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From ‘Lou Grant’ to ‘Up,’ 7 of Asner’s must-see roles

Seven-time Emmy Award winner died Aug. 29 at age 91

By Nardine Saad, Los Angeles Times
Published: September 5, 2021, 6:00am

With a storied six-decade career, the late Ed Asner packed his repertoire with dozens of beloved characters and many, many cameos and guest appearances.

The seemingly indefatigable “Mary Tyler Moore Show” alumnus and “Lou Grant” star, who also had a string of Broadway credits, began his TV career in earnest in the 1960s when he appeared in anthology series such as “Alfred Hitchcock Presents” and “Route 66,” then “Thunder Alley” and “Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip.” Asner’s roles went on to include present-day streaming darlings “Grace & Frankie,” “Dead to Me” and “Cobra Kai.”

The seven-time Emmy Award winner, who died Aug. 29 at age 91, worked until the end. He’ll appear in a number of posthumous roles for years to come, including the animated projects “Dug Days,” “The Gettysburg Address” and “Back Home Again;” as well as the live-action series and films “A Fargo Christmas Story,” “Awaken” and “The Last Saturday Night.”

Until then, here’s a look back on some Asner’s must-see roles:

  • Bart Jason in ‘El Dorado’

Asner made his big-screen debut in 1962’s “Kid Galahad,” one of the two films he made with Elvis Presley. They were minor roles, so Asner called it the “big league” when he was cast in Howard Hawks’ 1966 John Wayne flick “El Dorado” — and it was, because the movie was also a critical success.

The Western featured Wayne as a gunslinger, Robert Mitchum as a sheriff and Asner as Wayne’s rival, the wealthy landowner Bart Jason.

  • Lou Grant in ‘Mary Tyler Moore’ and ‘Lou Grant’

Asner’s most iconic role was that of veteran newsman Lou Grant — a character who originated as the blustery but lovable, spunk-hating news director of the 1970 sitcom “The Mary Tyler Moore Show.” The “everyman” role earned Asner three comedy Emmys and led to the hourlong dramatic series “Lou Grant,” which ran on CBS from 1977 to 1982. Asner’s portrayal of the hard-nosed city editor of the Los Angeles Tribune earned him two Emmys for drama, making him the only actor to win Emmys for playing the same character in both a comedy and a drama.

“He radiates warmth, generosity and caring, someone who reflects a toughness over a mound of Jell-O, a nice degree of intelligence but a working intelligence as opposed to an arrogant one,” he told The Times about the character in 1977.

  • Axel Jordache in ‘Rich Man, Poor Man’

In 1976, ABC aired the colorful and melodramatic “Rich Man, Poor Man,” a 12-hour miniseries about the immigrant Jordache family that had Americans “glued to their TV sets for the groundbreaking saga.”

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The miniseries was based on Irwin Shaw’s bestselling 1970 novel by the same name and was set between 1945 to 1965. In it, Asner played the clan’s tyrannical German-born patriarch, Axel, the father of Peter Strauss’s Rudy Jordache and Nick Nolte’s Tom Jordache.

Asner earned a supporting actor Primetime Emmy Award for the role.

  • Capt. Thomas Davies in ‘Roots’

Asner was among the numerous sympathetic, even beloved, white TV stars enlisted to play unsympathetic roles in ABC’s iconic 1977 slave-trade saga “Roots.” Asner was transformed into the morally conflicted Capt. Davies, who led the slave ship that brought LeVar Burton’s Kunta Kinte to America.

He earned another Emmy Award for that three-episode performance.

  • Santa Claus in ‘Elf’

Returning to feel-good fare, Asner played Santa Claus in the 2003 Will Ferrell comedy “Elf.” It was a relatively small role, but a climactic one — Asner’s Santa is marooned in Central Park because of a dearth of holiday spirit, so Ferrell’s Buddy the elf helps power up Santa’s sleigh while his friends spread Christmas cheer by singing loud for all to hear.

It was one of many St. Nick roles that Asner took on over the years, prompting him to say, “I’m getting too old for this job!” in the comedy. Prior to that role, his other holiday films include 1996’s animated “The Story of Santa Claus,” the 1991 TV movie “Yes, Virginia, There Is a Santa Claus” and 2002’s “The Man Who Saved Christmas.”

  • Carl Fredricksen in ‘Up’

Asner voiced the cranky Carl Fredricksen — a widower who tries hoisting his house into the air with exactly 20,622 helium balloons — in Pixar’s Oscar-winning 2009 tear-jerker “Up.”

“Instead of a Clint Eastwood-type senior citizen who is fitter than people half his age, ‘Up’ gives us a man who uses a walker and can’t handle stairs but still manages to be heroic when it counts,” wrote former Los Angeles Times film critic Kenneth Turan.”

The animation studio tweeted that Asner was “our real life Carl Fredricksen: a veneer of grouch over an incredibly loving and kind human being.” His work on the spinoff TV Series “Dug Days” had already been completed prior to his death.

  • Mr. Weiner on ‘Curb Your Enthusiasm’

Asner appeared as Mr. Weiner in a 2001 “Curb Your Enthusiasm” episode titled “The Acupuncturist.” He seemingly played a heightened version of himself, as did many of Larry David’s guest actors, but was cast as a dad who David inadvertently convinces to cut his son out of his will.

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