"Mr. Maude Findlay", Bill Macy, who played Walter Findlay, the hen-pecked husband of the the 1970s television situation comedy Maude, starring Beatrice Arthur..
Wolf Martin Garber (May 18, 1922 – October 17, 2019), known as Bill Macy, was an American actor.
(comment: no obvious relation to William H. Macy, an actor about the right age to be a son)
Macy made more than 70 appearances on film and television. He appeared as the Jury foreman in The Producers in 1967. Other memorable roles include the co-inventor of the 'Opti-grab' in the 1979 Steve Martin comedy The Jerk, and as the head television writer in My Favorite Year (1982).
His other film credits include roles in Death at Love House (1976), The Late Show (1977), Serial (1980), Movers & Shakers (1985), Bad Medicine (1985), Tales from the Darkside (1986), Sibling Rivalry (1990), The Doctor (1991), Me, Myself and I (1992), Analyze This (1999), Surviving Christmas (2004), The Holiday (2006), and Mr. Woodcock (2007).
In 1986, Macy was a guest on the fourth episode of L.A. Law, playing an older man whose young wife wants a music career.[3] Macy appeared in the popular television movie Perry Mason and The Case Of The Murdered Madame (1987) as banker Richard Wilson.
He appeared occasionally on Seinfeld as one of the residents of the Florida retirement community where Jerry Seinfeld's parents lived. Macy portrayed a demon in a guest appearance on Millennium.[4] Macy made a guest appearance as a patient on Chicago Hope, and as an aging gambler on the series Las Vegas.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Macy
Wolf Martin Garber (May 18, 1922 – October 17, 2019), known as Bill Macy, was an American actor.
(comment: no obvious relation to William H. Macy, an actor about the right age to be a son)
Macy made more than 70 appearances on film and television. He appeared as the Jury foreman in The Producers in 1967. Other memorable roles include the co-inventor of the 'Opti-grab' in the 1979 Steve Martin comedy The Jerk, and as the head television writer in My Favorite Year (1982).
His other film credits include roles in Death at Love House (1976), The Late Show (1977), Serial (1980), Movers & Shakers (1985), Bad Medicine (1985), Tales from the Darkside (1986), Sibling Rivalry (1990), The Doctor (1991), Me, Myself and I (1992), Analyze This (1999), Surviving Christmas (2004), The Holiday (2006), and Mr. Woodcock (2007).
In 1986, Macy was a guest on the fourth episode of L.A. Law, playing an older man whose young wife wants a music career.[3] Macy appeared in the popular television movie Perry Mason and The Case Of The Murdered Madame (1987) as banker Richard Wilson.
He appeared occasionally on Seinfeld as one of the residents of the Florida retirement community where Jerry Seinfeld's parents lived. Macy portrayed a demon in a guest appearance on Millennium.[4] Macy made a guest appearance as a patient on Chicago Hope, and as an aging gambler on the series Las Vegas.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Macy
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.