Climax!
Climax! is an American anthology series that aired on CBS from 1954 to 1958. The series was hosted by William L...
Acting
Shaike Ophir (Hebrew: שייקה אופיר; November 4, 1928 – August 17, 1987) was an Israeli film and theater actor, comedian, playwright, screenwriter, director, and the country's first mime.
Yeshayahu (Shaike) Goldstein-Ophir was born in Jerusalem. His family was Masortiim, and his Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry in the city goes back to the mid-19th century. He studied acting as an adolescent but left school in the 1940s to enlist in the Palmach. During the 1948 Arab-Israeli War he escorted convoys to the besieged city of Jerusalem and took part in naval battles.
Thanks to his comic skills he was accepted to the Chezbatron, an army entertainment troupe. In the 1950s, he made a name for himself as a multi-talented performer. He even recorded a few hit songs during this period.
During the late 1950s and early 1960s Ophir occasionally guest-starred in American TV shows such as Shirley Temple's Storybook and Alfred Hitchcock Presents (in the episode "The Waxwork," where he was billed as Shai K. Ophir). Ophir acted in 28 films, wrote, directed, and starred in several variety shows, and was an accomplished mime, appearing alongside Marcel Marceau. He reached the peak of his international fame in the title role of Ha-Shoter Azoulay (literally, Policeman Azoulay, translated as The Policeman), a film vehicle by Ephraim Kishon which won a Golden Globe for Best Foreign-Language Film (1972) and was nominated for a Best Foreign Language Academy Award the same year. He also starred in other Ephraim Kishon films, including Ervinka, Blaumilch Canal and The Fox in the Chicken Coop, and the 1973 Moshé Mizrahi film Daughters, Daughters. In 1977 he starred opposite Melanie Griffith in The Garden.
In 1985, Ophir starred in a stage adaptation of Janusz Korczak's children's novel King Matt the First, where he played seven different roles. The children's play was very successful and ran for three years. Over this period Ophir was diagnosed with lung cancer, to which he succumbed in 1987. Ophir was a theatrical director for HaGashash HaHiver. He also directed the Israeli movie Hamesh Ma'ot Elef Shahor, and wrote the screenplay for 4 Israeli movies. He wrote and performed many sketches and comedy routines, many of which are still popular in Israel today. He also did a series of Arabic-instruction TV programs that ran through the 1980s.
He also appeared in the Chuck Norris film, The Delta Force.
Ophir was married twice and had four children, two from each spouse. His daughter, Karin Ophir, is also an actress. Shaike Ophir, a heavy smoker, died from lung cancer in 1987.
Browse movies and TV shows featuring Shaike Ophir
Climax! is an American anthology series that aired on CBS from 1954 to 1958. The series was hosted by William L...
A television anthology series hosted by Alfred Hitchcock featuring dramas, thrillers, and mysteries.
Shirley Temple's Storybook is an American children's anthology series hosted and narrated by actress Shirley Te...
A 707 aircraft jetliner, en route from Athens to Rome and then to New York City, is hijacked by Lebanese terror...
Ever in search of adventure, explorer Allan Quatermain agrees to join the beautiful Jesse Huston on a mission t...
Two comedians borrow 500,000 Israeli pounds from an entrepreneur who launders the mafia money via his night clu...
900 years after a nuclear war in the USA, mankind is back to the stone ages. Amazon women rule the tribes, whil...
Abraham, an old man, has a fruit garden in Jerusalem that is threatened by a number of people who want to buy h...
A fatherless family immigrates to Israel from Egypt during the British Mandate period. The film traces the hard...
A good-natured but incorrigible layabout becomes embroiled in a plot to rob the Israeli lottery, all the while...
In July 1976, an Air France flight from Tel-Aviv to Paris via Athens was hijacked and forced to land in Entebbe...
Feature-length, live-action musical version of the classic fairy tale by Charles Perrault.
Yasha is a Jewish stage magician who tours through eastern Europe while destroying his career through personal...
500000 Black 1977
A TV film made as part of The Buick-Electra Playhouse.
In the Southwest of 1915 Carlos backs an intended uprising of the common countymen against his father Phillip,...
Charles Hodgson is a British aristocrat who decides to become a thief as a way of getting at his twin brother,...
Azulai is a policeman in Jaffa, whose incompetence is only matched by his soft-heartedness. His superiors want...
Daliah sneaks into a cargo ship bound to Israel. The sailors will do anything to hide from the though captain h...
A slapstick comedy lampooning bureaucracy and the madness of everyday life in Israel centers on an escaped luna...
Musical adaptation of the Brothers Grimm story broadcast as a live television special on NBC.
Amitz Dolniker, an Israeli politician who speaks way to much has a heart attack in the middle of his speech. In...
Meshulam, a lowly bank clerk, has two hobbies: crime novels, and the ability to calculate investment interest i...
Ze'evik and Srool are hiding in Tiberias from the angry customer to whom they owe money.
In this Israeli comedy, a father is afraid that after having sired eight daughters, that he will never produce...
A comedy about Moishe, a soldier in the army whose nickname is Moishe Air-Condition.
Sherman, who is on trial for murder, is found not guilty thanks to reasonable doubt, however; having stood tria...
The story of a soccer team, respectable families, a corrupt night club owner, and a young lad to guide all to a...
A comic and episodic satire, the film uses improvisation to illustrate the clash between fantasy and reality in...
A thief is released from prison and with the help of his friend he tries to avenge the policeman who caught him.
The story is set in 1926, Yemen. Naama, a popular nightclub singer, learns of her Jewish roots whilst around he...
A Tel Aviv taxi breaks down, and while the driver attempts to repair it, the passengers take shelter and relate...