The Los Angeles Times Los Angeles, Calif.; Jan 8, 1988;
NANCY MILLS;

: Actor Theodore Bikel donned makeup to portray an early resident
of Los Angeles for KCET's "Los Angeles History Project." / TONY
BARNARD / Los Angeles Times
"Some actors are what they are no matter what name you give
them," Theodore Bikel says. "Clark Gable looked, walked and talked
exactly the same in every picture. I like to change shape, accent and gait.
That way I never get stale."
While Bikel's approach to work may be more challenging than
Gable's, it has one major drawback: lack of recognition. Almost everyone can
conjure up a clear image of Gable, even though he has been dead for 27 years.
Bikel's image proves to be much more elusive.
Consider his latest three jobs in Hollywood:
-On "Falcon Crest" this season, he is portraying a
Bulgarian villain in four episodes (including tonight's at 10 on CBS). "He
is one of the most deliciously evil characters I've played," Bikel says
with pleasure. "I speak with a strong Bulgarian accent. When I played the
Moldavian prime minister on `Dynasty' (several years ago), I spoke very British
English."
-On Sunday's episode of "Buck James" on ABC, he plays
"an elderly Jewish person, the grandfather of a lady surgeon at the
hospital. Grandpa and Grandma come to visit their daughter and meet her new
boyfriend. They're concerned that he's not Jewish and carries a gun."
-For KCET's "Los Angeles History Project," to air in
May, he has just completed filming a 30-minute monologue about Los Angeles in
1915 as seen through the eyes of Jewish pioneer Harris Newmark, age 82.
"Newmark left Prussia when he was 11," Bikel says.
"He stopped in New York for a day to look around. Then he went by boat to
California, via Nicaragua, landing at San Pedro in 1853. Newmark had one of the
first telephones in Los Angeles. His number was easy to call-it was 5."
In order to look like Newmark, Bikel, 63, spent three hours
each morning in the makeup chair. Using a Yiddish-like inverted sentence, he
jokes, " `Falcon Crest' money they don't pay you, but I'm tickled to do
it. I do other things in order to permit myself the luxury of doing this
project."
Harris Newmark will be in no way reminiscent of one of Bikel's
most famous stage portrayals, Tevye the Milkman in "Fiddler on the
Roof."
"I've done `Fiddler' at least 940 times," he says.
"That story was set in 1905, but those were Eastern-European Jews. Newmark
came from what I perceive to be a very Germanic and assimilated family. We're
talking rich Jews here."
Bikel, who was born in Vienna and emigrated with his parents to
Palestine when he was 13, is an authority on Jewish history. He became
interested in acting while working on a kibbutz, and in 1947 went to London to
study at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. He came to the United States in the
mid-1950s.
Although he has appeared in more than 30 films and received an
Oscar nomination for his performance in "The Defiant Ones" in 1958,
many of his older fans know him through his folk singing.
"Colleges don't book old fuddy-duddies like me now," he
says, referring to his once extensive college touring schedule. "In the
old days the faculty had a say about who came to perform. Today, if there's any
money in the budget, students spend it on rock concerts."
Bikel has tried to adapt himself to the times. "I've added
Jacques Brel songs and a few songs from musical shows," he says, "but
I'd never abandon the folk material. I've had some of it arranged for
orchestras. Several years ago I gave a concert with the Los Angeles
Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl."
He also writes articles and gives lectures on a wide range of
subjects. He gives an example: "I talk to IBM executives about the
necessity of a cultural counterbalance in a world dominated by computers."
The man is never at a loss for a topic. "My sons (18 and 16)
say, `Other people's fathers collect baseball cards or butterflies. Our dad
collects words.' It's true. I am a word person. I love words. I juggle with
them."
Surprisingly, he says he would like to juggle with them every week
on a television series. "I've got to work," he explains. "If
you're a regular on a show, you still have half a year to do other
work"-such as traveling around the world giving concerts and lectures in
French, German, Hebrew, Yiddish, Spanish and Russian.
"I think of myself as a man of the world, at home in many
cultures and languages," he says. "But in Los Angeles, when you're
not there, they think you're sick. When you're sick, they think you're dead.
You have to remind them you're neither of those."
What Bikel needs is a big hit. He doesn't think it will be his
recently completed film "Dark Tower," with Michael Moriarty, Jenny
Agutter and Kevin McCarthy. "It's about the occult" is all he'll say.
Instead, he looks toward television to overcome what he perceives
as an identity problem.
"In this town, people in power are very young. What do you
say when a vice president of a studio, who was in diapers when you got an
Academy Award nomination, asks you, `What have you done?' Do you go after him
with a knife? Of course not. You smile and try to get work on `Family Ties.'
"
Association with a comedy series would also solve another problem.
"People who do know me think of me as super-serious and highly
intellectual," Bikel worries. "That spells, `You don't do comedy.'
I'm a serious actor who gets lots of laughs-a concept that's hard to
communicate.
"I'm not complaining," he hastens to add. "I have a
wonderful career. It's the actors' syndrome."
He breaks off to tell a joke: "How many actors does it take
to change a light bulb? One hundred-one to change the bulb and 99 to say `I
could have done that.' "
In Connecticut, where Bikel lives with his family when he's not
traveling, he belongs to the Theater Artists Workshop of Westport.
"It's indispensable," he says. "I either do a scene
or I watch others do scenes and offer a comment or two. It's a safe place to
fail. In our profession, failure is costly, but that's where I can do the stuff
that nobody lets me do.
"When is the last time somebody offered me `King Lear?' I did
a 20-minute scene from `Lear' at the workshop. Another time, I did a 20-minute
scene from `Antigone.' I like to keep my finger in the pie."
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