Baltimore Sun

Character actor played memorable foil on ‘Maude’

- By Lynn Elber

LOS ANGELES — Bill Macy, the character actor whose hangdog expression was a perfect match for his role as the long-suffering foil to Bea Arthur’s unyielding feminist on the daring 1970s sitcom “Maude,” has died. He was 97.

Macy died Thursday night in Los Angeles, his friend Matt Beckoff said Friday. Further details weren’t available from Beckoff or Macy’s wife, Samantha Harper Macy.

The stint as Walter Findlay on the CBS sitcom that aired from 1972-78 was Macy’s highest-profile one in a long stage, film and TV career. He made dozens of guest appearance­s in series including “Seinfeld,” “How I Met Your Mother” and “ER.”

“Maude” was a spinoff to the landmark sitcom “All in the Family” from producers Norman Lear and Bud Yorkin. Staunch liberal Maude’s sharp exchanges with conservati­ve Archie Bunker (Carroll O’Connor) were so entertaini­ng that Lear fashioned a series around her.

In a 1998 interview for the TV academy foundation’s archive, Lear said he cast Macy as Maude Findlay’s husband based on his work in an off-Broadway play. In it, his character had a prolonged scene of choking to death on a chicken bone.

It was an unforgetta­ble “tour de force” performanc­e, Lear said.

Macy was born Wolf Garber on May 18, 1922, to Michael and Mollie Garber in Revere, Massachuse­tts. He had a career in the theater and film before “Maude,” including as an original cast member of the 1969-72 New York stage sensation “Oh! Calcutta!” that featured fully nude actors. He was in the 1972 movie version of the musical about sexual mores.

Among Macy’s other movie credits are 2006’s “The Holiday”; 1999’s “Analyze This”; the 1979 Steve Martin comedy “The Jerk,” and 1982’s “My Favorite Year” starring Peter O’Toole, an affectiona­te behind-the-scenes look at a 1950s TV variety series.

Macy, as head comedy writer for temperamen­tal star King Kaiser (Joseph Bologna), used his gifts to great effect, as he later would while playing spouse to demanding Maude. Among them: his distinctiv­ely puffy- eyed, beset-upon expression of suffering, and an ability to slide deftly into explosive frustratio­n.

“Maude” also gave Macy the chance to turn serious. In one story line he descended into alcoholism and struck Maude; in another he offered tender support in a provocativ­e episode when she decided to end an unexpected, latein-life pregnancy.

In real life, strangers would call him “Mr. Maude” and, presuming that he and Walter really were the same people, console him for having such a difficult wife.

“I used to tell them that people like that really existed,” Macy once explained.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL/AP 2004 ?? Bill Macy had a long career in theater and film before being cast in the ’70s sitcom “Maude.”
MARK J. TERRILL/AP 2004 Bill Macy had a long career in theater and film before being cast in the ’70s sitcom “Maude.”

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