Brother Theodore

Actor

Birthday November 11, 1906

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Düsseldorf, Rhine Province, German Empire

DEATH DATE 2001-4-5, New York City, New York, U.S. (94 years old)

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1906

Theodore Isidore Gottlieb (November 11, 1906 – April 5, 2001), mostly known as Brother Theodore, was a German-born American actor and comedian known for rambling, stream-of-consciousness monologues which he called "stand-up tragedy".

1920

His style is similar to Diseuse or Kabarett, which was popular in Western Germany during the 1920s and 30s's. He was described as "Boris Karloff, surrealist Salvador Dalí, Nijinsky and Red Skelton…simultaneously".

Gottlieb was born into a Jewish family in Düsseldorf, in the Rhine Province, where his father was a magazine publisher.

He attended the University of Cologne.

At age 32, under Nazi rule, he was imprisoned at the Dachau concentration camp until he signed over his family's fortune for one Reichsmark.

After being deported from Switzerland for chess hustling, he went to Austria where Albert Einstein, a family friend, helped him immigrate to the United States.

He worked as a janitor at Stanford University, where he demonstrated his prowess at chess by beating 30 professors simultaneously, and later became a dockworker in San Francisco.

1940

This was one of the several movie appearances he made beginning in the 1940s and continuing into the 1990s.

Theodore's career as a monologuist began in California in the late 1940s, with dramatic Poe recitals.

1946

He played a bit part in Orson Welles' 1946 movie The Stranger.

1950

He moved to New York City, and by the 1950s, his monologues, now darkly humorous, had attracted a cult following.

After his nightclub and TV appearances in the 1950s and '60s waned, he retired in the mid-1970s.

He was pulled out of retirement and booked by magician Dorothy Dietrich and Dick Brooks in the Magic Towne House on the affluent Upper East Side of Manhattan for special weekend midnight performances.

Years earlier, Brooks had remembered seeing Brother Theodore drawing large crowds at small, eclectic clubs across the Lower East Side (Greenwich and the East Village) and sought him out to appear at his new club.

1958

In 1958, he presented a one-man show that promoted "quadrupedism", the idea that human beings should walk on all fours.

1960

Jay Landesman booked him at St. Louis' Crystal Palace during the 1960s.

In the early 1960s, he frequently performed at the Café Bizarre in New York's Greenwich Village (106 W 3rd Street).

He reached a wider audience through television, with 36 appearances on The Merv Griffin Show in the 1960s and '70s, and was also a guest on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, The Dick Cavett Show, and The Joey Bishop Show.

1977

These were mostly small parts in B-movies, although he did provide the voice of Gollum in the 1977 made-for-television animated version of The Hobbit and the follow-up adaptation of The Return of the King (1980).

This resulted in a resurgence of interest in Brother Theodore that brought him success in his later years starting with Tom Snyder's Tomorrow Show in 1977 followed by more TV appearances and movies.

According to Brooks, it took multiple calls to Theodore to convince him to make a comeback.

Theodore's attitude was very bleak, and he felt his career was over.

Brooks wanted to charge ten or more dollars, but Theodore insisted on four dollars, so as not to scare people away.

The show was a success and ran for three years.

A picture of the Magic Towne House ad appeared in local New York newspapers such as the Village Voice and The New York Post.

In an interview for MUM, The Society of American Magicians official magazine Dorothy Dietrich said:

Dick knew him.

As a kid Dick used to see him around the village and they would be lined up around the block to see him.

The stage was black with a pin spot on a desk which was raked towards the audience.

The light comes on and there he is with a big shadow behind him.

He just stares at the audience for an excruciatingly long time.

Then he says, "Einstein is dead. Schopenhauer is dead... and I'm not feeling so well myself!"

He was the king of dark humor.

He performed as a wacko.

Truthfully, he was always depressed in real life and people thought it was his stage character.

He was from a rich family in Europe and then his whole family went to concentration camps and lost it all.

When he came to the States, he quickly became a huge celebrity in the Village.

Then he totally disappeared and became a has been.

Dick remembered him and tracked him down.

1982

He also voiced Ruhk, Mommy Fortuna's assistant and carnival barker in The Last Unicorn (1982).