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      Gene Saks

      Gene Saks

      Highest Rated: 98% The Odd Couple (1968)

      Lowest Rated: 29% Last of the Red Hot Lovers (1972)

      Birthday: Nov 8, 1921

      Birthplace: New York, New York, USA

      While primarily noted as a director of stage and screen, Gene Saks actually began his career as an actor. Trained at the Dramatic Workshop of the New School for Social Research (which was a precursor of the Actors Studio), he was a co-founder of an acting troupe in the late 1940s. Saks made his stage debut with the company in "Juno and the Paycock" in 1947 and he went on to spend the next decade and a half in a number of plays and one musical, "South Pacific." By the early 60s, he had begun his directing career with Carl Reiner's play "Enter Laughing" (1963) and went on to excel in staging comedies and musicals, including "Mame" (1966), which made a Broadway musical star of Angela Lansbury and also featured Saks' then-wife Beatrice Arthur, Bernard Slade's romantic comedy "Same Time, Next Year" (1975) with Ellen Burstyn and Charles Grodin as illicit lovers who tryst on an annual basis and the Cy Coleman musical "I Love My Wife" (1977). But Saks was perhaps best recalled for his long stage association with Neil Simon. The director helped shaped Simon's award-winning autobiographical trilogy ("Brighton Beach Memoirs" 1983, "Biloxi Blues" 1985, and "Broadway Bound" 1986) and guided a number of performances to what many critics felt were the performances of their careers. Among the latter were Matthew Broderick in "Brighton Beach Memoirs," Barry Miller in "Biloxi Blues" and Linda Lavin in "Broadway Bound." Additionally, Saks was the director of Simon's farcical "Rumors" (1988) and the playwright's Pulitzer-winning "Lost in Yonkers" (1991). A dispute over the direction of the 1993 stage musical based on "The Goodbye Girl" led to a temporary rift between Saks and Simon.On the big screen, Saks was both actor and director. In the former capacity, he was featured in films adapted from two Herb Gardner plays, "A Thousand Clowns" (1965) and "The Goodbye People" (1984) as well as one based on Simon's "The Prisoner of Second Avenue" (1974). In 1994, he had two prominent supporting roles as Paul Newman's lawyer friend in "Nobody's Fool" and as a colleague of Walter Matthau's Albert Einstein in "I.Q." Under Saks' direction, Robert Redford in "Barefoot in the Park" (1967) first demonstrated his easy charm and comedic abilities while Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau seemed near-perfect as Felix and Oscar in "The Odd Couple" (1968). Goldie Hawn earned an Oscar for her performance as the giddy object of affections for a dentist (Matthau) in the romantic comedy "Cactus Flower" (1969). One prominent misfire was the big screen version of "Mame" (1974) which featured a miscast Lucille Ball in the title role and Beatrice Arthur and Jane Connell reprising their stage roles. Following the European love story "A Fine Romance" (1992) starring Julie Andrews and Marcello Mastroianni, Saks' final directing credit came with a TV adaptation of the early '60s Broadway hit "Bye Bye Birdie" (ABC 1995), starring Jason Alexander and Vanessa Williams and hewing closer to the original script than the 1963 film had. Saks made his big-screen farewell with a supporting role in Woody Allen's "Deconstructing Harry" (1997) as the title character's father. Gene Saks died of pneumonia at his East Hampton, New York home on March 28, 2015. He was 93.

      Highest rated movies

      Nobody's Fool
      Deconstructing Harry
      A Thousand Clowns
      The One and Only
      I.Q.
      The Prisoner of Second Avenue
      Lovesick

      Photos

      NOBODY'S FOOL, Gene Saks, Paul Newman, 1994, (c) Paramount I.Q., Joseph Maher, Gene Saks, Lou Jacobi, Walter Matthau, 1994 NOBODY'S FOOL, Margo Martindale, Jay Patterson, Gene Saks, Paul Newman, 1994, (c) Paramount I.Q., Walter Matthau, Lou Jacobi, Tim Robbins, Joseph Maher, Gene Saks, 1994, (c)Paramount BRIGHTON BEACH MEMOIRS, director Gene Saks, 1986, ©Universal BRIGHTON BEACH MEMOIRS, director Gene Saks, 1986, ©Universal

      Filmography

      Movies

      Credit
      73% 67% Barrymore Executive Producer - 2011
      73% 82% Deconstructing Harry Harry's Father (Character) $10.7M 1997
      No Score Yet No Score Yet On Seventh Avenue Sol Jacobs (Character) - 1996
      No Score Yet 39% Bye Bye Birdie Director - 1995
      91% 81% Nobody's Fool Wirf (Character) $38.3M 1994
      45% 47% I.Q. Boris Podolsky (Character) $25.2M 1994
      No Score Yet 80% A Fine Romance Director $10.1K 1991
      No Score Yet No Score Yet The Good Policeman Harry (Character) - 1991
      71% 79% Brighton Beach Memoirs Director $11.0M 1986
      40% 36% Lovesick Frantic Patient (Character) - 1983
      55% 57% The One and Only Sidney Seltzer (Character) - 1978
      44% 67% The Prisoner of Second Avenue Harry Edison (Character) - 1975
      36% 48% Mame Director - 1974
      29% 81% Last of the Red Hot Lovers Director - 1972
      85% 81% Cactus Flower Director - 1969
      98% 89% The Odd Couple Director - 1968
      81% 79% Barefoot in the Park Director - 1967
      72% 88% A Thousand Clowns Leo (Character) - 1965

      TV

      Credit
      No Score Yet 83% Law & Order Unknown (Guest Star) 1998