Alan Arkin: 10 Great Performances from His Seven-Decade Career
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Alan Arkin, an acclaimed actor who excelled at both comedy and drama over the course of his more than 70-year-career, died Thursday at age 89.
From his Tony Award–winning career breakthrough in the early 1960s to his first Academy Award win in the 2000s, Arkin’s career was defined as much by its longevity as it was the actor’s casual wit and exceptional talent. Below are 10 of the greatest performances from the late actor’s long and diverse career.
Enter Laughing (1963)
After starting his career in the early 1960s with the Second City improv comedy troupe and some television appearances, Arkin had his breakout performance in the Broadway play Enter Laughing in 1963. A farcical comedy based on actor Carl Reiner’s autobiography, Arkin earned a Tony Award for his performance as David Kolowitz, an aspiring young actor in the Bronx. “The show ran for a year and made him a star,” according to The New York Times.
The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming (1966)
Arkin earned his first Oscar nomination for playing a Soviet Union Navy lieutenant in a submarine that becomes grounded in a New England town in this Cold War satire. Arkin, who grew up in a Russian Jewish household, spoke English and Russian fluently in the role, according to the Encyclopedia of Jewish American Popular Culture. Variety called Arkin “absolutely outstanding as the courtly Russian who kisses a lady’s hand even as he draws a gun.”
The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter (1968)
Arkin received a second Academy Award nomination for his performance as John Singer, a deaf-mute in a small southern town during the Depression, in this adaptation of the classic 1940 novel by Carson McCullers. “Walking, with his hat jammed flat on his head, among the obese, the mad, the infirm, characters with one leg, broken hip, scarred mouth, failing life, he somehow manages to convey every dimension of his character, especially intelligence,” The New York Times wrote.
Catch-22 (1970)
Arkin played the lead role in this anti-war satire, based on the novel of the same name by Joseph Heller. In portraying Captain John Yossarian, a U.S. Army Air Force bombardier whose determination to survive World War II leads to several comedic exploits, Arkin said: “It was the only part I’ve ever worked on which didn’t demand a conception, because there isn’t much difference between me and Yossarian.”
The Sunshine Boys (1973)
Arkin stepped off of the stage and into the director’s seat in 1973, when he directed a Broadway production of this Neil Simon play about an estranged vaudeville comedy duo who reunite for a TV special. Simon chose Arkin to direct the play after a falling out with the playwright’s usual directing partner, Mike Nichols, who had demanded a larger percentage of the show’s profits, according to Acting Foolish, an autobiography by actor Lewis J. Stadlen.
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Escape from Sobibor (1987)
One of Arkin’s most celebrated television performances was his portrayal of Leon Felhendler, a Polish resistance fighter, in this British TV film based upon a real-life mass escape of Jewish prisoners from the Nazi extermination camp at Sobibor in 1943. Arkin earned an Emmy nomination for his performance as Felhendler, who helped organize the prisoner uprising, according to Indelible Shadows: Film and the Holocaust by Annette Insdorf.
Thirteen Conversations About One Thing (2001)
Arkin appeared in several supporting film roles throughout the 1990s, including The Rocketeer, Glengarry Glen Ross, and Gattaca. But he earned some of his best reviews in years for his performance in Thirteen Conversations About One Thing, a 2001 film featuring a large ensemble cast and a story told in 13 vignettes. Arkin was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award and National Society of Film Critic Award and won the Boston Society of Film Critics award for Best Supporting Actor.
Little Miss Sunshine (2006)
More than five decades into his acting career, Arkin finally won his first Academy Award for Little Miss Sunshine, in which he played the caustic grandfather in a dysfunctional family driving across the country to a child beauty pageant. “More than anything, I am deeply moved by the open heart and appreciation our small film has received, which in these fragmented times, speaks so openly of the possibility of innocence, growth, and connection,” Arkin said during his Oscar acceptance speech.
Argo (2012)
Arkin received another Oscar nomination six years later—again for a comedic supporting performance—for his role in this Ben Affleck–directed film inspired by the real-life C.I.A. mission to rescue six U.S. diplomats from Tehran during the 1979 Iran hostage crisis. Arkin portrayed Lester Siegel, a film director who cooperates with Affleck’s CIA agent character, and who bitingly delivers one of the film’s most memorable lines: “Argo f–– yourself!”
The Kominsky Method (2018-19)
Arkin continued acting into the final years of his life, and one of his most memorable late-career performances was Norman Newlander in The Kominsky Method, a Netflix comedy-drama series. Newlander is the agent and friend of the show’s protagonist, a washed up actor and Hollywood acting coach played by Michael Douglas. The performance earned Arkin Emmy nominations in two consecutive years.
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