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Glaser detecting similarities between Starsky and Tevye

August 15, 2013 11:19
Paul Michael Glaser (Photo: Pamela Raith)

By

Angela Epstein,

Angela Epstein

5 min read

In the great panoply of iconic male acting roles, the part of an impoverished milkman in turn-of-the-20th-century Russia — transport, horse and cart — and a hot-shot detective who scorches the earth in a red-striped Torino are worlds apart. But no. The two are deeply connected, insists Paul Michael Glaser, who found worldwide fame in 1970s cop show Starsky and Hutch and is now stepping into the shoes of the philosophising Tevye in a UK theatre tour of Fiddler on the Roof.

“Tevye is an everyman — he speaks for everyone, as he tries to reconcile himself to the way life changes,” Glaser says. “In the process, his is a story which cuts across all religions. And Starsky, well, he was an everyman, too. I didn’t play him as Jewish. People often wonder whether he was, but to me he was just ethnic. So I was able to play him lots of ways — sad, whimsical, serious, adult, childish. How many characters do you know that can do that? Tevye is one of them. That’s where the common ground is. In a sense, I’m an everyman, too.”

Actor, director, writer, poet and campaigner, Glaser has enjoyed a diversely stellar career. Yet for many, he remains frozen in aspic —- or rather a chunky cardigan— as Detective Dave Starsky.

But being synonymous with a role is something he is comfortable with — indeed, he appreciates the irony of now playing a character inextricably linked to Chaim Topol.