Guest Comic
    - Janet Blair, Zero Mostel (1949) - Self - Guest Comic
    1949
    The Ed Sullivan Show (TV Series) as
    Self - Comedian
    - Episode #2.38 (1949) - Self - Comedian
    1949
    Floor Show (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Episode #1.6 (1949) - Self
    1948
    Off the Record (TV Series) as
    Self - Host
    Archive Footage
    2021
    King of Cool (Documentary) as
    Self
    2019
    Fiddler: A Miracle of Miracles (Documentary) as
    Self
    2018
    Imagine (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Mel Brooks: Unwrapped (2018) - Self (uncredited)
    2014
    The Factor (TV Series) as
    Self (segment "Watters' World")
    - Episode dated 10 February 2014 (2014) - Self (segment "Watters' World")
    2013
    American Masters (TV Series documentary) as
    Self
    - Mel Brooks: Make a Noise (2013) - Self
    2013
    Broadway Musicals: A Jewish Legacy (TV Movie documentary) as
    Tevye
    2008
    Hollywood contra Franco (Documentary) as
    Hecky Brown
    2008
    Role Model: Gene Wilder (TV Movie documentary) as
    Max Bialystock (uncredited)
    2007
    Hitler: The Comedy Years (TV Movie documentary) as
    Max Bialystock (uncredited)
    2003
    Great Performances (TV Series) as
    Self - Performer
    - Broadway's Lost Treasures III: The Best of the Tony Awards (2005) - Self - Performer
    - Broadway's Lost Treasures (2003)
    2004
    Broadway: The American Musical (TV Mini Series documentary) as
    Tevye (in 'Fiddler on the Roof')
    - Tradition: 1957-1979 (2004) - Tevye (in 'Fiddler on the Roof')
    2002
    The Making of 'the Producers' (Video documentary) as
    Max Bialystock (uncredited)
    1998
    The 52nd Annual Tony Awards (TV Special) as
    Self
    1996
    The 50th Annual Tony Awards (TV Special) as
    Self
    1994
    Carol Burnett: The Special Years (TV Movie documentary) as
    Self
    1989
    Sesame Street (TV Series) as
    Spell Binder
    - An African Lullaby by Lillian (1992) - Spell Binder
    - Montana Day (Part 4) (1991) - Spell Binder
    - Episode #20.98 (1989) - Spell Binder
    1986
    The Muppets: A Celebration of 30 Years (TV Movie) as
    Self
    1985
    Muppet Video: Muppet Moments (Video) as
    Self
    1985
    Muppet Video: Muppet Treasures (Video) as
    Self
    1982
    Hollywood: The Gift of Laughter (TV Movie documentary) as
    Actor - 'A Funny Thing Happened to Me on the Way to the Forum' (uncredited)
    1981
    Of Muppets and Men: The Making of 'The Muppet Show' (TV Movie documentary) as
    Self
    1978
    The 50th Annual Academy Awards (TV Special) as
    Self - Memorial Tribute
    1972
    The Dick Cavett Show (TV Series) as
    Max Bialystock
    - Robert Altman/Mel Brooks/Peter Bogdanovich/Frank Capra (1972) - Max Bialystock

    References

    Zero Mostel Wikipedia