Martin Gabel
Martin Gabel (June 19, 1912 – May 22, 1986) was an American actor, director, and producer whose career spanned four decades across theater, film, and television.[1][2] Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Gabel attended Lehigh University as an English major before dropping out to train at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts.[1] He made his Broadway debut in 1933 in the play Man Bites Dog and became an original member of Orson Welles's Mercury Theatre, contributing to innovative productions in the 1930s.[2] Gabel gained prominence for his character roles on Broadway, including notable performances in The Hidden River, Once More with Feeling, and Baker Street.[2] His most acclaimed stage role came in 1961 as the eccentric publisher Arthur Landis in Big Fish, Little Fish, for which he won a Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Play and a New York Drama Critics Circle citation.[1][2] In film, Gabel appeared in supporting roles in movies such as Fourteen Hours (1951), The Thief (1952), Lord Love a Duck (1966), Divorce American Style (1967), The Front Page (1974), and The First Deadly Sin (1980), often portraying authoritative or quirky figures.[2] On television, he made frequent guest appearances, including on the panel show What's My Line? alongside his wife, actress Arlene Francis, whom he married in 1946; the couple had one son, Peter.[2] Gabel also directed and produced Broadway shows, extending his influence in the theater world.[1] He died of a heart attack in New York City at age 73.[1][2]Early life and education
Family background
Martin Gabel was born on June 19, 1912, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[1] His parents were Rebecca (née Herzog) and Isaac Gabel, a jeweler who were Austrian Jewish immigrants from Galicia, then part of Austria-Hungary.[3][4] Gabel grew up in a well-to-do family environment in Philadelphia, where his father's profession as a jeweler contributed to a comfortable upbringing. He had a brother, Joseph.[1][4] This Jewish heritage formed the cultural backdrop of his early years in the city.[3]Education and training
Gabel attended Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, where he majored in English.[1] In his senior year, driven by a growing passion for acting, he left the university without graduating to pursue formal training in the performing arts.[1] Supported by his family's well-to-do background in Philadelphia, Gabel relocated to New York City in the early 1930s to immerse himself in the theater world.[1] There, he enrolled at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, a prestigious institution known for its rigorous curriculum in acting techniques, voice, and stagecraft, which provided the foundational skills essential for a professional career on stage.[1] This period of structured education marked the transition from academic pursuits to professional aspirations, culminating in Gabel's Broadway debut in 1933 in the short-lived comedy Man Bites Dog at the Lyceum Theatre.[5][6]Career
Theater
Martin Gabel began his Broadway career in the early 1930s, quickly establishing himself as a versatile character actor known for his commanding presence and resonant voice. His breakthrough came through his association with Orson Welles's innovative Mercury Theatre, where he became a key member of the repertory company. In the groundbreaking production of Julius Caesar (1937), Gabel portrayed Cassius, delivering a performance that highlighted the play's modern fascist undertones and contributed to the show's critical and commercial success. The following year, he took the title role of Danton in Danton's Death (1938), a dramatic adaptation of Georg Büchner's play that showcased Gabel's ability to embody complex revolutionary figures amid the Mercury's bold staging experiments. Over four decades on Broadway, from the 1930s to the 1970s, Gabel excelled in a wide range of character roles, often bringing intellectual depth and subtle menace to his portrayals. His work spanned comedies, dramas, and musicals, earning praise for its precision and adaptability. Notable among these was his depiction of Stephen A. Douglas in The Rivalry (1959), a historical drama by Norman Corwin that dramatized the famous Lincoln-Douglas debates, where Gabel's nuanced performance captured the senator's political savvy and personal conflicts. In 1962, he originated the role of Professor Moriarty in the musical Baker Street, a Sherlock Holmes adaptation, infusing the arch-villain with a chilling intellect that anchored the production's blend of mystery and song. Gabel's most acclaimed Broadway achievement came in 1961 with his Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Play for Big Fish, Little Fish, a comedy by Hugh Wheeler in which he played a pivotal supporting role that showcased his dry wit and dramatic timing; the performance also earned him a citation from the New York Drama Critics Circle.[1] Selected credits from his extensive Broadway portfolio include:- Cassius in Julius Caesar (Mercury Theatre, 1937–1938)
- Danton in Danton's Death (Mercury Theatre, 1938)
- Stephen A. Douglas in The Rivalry (Bijou Theatre, 1959)
- Featured role in Big Fish, Little Fish (ANTA Playhouse, 1961)
- Professor Moriarty in Baker Street (Broadway Theatre, 1962–1965)
Radio
Martin Gabel emerged as a prominent figure in the Golden Age of Radio during the 1930s and 1940s, making his debut in 1934 on WMCA in New York.[7] Over the next two decades, he amassed numerous appearances across a wide range of broadcasts, leveraging his resonant voice and dramatic delivery to become a staple in radio drama.[8] His early radio work built on vocal training received during his education, enabling him to excel in narration and character roles that demanded precision and emotional depth.[7] Gabel's association with Orson Welles marked a pivotal phase in his radio career, beginning with the six-part adaptation of Victor Hugo's Les Misérables on WOR-Mutual in 1937, where he portrayed the relentless inspector Javert.[9] This collaboration extended into Welles's Mercury Theatre on the Air series on CBS in 1938, with Gabel voicing Professor Abraham Van Helsing in the premiere episode, a dramatization of Bram Stoker's Dracula.[10] These performances, part of the Mercury ensemble's innovative audio productions, showcased Gabel's ability to convey complex characters through voice alone, bridging his theater background with the burgeoning medium of broadcast drama.[7] Beyond prestige projects, Gabel maintained steady roles in serialized programming. He was one of several actors to portray Doctor John Wayne on the CBS soap opera Big Sister from 1936 to 1952, contributing to its long-running domestic narratives.[7] Similarly, he took on the lead role of the antiquities dealer and sleuth Gregory Hood in The Casebook of Gregory Hood on Mutual and ABC from 1946 to 1951, voicing the protagonist in mystery adventures co-created by writers Anthony Boucher and Denis Green.[7] These recurring parts honed his skills in sustained character development, laying groundwork for his versatility in later stage and screen work.[8] Gabel's most acclaimed radio contribution came during World War II, particularly through his collaboration with writer Norman Corwin. He narrated and hosted Corwin's wartime specials on CBS, including the landmark VE Day broadcast On a Note of Triumph on May 8, 1945, which celebrated the Allied victory in Europe with poetic scripting, music by Bernard Herrmann, and a cast featuring voices like House Jameson.[1] This 59-minute program, heard by an estimated 60 million listeners, earned widespread praise for Gabel's commanding narration, which framed Corwin's reflections on triumph and human resilience.[11] His radio endeavors, especially these high-profile narrations, not only elevated his profile but also refined his interpretive abilities, influencing his authoritative presence in subsequent theater productions and film roles.[1]Film and television
Gabel's transition to film and television in the 1950s marked a shift from his stage and radio work, where his skills in delivering nuanced character portrayals and authoritative narration informed his screen presence. His early film roles often featured in noir-style thrillers and dramas, showcasing his ability to portray sophisticated, intense figures. In 1951, he debuted on screen as Dr. Strauss in Fourteen Hours, a suspenseful Fox production directed by Henry Hathaway about a man threatening suicide from a hotel ledge. The following year, Gabel appeared as Tomas Rienzi, a principled editor, in the Humphrey Bogart-led newspaper thriller Deadline – U.S.A., directed by Richard Brooks, where his performance added gravitas to the story of journalistic integrity amid corruption. Also in 1952, he played the enigmatic Mr. Bleek in The Thief, a tense Cold War espionage drama starring Ray Milland, emphasizing Gabel's knack for subtle menace in supporting parts. By the 1960s, Gabel's roles diversified into psychological thrillers, comedies, and ensemble pieces, reflecting the era's broader cinematic experimentation. A notable highlight was his turn as the flustered bank executive Sidney Strutt in Alfred Hitchcock's Marnie (1964), where he provided comic relief and underscored the film's themes of deception through his character's oblivious vulnerability.[12] He followed with a small but memorable role as T. Harrison Belmont in the satirical black comedy Lord Love a Duck (1966), directed by George Axelrod, contributing to its eccentric ensemble alongside Tuesday Weld and Roddy McDowall. In the divorce farce Divorce American Style (1967), Gabel portrayed Dr. Zenwinn, a marriage counselor whose deadpan advice heightened the film's humorous take on suburban dysfunction, starring Dick Van Dyke and Debbie Reynolds.[13] Gabel's television work, particularly in the 1950s and 1960s, centered on guest spots and panel appearances, leveraging his quick wit and charm. He was a frequent panelist on the long-running CBS game show What's My Line? from 1956 to 1967, appearing alongside his wife Arlene Francis in episodes that highlighted his engaging banter and deductive skills.[14] Later, he gravitated toward made-for-TV movies in the 1970s, blending drama and suspense. In the NBC adaptation Harvey (1972), Gabel played Judge Omar Gaffney in the whimsical fantasy based on Mary Chase's play, opposite James Stewart. He portrayed Meade De Ruyter, a shady financier, in the ABC detective thriller Smile Jenny, You're Dead (1974), starring David Janssen as a hardboiled investigator. Gabel's TV output culminated in Contract on Cherry Street (1977), an NBC crime drama where he appeared as Baruch "Bob" Waldman, supporting Frank Sinatra's portrayal of a police captain seeking vigilante justice. In the 1980s, Gabel's final screen role came in the crime thriller The First Deadly Sin (1980), directed by Brian G. Hutton, where he played Christopher Langley, a scholarly expert aiding detective Edward Delaney (Frank Sinatra) in tracking a serial killer. This late-career performance encapsulated his evolution from intense noir supporting characters to versatile dramatic and comedic turns across decades of visual media.Partial Filmography (Acting Roles Only)
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1951 | Fourteen Hours | Dr. Strauss | Film debut; thriller |
| 1952 | Deadline – U.S.A. | Tomas Rienzi | Noir drama |
| 1952 | The Thief | Mr. Bleek | Espionage thriller |
| 1964 | Marnie | Sidney Strutt | Hitchcock psychological thriller |
| 1966 | Lord Love a Duck | T. Harrison Belmont | Satirical comedy |
| 1967 | Divorce American Style | Dr. Zenwinn | Comedy |
| 1972 | Harvey (TV movie) | Judge Omar Gaffney | Fantasy adaptation |
| 1974 | Smile Jenny, You're Dead (TV movie) | Meade De Ruyter | Detective thriller |
| 1977 | Contract on Cherry Street (TV movie) | Baruch "Bob" Waldman | Crime drama |
| 1980 | The First Deadly Sin | Christopher Langley | Final film; serial killer thriller |