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Marty Feldman

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"I am too old to die young, and too young to grow up," Marty Feldman told a reporter -- a week before he died.This beloved comedian, who poked fun at himself, as well as others, was born Martin Alan Feldman on July 8, 1934, in London, England. His parents were of Ukrainian Jewish heritage (from Kiev). He was the son of Cecilia (n��e Crook) and Myer Feldman, a gown manufacturer. Marty spent his childhood in the poverty-stricken London East End and left school at the age of 15, hoping for a career as a jazz trumpeter (his appearance in a Variety show earned him the title "the worst trumpeter in the world"). He had just started his comedy career, as a writer for BBC radio programs and TV shows in the late 1950s, when he married Lauretta Sullivan in January 1959 (they would stay married until his death in 1982). There's a saying: "Your face is your fortune"; Marty had received a double-whammy. His nose was mangled in his youthful years in a boxing match; his walleyed orbs were the result of both a hyperactive thyroid and a botched operation after a car accident before his 30th birthday, in 1963. American audiences first saw Marty in Dean Martin Presents the Golddiggers (1968), where he did comedy skits with Susie Ewing and the Golddiggers. He appeared in a number of movies, his most-remembered role being that of Igor (pronounced Eye-Gor) in Young Frankenstein (1974). Besides acting, he made his directorial debut in The Last Remake of Beau Geste (1977). Beloved and popular, it seemed Marty was to enjoy a long career in the entertainment field. However, he died of a massive heart attack, caused by shellfish food poisoning, while filming Yellowbeard (1983) in Mexico City, on December 2, 1982... he was only 48.
Marty Feldman
Bio: "I am too old to die young, and too young to grow up," Marty Feldman told a reporter -- a week before he died.This beloved comedian, who poked fun at himself, as well as others, was born Martin Alan Feldman on July 8, 1934, in London, England. His parents were of Ukrainian Jewish heritage (from Kiev). He was the son of Cecilia (n��e Crook) and Myer Feldman, a gown manufacturer. Marty spent his childhood in the poverty-stricken London East End and left school at the age of 15, hoping for a career as a jazz trumpeter (his appearance in a Variety show earned him the title "the worst trumpeter in the world"). He had just started his comedy career, as a writer for BBC radio programs and TV shows in the late 1950s, when he married Lauretta Sullivan in January 1959 (they would stay married until his death in 1982). There's a saying: "Your face is your fortune"; Marty had received a double-whammy. His nose was mangled in his youthful years in a boxing match; his walleyed orbs were the result of both a hyperactive thyroid and a botched operation after a car accident before his 30th birthday, in 1963. American audiences first saw Marty in Dean Martin Presents the Golddiggers (1968), where he did comedy skits with Susie Ewing and the Golddiggers. He appeared in a number of movies, his most-remembered role being that of Igor (pronounced Eye-Gor) in Young Frankenstein (1974). Besides acting, he made his directorial debut in The Last Remake of Beau Geste (1977). Beloved and popular, it seemed Marty was to enjoy a long career in the entertainment field. However, he died of a massive heart attack, caused by shellfish food poisoning, while filming Yellowbeard (1983) in Mexico City, on December 2, 1982... he was only 48.

Tivia: Died in Mexico City of shellfish poisoning on the last day of filming a scene from Yellowbeard (1983), in which he was supposed to die. A double completed the death scene. His illness was discovered by filmmaker friend Michael Mileham who had also suffered from the same poisoning but survived.Suffered from Graves' disease during his early childhood in which, after a botched surgical operation, his condition resulted in his eyes being more protruded and misaligned (strabismus).According to various sources, Feldman was known to get physically sick when having to watch screenings of his own work or performance.Befriended a young teen who crashed the Young Frankenstein (1974) set named Alan Spencer and offered encouragement to his writing career. The young scribe eventually created the TV show Sledge Hammer! (1986).His wife Lauretta asked him to marry her, when he supposedly made no move to do so, after nine months of daily dating.When presenting the 1976 Live Action Short Oscar, he called the two winning producers to the stage, threw the statue to the floor, then handed a shard of the award to each one. He said, "It said, 'Made in Hong Kong' on the bottom."Liked to write poetry and, as a teenager, was even introduced to famous poet Dylan Thomas. Thomas reportedly told the young Feldman that he had talent, thus he continued to write.In A Clockwork Orange (1971), when Alex (Malcolm McDowell) returns home from prison one of the smaller headlines in the newspaper his father is reading says: "Marty Feldman's Wife Banned".Had a number of absurd and varied jobs in his youth. These included being a kitchen hand, message boy for an advertising agency, jazz musician in clubs, greyhound racetrack tipster, and an assistant to an Indian fakir in his side-show acts.Was deported from Paris for vagrancy as a teenager when he pretended to be an innocent youth, impressed with the work of an American sculptor pretending to be French. Feldman, working on commission for the sculptor, lured gullible tourists as customers.Liked to play soccer and also enjoyed watching baseball, calling it, "Cricket on speed".Best remembered by American audiences for his role as Igor (pronounced "Eye-gore") in Mel Brooks' spoof Young Frankenstein (1974). Gene Wilder, who co-wrote the film with Brooks and starred as the titular Frankenstein, stated on numerous occasions that he considered Feldman the heart of the film. Brooks agreed completely with this sentiment.Subject of a novelty song by Bruce Baum. The song was a parody of the hit "Bette Davis Eyes" by Kim Carnes ("All the boys think she's a guy / she's got Marty Feldman eyes").Interred at Forest Lawn - Hollywood Hills, Los Angeles, California - Garden of Heritage, Lot 5420 near his idol, Buster Keaton.In his DVD commentary for Young Frankenstein (1974), director Mel Brooks provides a further explanation for Marty Feldman's early death. According to Brooks, who worked with him on Young Frankenstein and Silent Movie (1976), Feldman smoked about half a carton of cigarettes (four or five packs) a day as well as drank copious amounts of black coffee (the tannic acid in coffee, which can be partly neutralized by milk, in some studies has been found to increase the risk of heart attack but this association is weak. Coffee does lead to high blood pressure, but only temporarily. Most people don't even feel the difference, let alone suffer from any adverse health effects as a result. And as far as heart disease goes, most research suggests that there is no link between coffee and heart problems for healthy people). Feldman did not eat meat and compensated for the lack of meat in his diet by eating large amounts of eggs and dairy products on a daily basis. However, the ketogenic diet has proven that fats - healthy fats found in organic, 100% grass fed meats and wild caught Alaskan fish - are good for us all. The high altitude of Mexico City (over 7,000 feet above sea level) with the air about 24% thinner, where Feldman was filming most of Yellowbeard (1983), could have added still more stress by forcing his heart and lungs to work harder. The food poisoning that Feldman and Michael Mileham contracted shows that Feldman likely had underlying and predisposing cardiovascular conditions that lead to his demise under the stresses of the high altitude, compromised lung capacity and oxygen delivery due to his heavy cigarette smoking off-camera, and with food poisoning may have been the final straw, which may explain why Mileham survived, and Feldman didn't. It is also plausible that Feldman may have gotten a larger dose of poisoned shellfish than Mileham.His film The Last Remake of Beau Geste (1977) was butchered by the studio. Those that worked on it said that was the reason it was not a classic.Biography in: "Who's Who in Comedy" by Ronald L. Smith, pg. 157-158. New York: Facts on File, 1992. ISBN 0816023387Despite persistent published reports, Marty Feldman wasn't the brother of actress Fenella Fielding. The two are not related in any way.
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Name: Marty Feldman Type: Writer,Actor,Script and Continuity Department (IMDB)
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Marty Feldman data
Model rank: 1407
Last update: 2024-07-01 04:48:56
Marty Feldman profile
Height: 5' 7' (1.70 m)
Biography: \"I am too old to die young, and too young to grow up,\" Marty Feldman told a reporter -- a week before he died.This beloved comedian, who poked fun at himself, as well as others, was born Martin Alan Feldman on July 8, 1934, in London, England.
Trivia: Died in Mexico City of shellfish poisoning on the last day of filming a scene from Yellowbeard (1983), in which he was supposed to die. A double completed the death scene. His illness was discovered by filmmaker friend Michael Mileham who had also suffered from the same poisoning but survived.Suffered from Graves' disease during his early childhood in which, after a botched surgical operation, his condition resulted in his eyes being more protruded and misaligned (strabismus).According to various sources, Feldman was known to get physically sick when having to watch screenings of his own work or performance.Befriended a young teen who crashed the Young Frankenstein (1974) set named Alan Spencer and offered encouragement to his writing career. The young scribe eventually created the TV show Sledge Hammer! (1986).His wife Lauretta asked him to marry her, when he supposedly made no move to do so, after nine months of daily dating.When presenting the 1976 Live Action Short Oscar, he called the two winning producers to the stage, threw the statue to the floor, then handed a shard of the award to each one. He said, "It said, 'Made in Hong Kong' on the bottom."Liked to write poetry and, as a teenager, was even introduced to famous poet Dylan Thomas. Thomas reportedly told the young Feldman that he had talent, thus he continued to write.In A Clockwork Orange (1971), when Alex (Malcolm McDowell) returns home from prison one of the smaller headlines in the newspaper his father is reading says: "Marty Feldman's Wife Banned".Had a number of absurd and varied jobs in his youth. These included being a kitchen hand, message boy for an advertising agency, jazz musician in clubs, greyhound racetrack tipster, and an assistant to an Indian fakir in his side-show acts.Was deported from Paris for vagrancy as a teenager when he pretended to be an innocent youth, impressed with the work of an American sculptor pretending to be French. Feldman, working on commission for the sculptor, lured gullible tourists as customers.Liked to play soccer and also enjoyed watching baseball, calling it, "Cricket on speed".Best remembered by American audiences for his role as Igor (pronounced "Eye-gore") in Mel Brooks' spoof Young Frankenstein (1974). Gene Wilder, who co-wrote the film with Brooks and starred as the titular Frankenstein, stated on numerous occasions that he considered Feldman the heart of the film. Brooks agreed completely with this sentiment.Subject of a novelty song by Bruce Baum. The song was a parody of the hit "Bette Davis Eyes" by Kim Carnes ("All the boys think she's a guy / she's got Marty Feldman eyes").Interred at Forest Lawn - Hollywood Hills, Los Angeles, California - Garden of Heritage, Lot 5420 near his idol, Buster Keaton.In his DVD commentary for Young Frankenstein (1974), director Mel Brooks provides a further explanation for Marty Feldman's early death. According to Brooks, who worked with him on Young Frankenstein and Silent Movie (1976), Feldman smoked about half a carton of cigarettes (four or five packs) a day as well as drank copious amounts of black coffee (the tannic acid in coffee, which can be partly neutralized by milk, in some studies has been found to increase the risk of heart attack but this association is weak. Coffee does lead to high blood pressure, but only temporarily. Most people don't even feel the difference, let alone suffer from any adverse health effects as a result. And as far as heart disease goes, most research suggests that there is no link between coffee and heart problems for healthy people). Feldman did not eat meat and compensated for the lack of meat in his diet by eating large amounts of eggs and dairy products on a daily basis. However, the ketogenic diet has proven that fats - healthy fats found in organic, 100% grass fed meats and wild caught Alaskan fish - are good for us all. The high altitude of Mexico City (over 7,000 feet above sea level) with the air about 24% thinner, where Feldman was filming most of Yellowbeard (1983), could have added still more stress by forcing his heart and lungs to work harder. The food poisoning that Feldman and Michael Mileham contracted shows that Feldman likely had underlying and predisposing cardiovascular conditions that lead to his demise under the stresses of the high altitude, compromised lung capacity and oxygen delivery due to his heavy cigarette smoking off-camera, and with food poisoning may have been the final straw, which may explain why Mileham survived, and Feldman didn't. It is also plausible that Feldman may have gotten a larger dose of poisoned shellfish than Mileham.His film The Last Remake of Beau Geste (1977) was butchered by the studio. Those that worked on it said that was the reason it was not a classic.Biography in: "Who's Who in Comedy" by Ronald L. Smith, pg. 157-158. New York: Facts on File, 1992. ISBN 0816023387Despite persistent published reports, Marty Feldman wasn't the brother of actress Fenella Fielding. The two are not related in any way.
Trademarks: Huge, bulging eyes
Quotes: The pen is mightier than the sword, and is considerably easier to write with. <br /> <hr> I don't want to be a director. I want to direct. There's a difference. <br /> <hr> Comedy, like sodomy, is an unnatural act. <br /> <hr> I won't eat anything that has intelligent life, but I'd gladly eat a network executive or a politician. <br /> <hr> Money can't buy poverty.
Job title: Writer,Actor,Script and Continuity Department
Spouse: Lauretta Feldman (January 14, 1959 - December 2, 1982) (his death)
Parents: Cecilia Feldman (Crook) Myer Feldman
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