Posted on 12/04/2008 10:21:59 AM PST by Borges
In an acting troupe that included Robert De Niro, Dustin Hoffman, and Al Pacino, the person who stood out more than any other in the Theatre Company of Boston during the 1960s was Paul Benedict. The long-jawed actor who found a touch of menace in the most comic parts and a touch of the absurd in the most serious roles, was found dead Monday at 70 of unknown causes on Martha's Vineyard.
Mr. Benedict, who also acted locally with the American Repertory Theatre, would have his own share of success on television and in the movies, playing the English neighbor Harry Bentley on the CBS series "The Jeffersons" from 1975 to 1985. He also appeared in the Christopher Guest comedies "This Is Spinal Tap," "Waiting for Guffman," and "A Mighty Wind."
(Excerpt) Read more at boston.com ...
One of those “I never realized” reactions...
Ah, from the Jeffersons.
Geez, the guy was everywhere. Rest in Peace.
You’ll be missed, Mr. Bentley. RIP.
That’s sad...I loved that guy on The Jeffersons.
A fabulous actor and human being. He will be missed.
Dear God...if You have a house painter up there, tall guy wearing a long coat and a bowler, and he says “I’m gonna paint a 9”...let him.
If you are going to go, Martha’s Vineyard is not a bad pick at all. RIP. Paul Benedict.
You beat me to it by a couple minutes.
I first remember seeing Benedict on Sesame Street when I was a very little kid. He was “The Mad Painter”, and did these skits where he taught numbers through painting. I remember one in particular where he crashed a picnic and painted numbers in ketchup and mustard on slices of bread.
RIP, Mr Benedict, and thank you for all the laughs.
Whoops, ya beat me to it.
Great minds, and all that. :-)
He also was in the movie, “Jeremiah Johnson.”
Yeah, he was great in the Jeffersons.
RIP Paul Benedict.
That was Stockard Channing in the Picnic scene w/ the Mad Painter
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SQGtEd40OFU
I believe he was the judge in an “Addams Family” movie as well.
Stockard Channing, huh? Now if she wasn’t the girl most likely to ...
He also was in the first “Goodbye Girl” with Richard Dreyfus and Marsha Mason. He played that weird director who wanted to gay-out Shakespeare’s Richard III.
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