- Born: 8 February 1925
- Died: 27 June 2001
- Birthplace: Newton, Massachusetts
- Best known as:
Felix Ungar in the movie The Odd Couple
4 good links
- The Kennedy Center Honors
Comments on his career, from the 1996 awards ceremony
- Perfect Timing, Perfect Gentleman
Posthumous 2001 tribute from film critic Derek Malcolm
- <i>Some Like it Hot</i>
Detailed recap of his famous comedy
- Larry King: Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau
Transcript of their 2001 appearance on King's talk show
Jack Lemmon Biography
A two-time Oscar winner, Jack Lemmon often played struggling underdogs like the neurotic Felix Ungar in the 1968 movie The Odd Couple. Lemmon attended Harvard and turned to acting after serving in the Navy. He appeared in dozens of high-profile films over 50 years, including the Billy Wilder comedies Some Like It Hot (1959, with Marilyn Monroe and Tony Curtis), The Apartment (1960, with Shirley MacLaine) and Irma La Douce (1963, also with MacLaine). He has also proved himself in dramas, including The Days of Wine and Roses (1962), Missing (1982), and Glengarry Glen Ross (1992, with Alec Baldwin). Lemmon won a best supporting actor Oscar as the scheming Ensign Pulver in Mister Roberts (1955, his best-known role until Felix Unger), and won the best actor award for the 1973 drama Save the Tiger. In The Odd Couple he teamed up with Walter Matthau, his collaborator on many other projects, including The Fortune Cookie (1966), Grumpy Old Men (1993) and Out to Sea (1997).
Extra credit:
Lemmon produced the 1967 Paul Newman film Cool Hand Luke... He played many times in the annual pro-am golf tournament at Pebble Beach, often paired with pro Peter Jacobsen; Lemmon's futile attempts to make the tournament cut became a good-natured annual story... On the Odd Couple TV series, Felix and Oscar were played by Tony Randall and Jack Klugman; in the original Broadway show they were played by Matthau and Art Carney... In 1998, actor Ving Rhames handed his own Golden Globe for acting to Lemmon, in what became a famous awards-ceremony moment.
