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  • Actor Thomajan, 87, dies

    Tallahassee Democrat, FL
    July 6 2005


    Actor Thomajan, 87, dies

    He had a long career with Hollywood titans, then spent his last years
    in Monticello

    By Mark Hinson

    DEMOCRAT SENIOR WRITER


    Feisty character actor Edd "Guy" Thomajan - who appeared in such
    films as "Panic in the Streets," "Miracle on 34th Street" and "The
    Pink Panther" - died at his home in Monticello on June 28. He was 87.

    Thomajan, who was also a veteran of World War II, retired to the
    woods of North Florida to build his own house in the 1980s. A
    lifelong bachelor, he left behind no family members or survivors.

    The diminutive Thomajan had a scrappy personality and salty
    vocabulary, but he could switch from crusty curmudgeon to charming
    gentleman in a matter of seconds. Around his friends, he enjoyed
    telling colorful tales of his days working on Broadway and in
    Hollywood with such famous figures as James Dean, Marlon Brando,
    Montgomery Clift, Shelley Winters, Audrey Hepburn, Paul Muni and
    legendary director Elia Kazan.

    "He was a walking encyclopedia of great stories," Steve MacQueen,
    former Tallahassee Democrat theater critic and Thomajan friend, said
    Tuesday.

    Born in Massachusetts, the son of Armenian immigrants, Thomajan began
    developing his street-tough persona as a kid after his family
    relocated to a rough-and-tumble neighborhood in Brooklyn.

    As a teenager in New York City in the '30s, he hung around the Group
    Theatre, known for its socially relevant plays. It's where he first
    met Kazan.

    After serving four years in India, Burma and Japan during World War
    II - a tour of duty that included the liberation of hellish prison
    camps in Japan - Thomajan returned to find that Kazan had become one
    of the most prominent directors in New York. He worked as stage
    manager for a trio of Kazan's landmark Tennessee Williams productions
    on Broadway - "Camino Real," "Sweet Bird of Youth" and "A Streetcar
    Named Desire."

    During "Streetcar," Thomajan's jobs also included keeping Williams
    supplied with "the right amount of bourbon" and sparring with Brando
    backstage between scenes. Thomajan and Brando never became friends
    and "would tolerate each other," he said.

    "As an actor, Brando is one of the greatest," Thomajan said in 1995.
    "Very powerful, very influential actor who could do some really
    amazing things. As a person, of course, he's a jerk, very selfish and
    egotistical."

    The theater was always Thomajan's first love, and he often spoke
    passionately about the need for contemporary plays dealing seriously
    with social issues and the human condition.

    "Where are the new plays?" he said. "That's what we need. What the
    hell do you get out of revivals unless the people involved can
    interpret them in a different way than they've been done for 400
    years?"

    Although he never obtained a college degree, the self-educated
    Thomajan could discuss classic plays and literature at length. When
    it came to chess, his playing style was as aggressive and keen as the
    man himself. In the '90s, the ever-restless Thomajan wrote an updated
    stage version of Moliere's "The Miser" and many other works.

    Thomajan was on hand when Kazan's career expanded beyond the stage
    and onto the screen. He appeared in front of the cameras and behind
    the scenes with the director on such films as "Viva Zapata," "East of
    Eden," "Wild River," "Boomerang!" and "On the Waterfront."

    In the famed car scene in "On the Waterfront" - the one in which
    Brando tells Rod Steiger, "I could have been a contender, instead of
    a bum, which is what I am" - Kazan filmed the shots of the two of
    them, then did Brando's close-ups as Steiger fed him his lines. But
    when it was time for Steiger's close-ups, Brando left. Steiger fumed.

    "So Kazan said, 'Edd, get in there and give him lines,'" Thomajan
    said in '95. "So on the close-ups with Steiger, when he's looking
    off-camera at Brando, he's looking at me."

    In 1950, Thomajan co-starred with Jack Palance and Zero Mostel as one
    of three disease-ridden lowlifes spreading a plague in Kazan's gritty
    classic "Panic in the Streets." In one memorable scene, Thomajan was
    tossed from a seedy second-story tenement into an alley in New
    Orleans.

    "We didn't use any stunt guys on that picture," he said in 1999 when
    Kazan was being given an honorary Oscar. "It hurt my neck, but I
    walked away. I would've done anything for Gadge (Kazan's nickname)."

    In the '60s, Thomajan kept working, directing numerous summer shows
    in Miami Beach and even made a film called "The Ex-Americans," which
    he directed in Rome (he later dismissed the movie as "just plain
    bad"). He also worked as an executive production supervisor and scout
    for a Canadian firm that financed lesser-known pictures all over
    Europe. Other credits include directing a Broadway play ("Harbor
    Lights," starring Robert Alda) and even a few operas for New York's
    Civic Theatre.

    When asked why he settled down in a remote A-frame cabin, which
    intentionally had no phone or TV, in the woods near Monticello,
    Thomajan liked to joke: "Because it's halfway between New York and
    Miami."

    Thomajan requested that no memorial service be held after his death.



    THOMAJAN PLAYED ...

    A postal worker in the Christmas classic "Miracle on 34th Street"
    (1947)

    A court witness named Cartucci in Elia Kazan's "Boomerang!" (1947)

    A plague-infected thief who is eventually tossed from a balcony (by
    Jack Palance) in Kazan's "Panic in the Streets" (1950)

    A gangster in "The Breaking Point" (1950), directed by Michael Curtiz
    ("Casablanca").

    A dog-stealing henchman for David Niven in "The Pink Panther" (1964)

    He was also stage manager for Kazan's Broadway productions of "A
    Streetcar Named Desire," "Camino Real" and "Sweet Bird of Youth," all
    by Tennessee Williams.
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