Al Lewis

Al Lewis

Active - 1960 - 2004  |   Born - Apr 30, 1923   |   Died - Feb 3, 2006   |   Genres - Comedy, Horror, Fantasy

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Biography by AllMovie

There is more to character actor Al Lewis than meets the eye. Best known to baby boomers for playing the roles of Officer Schnauzer in Car 54 Where Are You? and Grandpa in The Munsters, he holds a doctorate in child psychology from Columbia University, has penned two children's books, produced a kid-oriented home video, and once hosted a series of Saturday morning television shows on WTBS. He has also been a circus performer, a school teacher, and a vaudevillian. Lewis became an actor after earning his degree, teaching, and writing his books. He studied with the Paul Mann Actor's Workshop in New York. On television, he first appeared in "Trouble-In-Law" on The U.S. Steel Hour (1959). The following year, Lewis appeared in the feature film Naked City and then was cast opposite Fred Gwynne in Car 54, Where Are You? The show ran until 1963 and within a year, he was playing the vampiric Grandpa against Gwynne's Frankenstein, Herman Munster. Though The Munsters lasted two years, it has developed a cult following and has re-aired endlessly in syndication and spawned a feature-length sequel, Munster Go Home (1964), and a made-for-TV reunion movie, Munster's Revenge (1981). In 1994, he reprised his role as Schnauzer for the TV-movie version of Car 54 Where Are You? Lewis has gone on to continue making occasional guest appearances on television and a sporadic movie career. In addition to his other endeavors, Lewis has been a high school basketball scout and the owner of a restaurant in New York.

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Factsheet

  • Decided at some point in his life to pretend he was 13 years older than he actually was, possibly to fit the part of elderly Grandpa Munster on the 1964-66 sitcom The Munsters.
  • Notoriously told stories about his life that could not be verified; in one tall tale, he claimed to have worked on a defense committee in the politically charged case of the anarchists Sacco and Vanzetti...at the age, it turned out, of 4.
  • His second wife once told the New York Times that "he always told me he was born in 1910," adding, "I don't think it matters at all."
  • Ran a successful Greenwich Village, NY, eatery.
  • Hosted a radio show on WBAI-FM in New York, NY.
  • Campaigned against the death penalty and certain drug laws in his home state of New York.
  • Ran as a Green Party candidate for governor of New York in 1998.