Max Gail
Max Gail | |
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Gail in 1975. | |
Born |
Maxwell Trowbridge Gail, Jr. April 5, 1943 Detroit, Michigan, US |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1970s-present |
Spouse(s) |
Nan Harris (1989-present) Willie Beir (1983-1986) [her death] |
Maxwell Trowbridge "Max" Gail, Jr.[1] (born April 5, 1943) is an American actor who has starred in stage, television, and film roles. He most notably portrayed the role of Detective Stan "Wojo" Wojciehowicz on the television sitcom Barney Miller.[2]
Life and career
Gail was born in Detroit, Michigan, the son of Mary Elizabeth (Scanlon) and Maxwell Trowbridge Gail, a businessman,[1] and he was raised in Grosse Ile, Michigan. He attended Williams College, and was later an instructor for the University Liggett School before becoming an actor. His acting debut came in 1970 for The Little Fox Theatre in San Francisco, California, playing Chief Bromden in the original stage production of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. In 1973, he reprised this role in his New York stage debut.
He is best known for his television role as Det. Stan "Wojo" Wojoehowicz in the sitcom Barney Miller (1975-1982). Gail's best known feature film role is in D.C. Cab (1983) as Harold, the owner of the D.C. Cab taxi company. He also directed several episodes of Barney Miller as Maxwell Gail.
In 1984, Gail was featured in the monodrama The Babe on Broadway. This stage play was filmed and later featured on PBS.
Gail has starred in other TV series including Whiz Kids (1983) as Llewellan Farley, Jr., an investigative reporter who is friends with a group of teenage computer hackers. He worked on the short-lived Normal Life (1990). He has appeared on the TV series Sons & Daughters (2006).
Gail has made many guest appearances on TV shows such as Cannon, Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman, Due South, The Streets of San Francisco, Paul Sand in Friends and Lovers, The Drew Carey Show, Quantum Leap, Psych, Gary Unmarried, NCIS (Episode "Murder 2.0"), "Longmire" -Episode 40, and Mad Men.
Gail appeared as Brooklyn Dodgers manager Burt Shotton in the 2013 film 42, a film about Jackie Robinson's first two years as a member of the Dodgers organization, including his first year of playing at the Major League level in 1947.
Gail runs Full Circle, a production company which has featured documentaries on such subjects as Agent Orange, Native Americans, and nuclear issues.
Gail's first wife, Willie Bier, died of cancer in 1986; they have a daughter, India. He and his second wife, Nan, have two children, Maxwell and Grace. Gail has a twin sister, actress Mary Gail.
Filmography
- The Organization (1971)
- Night Moves (1975)
- Cardiac Arrest (1980)
- D.C. Cab (1983)
- Heartbreakers (1984)
- Where are the Children (1986)
- Man Against the Mob (1988)
- The Outside Woman (1989)
- Our Shining Moment (1991)
- Street Crimes (1992)
- Pontiac Moon (1994)
- Dangerous Touch (1994)
- Good Luck (1996)
- Forest Warrior (1996)
- Naturally Native (1998)
- Judgment Day (1999)
- Mind Rage (2000)
- Facing the Enemy (2001)
- Truth and Dare (2003)
- Perceptions (2005)
- I'll See You In My Dreams (2005)
- Tillamook Treasure (2006)
- Angst (2006)
- You Don't Know Jack: The Jack Soo Story (2009)
- Always and Forever (2009)
- Psych (2012)
- 42 (2013)
- Underdog Kids (2015)
- Mad Men (2015)
- The Frontier (2015)
- Review (2015)
References
- 1 2 Filmreference.com
- ↑ Gates, Anita (September 11, 2014). "A Son Comes Home: Cue the Father Clash". The New York Times.
External links
- Max Gail at the Internet Movie Database
- Max Gail on Facebook
- LAP.org
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