Known For Actor
Gender Male
Birthday 1923-12-01
Deathday 1987-04-17 (63 years old)
Place of Birth Buffalo, New York, USA
Also Known As Richard Schulefand
One-of-a-kind nightclub comedian and singer Dick Shawn (ne Richard Schulefand) was as off-the-wall as they came and, as such, proved to be rather an acquired taste. Way ahead of his time most say, it was extremely difficult indeed to know how to properly tap into this man's eclectic talents. Shawn began inching toward the forefront during the be-bop 50s and early 60s with his odd penchant for playing cool cats. During his mild bid for film stardom, he was top-billed as a hip, laid back genie in the thoroughly dismal satire The Wizard of Baghdad (1960), but seemed to have better luck when taken in smaller doses. He fared quite well opposite another "way-out-there" comedian, Ernie Kovacs, in Wake Me When It's Over (1960) as a hustling soldier out to make a buck in the Far East. Also on the plus side, he replaced Zero Mostel in the bawdy musical "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum" on Broadway and stole a small scene in the all-star epic comedy It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World (1963). By far, the one role that completely overshadows all of his other hard work is his mock portrayal of a singing Adolf Hitler in the show-within-a-movie The Producers (1968). In the film, which starred Mostel and Gene Wilder as two con artists deliberately producing a stage "bomb" called "Springtime for Hitler," Shawn sang the hammy, absurdly narcissistic song "Love Power." The movie finally captured Shawn in his element, but this stroke of genius of matching actor to role would never happen again for him. For the most part his roles came off slick and smarmy, and were stuck in mediocre material. Shawn won a huge fan base, however, touring in one-man stage shows which contained a weird mix of songs, sketches, satire, philosophy and even pantomime. A bright, innovative wit, one of his best touring shows was called "The Second Greatest Entertainer in the World." During the show's intermission, Shawn would lie visibly on the stage floor absolutely still during the entire time. By freakish coincidence, Shawn was performing at the University of California at San Diego in 1987 when he suddenly fell forward on the stage during one of his spiels about the Holocaust. The audience, of course, laughed, thinking it was just a part of his odd shtick. In actuality, the 63-year-old married actor with four children had suffered a fatal heart attack. A not-surprising end for this thoroughly offbeat and intriguing personality.
as Self (archive footage)
as Self (archive footage)
as Snow Miser (archive sound) (uncredited)
as Self (archive footage)
as Charlie Slater
as Stan Starkey
as Commander Bog
as Self
as The Psychiatrist
as Donald
as Emperor
as Bo Gumbs
as Deke Halliday
as Joe Willoughby
as Ivan Zolotov
as Mae
as Self - Host
as Bo Gumbs
as Professor Hoover
as Rodney Pointsetter / Ainsley Pointsetter
as Self
as Guest Interviewee
as Emperor
as Lieutenant Ferguson NYPD
as Deke Edwards
as Manny Lander
as David Jackson
as Harvey Blanchard
as Snow Miser (voice)
as Marshal Bing Bell
as Lucky
as Himself
as Harry Bricker
as Lorenzo St. DuBois (L.S.D.)
as Self - Guest
as Dr. Gregory Mannix
as Igor Valkleinokov
as Captain Lionel Cash
as Paul Benderhof
as Arnold Plum
as Sylvester Marcus
as Self
as Ace Winthrop
as Genii-Ali Mahmud
as Self - Co-Host
as Self
as Gus Brubaker
as Charlie Wilson
as Singer
as Self
as Felix Franklin
as Self
as Screenplay