
Shaike Ophir
Acting • Born 1928-11-04 – Died 1987-08-17
Biography
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.
Filmography
34 credits
America 3000
Movie • 1986
Lelz

The Magician of Lublin
Movie • 1979
Schmul

El Dorado
Movie • 1963
Shneider

The Delta Force
Movie • 1986
Father Nicholas

Daughters, Daughters
Movie • 1974
Sabbatai Alfandari

The Big Dig
Movie • 1969
Police Officer

Hansel and Gretel
Movie • 1958
Miney

500000 Black
Movie • 1977

The Policeman
Movie • 1971
Constable Sgt. Abraham Azulai

The Fox in the Chicken Coop
Movie • 1978
Amitz Dolniker

Theft from a Thief
Movie • 1977

Moishe Air-Condition
Movie • 1966

The Fifth Column
Movie • 1960

The Great Telephone Robbery
Movie • 1972

The Garden
Movie • 1977
Avram

Wrong Number
Movie • 1979
Superintendent Moshe Cohen

Half a Million Black
Movie • 1977

Fish, Football and Girls
Movie • 1968

King Solomon's Mines
Movie • 1985
Kassam

Hole in the Moon
Movie • 1964

Tel Aviv Taxi
Movie • 1956
Mark

The House on Chelouche Street
Movie • 1973
Haim

Carlos
Movie • 1971

Diamonds
Movie • 1975
Moshe

Operation Thunderbolt
Movie • 1977
Gadi Arnon

Dalia and the Sailors
Movie • 1964
Jacko

The Father
Movie • 1975

Ervinka
Movie • 1967

Sleeping Beauty
Movie • 1987
Elf Master

Lacking a Homeland
Movie • 1959

Alfred Hitchcock Presents
TV • 1955
Bourdette

Climax!
TV • 1954
Spider

Einer wird gewinnen
TV • 1964
Self

Shirley Temple's Storybook
TV • 1958
Rumpelstiltskin