Name | Paul Benedict |
---|---|
Birth date | September 17, 1938 |
Birth place | Silver City, New Mexico,United States |
Death date | |
Death place | Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts,United States |
Occupation | Film, television actor |
Yearsactive | 1960s–2008 |
Paul Benedict (September 17, 1938 – December 1, 2008) was an American actor who made numerous appearances in television and movies beginning in the 1960s. He was known for his roles as The Number Painter on the popular PBS children's show Sesame Street, and as the quirky English neighbor "Harry Bentley" on the CBS sitcom The Jeffersons. Often mistakenly credited as Charlie Bucket's school teacher (the uncredited role of Mr. Turkentine), in the cult classic Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory, who was actually played by David Battley .
Benedict also played the recurring character The Number Painter on the long-running children's PBS show, Sesame Street.
In the movie The Goodbye Girl (1977) starring Richard Dreyfuss, Benedict played the stage director of a production of Richard III in which Richard III was to be portrayed in the play as a stereotypical gay man. He was in a short scene in the mockumentary This Is Spinal Tap (1984), playing Tucker Smitty Brown, the awkward desk clerk who checks in the band. Called a "twisted old fruit" by the band's manager Ian, he replies, "I'm just as God made me, sir." In the 1990 film The Freshman, he played the condescending NYU film school professor of Matthew Broderick's main character. He also made a memorable appearance as the incorrectly assumed title character in the 1996 film Waiting for Guffman, another mockumentary involving many of the same writers and actors as This Is Spinal Tap.
Benedict also played the role of a slave trader in Dino De Laurentiis' Mandingo opposite James Mason and Perry King in 1975. Perhaps his best known movie role was of the Reverend Lindquist in the 1972 Sydney Pollack film Jeremiah Johnson. He also appeared on one episode of Seinfeld as a magazine editor with The New Yorker who was questioned by Elaine about a cartoon in the newspaper.
In 2007, Benedict performed as "Hirst" in Harold Pinter's No Man's Land at the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
As a director, Benedict directed Frank D. Gilroy's Any Given Day on Broadway. Off-Broadway, he directed the original production of Terrence McNally's Frankie and Johnny in the Claire de Lune, and Kathy Najimy and Mo Gaffney's The Kathy and Mo Show, which won an Obie Award.
He was awarded a posthumous Elliot Norton Award by the Boston Theater Critics Assn. in 2009.
Category:American film actors Category:American television actors Category:Actors from New Mexico Category:People from Grant County, New Mexico Category:People with acromegaly Category:1938 births Category:2008 deaths Category:Suffolk University alumni
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