Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Family & Personal Life. Vic Tayback was born in Brooklyn, New York, on January 6, 1930, to Helen Tayback and Najeeb James Tayback. He had a brother named Joe Tayback, who owned ‘KAZM’, the only radio station in Sedona, Arizona for a long period of time. Tayback’s parents had immigrated to Burbank, California, from Aleppo, Syria.

  2. Vic Tayback made one guest appearance on Flo. Diane Ladd, who received an Academy Award nomination for her portrayal of Flo in the film version, joined the cast in 1980 as Isabelle "Belle" Dupree, a hard-edged but kind-hearted woman. She had been a waitress of Mel's in the past, during which the two had a romantic relationship.

  3. There, Tayback would spend the rest of his life and career as an actor. For almost the first 20 years of his career Tayback managed to land only one-off appearances on TV shows like "Mission: Impossible" and "The Man from U.N.C.L.E." and a few roles in feature films. In 1974 Martin Scorsese cast him as restaurant owner Mel Sharples in "Alice ...

  4. Alice: Created by Robert Getchell. With Linda Lavin, Vic Tayback, Beth Howland, Philip McKeon. The misadventures and trials of an aspiring singer and her co-workers at a greasy-spoon diner.

  5. Biography. Burly, likable actor Vic Tayback was born in Brooklyn but his family moved to Burbank, California, when he was a teenager. There, Tayback would spend the rest of his life and career as an actor. For almost the first 20 years of his career Tayback managed to land only one-off appearances on TV shows like "Mission: Impossible" and "The ...

  6. 25 de may. de 1990 · GLENDALE, Calif. -- Actor Vic Tayback, who played the gruff but endearing owner of a desert-town diner on television's 'Alice,' died Friday of a heart attack. He was 60. Tayback's wife called ...

  7. Vic Tayback played three characters in three seasons of Bewitched (1965-1971).. Biography []. Vic Tayback was an American actor and writer. He is best remembered as the diner owner 'Mel Sharples' in the 1974 film "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore" and in the CBS television sitcom "Alice" that ran from August 1976 until March 1985, the latter for which he received two Golden Globe Awards and an ...