The Daily Telegraph

Richard Belzer

Actor and comedian who played Detective John Munch in a string of top-rated US TV series

- Richard Belzer, born August 4 1944, died February 19 2023

RICHARD BELZER, who has died aged 78, was a stand-up comedian and actor who made television history by portraying the same fictional character, detective John Munch, in no fewer than 11 different television series across six different networks over 23 years.

Munch was originated in 1993 in NBC’S

Homicide: Life on the Street, which was set in Baltimore and ran for seven seasons. Munch subsequent­ly moved to New York, where he appeared in 15 seasons (326 episodes) of

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, Belzer appearing alongside Ice-t. Munch also appeared in The Wire, The X-files and the sitcoms Arrested Developmen­t and 30 Rock.

“It was a bit of a miracle how I got the part,” Belzer said. “I didn’t audition for it. Barry Levinson [executive producer of Homicide] heard me on The Howard Stern Show and brought me in to read.”

Of the Munch character, Belzer said: “I would never be a detective, but if I were, that’s how I’d be. The character is very close to how I would be. They write to all of my paranoia, anti-establishm­ent dissonance and conspiracy theories.”

Richard Jay Belzer was born on August 4 1944 in Bridgeport, Connecticu­t, and brought up in a housing project, the son of a vending-machine salesman. His parents, Charles and Frances, were of Jewish descent, and as a soldier Charles had taken part in the liberation of Dachau concentrat­ion camp.

Frances was physically abusive towards Richard and his older brother Len, and Richard would impersonat­e Jerry Lewis to make their mother laugh and stop hitting them. “My kitchen was the toughest room I ever worked,” he said.

He was 18 when his mother died of breast cancer and 22 when his father committed suicide. His brother Len, who became a radio comedy host, jumped to his death from the roof of a 16-storey Manhattan high-rise in 2014.

After school Belzer worked as a reporter for The Bridgeport Post. He was expelled from college in 1964 for breaking curfew, having alcohol in his dorm and leading a demo. He later got a discharge from the army by feigning various neuroses, and worked stints as a census taker, a dock worker and a jewellery salesman.

In 1973 Belzer played multiple characters in The Groove Tube, a collection of skits which became a cult film, and joined John Belushi, Gilda Radner, Bill Murray and others on The National Lampoon Radio Hour. In 1975 he became the off-screen warm-up comic for a new weekly television satire show, Saturday Night Live, but while Belushi, Radner, Murray and Chevy Chase were on-screen regulars, Belzer had to be content with cameos.

For five years in the 1970s he was MC at the comedy club Catch a Rising Star, where he learnt to engage with rowdy audiences, recording his act and analysing it to make improvemen­ts. Spiky and acerbic, he combined deadpan humour with mockery and impression­s of celebritie­s such as Ronald Reagan, Bob Dylan (as a resident of a Jewish old people’s home) and Mick Jagger, which he liked to call “peacock on acid”.

Belzer’s friend Robin Williams once described his stand-up persona as “the Marquis de Sade as a gameshow host”.

Cameo film and television roles followed, in Fame (1980) and Scarface (1983), The Flash television series (1991) and the sci-fi movie Species II (1998). His trademark tinted spectacles, which accompanie­d him from stand-up into his television roles, were the result of photosensi­tive eyes. When he cut his hair short, his bat ears were exposed.

He was treated for testicular cancer in 1983, which inspired his 1997 HBO comedy special Another Lone Nut. In 1985, while hosting his cable television show Hot Properties, Belzer asked Hulk Hogan to put him in a wrestling hold. Hogan obliged with a front chin lock, rendering Belzer unconsciou­s, and dropping him. Belzer required eight stitches to his head.

He sued Hogan for $5 million in damages and was able to buy a home for himself and his wife in Bozouls in southern France (“Chez Hogan”) from the proceeds of an out-of-court settlement.

In 2006 Belzer, a lifelong Democrat, grappled with a Fox News producer during a live interview and in 2012 he insulted the Right-wing network with a mock Nazi salute. “Whoever’s in power, I’m the opposition,” he told the pro-marijuana magazine High Times. “As a political comedian, it’s my job not to go to the White House. You can’t be seduced.”

But paranoia got the better of him when he appeared on the alt-right radio show hosted by Alex Jones and branded the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing as a “false flag” event.

In 2016, his first book (written with David Wayne), about the mysterious deaths of witnesses to the assassinat­ion of

John F Kennedy, became a bestseller. More books about conspiracy theories followed, as did a comic novel, I Am Not a Cop!, in which a fictionali­sed Belzer investigat­es the disappeara­nce of a friend. He was also the co-author of How to be a Stand-up Comic.

His first two marriages ended in divorce, but in 1981 he met Harlee Mcbride, an actress. They married in 1985, and she survives him with two stepdaught­ers.

 ?? ?? Belzer as Munch in Homicide: Life on the Street
Belzer as Munch in Homicide: Life on the Street

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