Actor / Director Profile
Walter Matthau videos
Loading...
related links
Walter Matthau Biography
Born Walter Matthow on October 1, 1920, to a pair of Russian-Jewish immigrants in New York City, Matthau grew up in poverty on the Lower East Side and started out selling soft drinks and playing bit parts at a Yiddish theater troupe at age 11. He was paid 50 cents for each of his occasional on-stage appearances. His father, a peddler from Kiev, left home when he was 3 years old. He lived with his older brother, Henry, and their mother, a garment worker, on the Lower East Side of New York. After graduating from Seward Park High School during the Depression, he took government jobs as a forest ranger in Montana, a gym instructor for the Works Progress Administration, and a boxing coach for policemen. During World War II, he served in the Army Air Corps as a radio cryptographer in a heavy bomber unit in Europe and returned home a sergeant with six battle stars.In 1948, his first Broadway role was when he was hired as an understudy for the role of an 83 year old English bishop in 'Anne of the Thousand Days' starring Rex Harrison. His fame came with The Fortune Cookie (1966) and The Odd Couple (1968). While making the former, he suffered a serious heart attack. This was due to heavy smoking and chronic gambling. Matthau immediately quit smoking and began a life-long regime of walking 2-5 miles per day.Matthau's acting career continued to flourish for the next 30 years with him playing memorable lead and supporting characters in both dramatic and comic films, several of them alongside Jack Lemmon. Unbeknownst to his fans, Matthau continued to battle heart disease and was later diagnosed with two forms of cancer. In 1976, he had heart bypass surgery. In 1993, he was hospitalized for double pneumonia. In 1995, he had a benign colon tumor removed. In 1999, he was hospitalized again for pneumonia where he was diagnosed again with cancer. Walter Matthau died on July 1, 2000, at age 79.
Walter Matthau Photo Gallery
Walter Matthau filmography
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
producer
director
self
self
self
self
self
self
self
self
self
self
self
self
self
self
self
self
self
self
137. The 41st Annual Academy Awards (1969)
TV Himself - Co-Presenter: Best Film Editing & Honorary Award to John Chambers
TV Himself - Co-Presenter: Best Film Editing & Honorary Award to John Chambers
self
self
self
self
141. The Stingiest Man in Town (1978)
TV (performer: "Humbug!", "One Little Boy", "The Christmas Spirit (reprise)", "Mankind Should Be My Business")
TV (performer: "Humbug!", "One Little Boy", "The Christmas Spirit (reprise)", "Mankind Should Be My Business")
soundtrack
