Jerry Stiller, '60s comedy legend who found renewed fame on 'Seinfeld,' dies at 92
Actor Jerry Stiller died from natural causes on Monday, but his life and legacy will continue be honored every Dec. 23.
That scores of fans actually celebrate the fictional holiday of Festivus on that date is proof of how big a legacy the 92-year-old comedy veteran left on a younger generation through his role as Frank Costanza, the creator of the "Festival for the rest of us" on the popular sitcom, “Seinfeld.”
Stiller wasn't cast as his signature character until his late sixties, decades after he had found success as one half of the comedy duo, Stiller and Meara, with his real-life wife, Anne Meara.
If Stiller and Meara made him famous, "Seinfeld" made him beloved.
Coupled with memorable cameos in his son Ben's "Zoolander" movies and a recurring part on "King of Queens," the elder Stiller enjoyed a career resurgence and an legacy that would be the envy of his comedy contemporaries from the '60s.
Ben Stiller paid tribute to his father on Twitter on Monday.
Milton Berle was the highest rated show back in the 1950s, they called him 'Mr. Television,' he was responsible for some of the highest ratings of the time," Robert Thompson, director of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture at Syracuse University, told NBC News. "But he appeared in variety shows and variety shows don’t rerun, so their fame stretches only as long as the memories of the people who watched them the first time around.I’m sad to say that my father, Jerry Stiller, passed away from natural causes. He was a great dad and grandfather, and the most dedicated husband to Anne for about 62 years. He will be greatly missed. Love you Dad. pic.twitter.com/KyoNsJIBz5— Ben Stiller (@RedHourBen) May 11, 202
"And that’s where Jerry Stiller, because of 'Seinfeld,' has guaranteed his place in enduring popular culture history. Those episodes are going to be running forever.
Born on June 8, 1927, in Brooklyn, New York, there was little to indicate the son of a bus driver would eventually rise to national recognition. After serving in the European theater in World War II, though, he graduated with a degree in speech and drama from Syracuse University in 1950 and embarked on an acting career.
Three years later, Stiller caught his big break — in the office of a casting director. That's where he met Meara, then a struggling actress looking for work and apparently a new set of cutlery for her apartment.
"From there we went down to the cafeteria… I bought her a cup of coffee because that’s all I could afford, really," Stiller recounted to MSNBC in 2012. "I said, 'Should I pick up the check?'
"She said, 'Forget about the check, pick up some silverware, stick it in your pocket and let’s get the hell out of here.'"
“Of course he did it, he wanted to sleep with me,” added Meara, ever the scene partner, in that "Morning Joe" interview.
The obvious chemistry between the tall Irish-Catholic Meara and the short, Jewish Stiller translated first to the stage — they joined the predecessor to Chicago's Second City comedy troupe in the mid 50s and eventually became a popular nightclub act in New York City — and later on screen. Stiller and Meara became regulars on the "Ed Sullivan Show," on which they appeared on more than 30 times between 1963 and 1971, according to IMDB.
Their popularity waned in the '70s along with the variety show format, however, and by the end of the decade they were relegated to co-hosting HBO's "Sneak Preview" segments, plugging upcoming shows and movies on the then fledgling pay cable channel. Though Stiller continued to work, he wouldn't find much as much success again — until 1993.
That's when debuted on "Seinfeld" as Frank Constanza, the father of one of the show's main characters, George Constanza (played by Jason Alexander). But at first, the veteran character actor was unimpressed by the role as it was written — a meek man dominated by his on-screen wife, played by Estelle Harris.
For about three days (of rehearsals) we kept doing that thing, I felt more and more restricted and finally on the final day before we were supposed to shoot, I just took it on myself," Stiller later told the Archive of American Television.
"And when (Harris yelled the line), ‘You’re the one who ruined his life, you were never there for him, you were a lousy role model, you weren’t a real father,' out of desperation I (screamed back), 'You’re the one who killed him off, you slept in bed with him, you made him sandwiches, you never treated him like a real object.