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Val Avery, 85, Tough-Guy Actor in Movies

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  • Val Avery, 85, Tough-Guy Actor in Movies

    The New York Times
    December 15, 2009 Tuesday
    Late Edition - Final


    Val Avery, 85, Tough-Guy Actor in Movies

    By WILLIAM GRIMES


    Val Avery, whose craggy features and threatening aura ensured him
    nearly 50 years of work playing tough guys on both sides of the law in
    dozens of television series and films like ''Hud,'' ''Hombre'' and
    several directed by John Cassavetes, died Saturday at his home in
    Greenwich Village. He was 85.

    The death was confirmed by his daughter, Margot Avery.

    Mr. Avery, who started out in live television and broke into film in
    ''The Harder They Fall'' (1956), Humphrey Bogart's last movie, found a
    rewarding niche playing cops, thugs, Mafia kingpins and mean bosses,
    although in ''The Magnificent Seven,'' John Sturges's classic 1960
    western, he appeared as a traveling corset salesman.

    Mr. Avery played the Mafia psychopath Socks Parelli in the Sidney
    Lumet caper film ''The Anderson Tapes'' (1971) and the Mafia godfather
    who cuts off Eric Roberts's thumb in ''The Pope of Greenwich Village''
    (1984). He also made frequent guest appearances on ''The Fugitive,''
    ''Gunsmoke,'' ''Columbo'' and other television series.

    In all, he made more than a hundred films and appeared on television
    more than 300 times in series and dramas. ''In the early years, there
    were times when it was rough, times when I thought of packing it in,
    and then a job would open up,'' he told The Daily News in 1999. ''And
    it would lead to another and another and another, until I had a career
    and a life.''

    Mr. Avery was born Sebouh Der Abrahamian on July 14, 1924, in
    Philadelphia. He acted in productions of the Armenian Youth Theater
    and, after serving as an Army flight instructor during World War II,
    enrolled in the Bessie V. Hicks School of Drama in Philadelphia.

    In 1953, he married the actress Margot Stevenson, who survives him,
    along with their daughter.

    On moving to Manhattan, Mr. Avery began working in live television,
    which led to roles in western and crime series and steady work in
    film. He appeared with Paul Newman as the ranch hand Jose in ''Hud''
    (1963) and the stationmaster Delgado in ''Hombre'' (1967); as a police
    inspector in ''The Laughing Policeman'' (1973); and as the gangster
    Trafficante in ''Donnie Brasco'' (1997).

    After Cassavetes directed him in five episodes of the television
    series ''Johnny Staccato,'' he cast him as Frielobe in ''Too Late
    Blues'' (1961). Mr. Avery later worked with Cassavetes in ''Faces''
    (1968), ''Minnie and Moskowitz'' (1971), ''The Killing of a Chinese
    Bookie'' (1976) and ''Gloria'' (1980).

    Mr. Avery slipped out of his usual groove from time to time. Sidney
    Poitier, with whom he had worked in ''Edge of the City'' (1957), cast
    him as a bumbling police lieutenant in ''Let's Do It Again'' (1975),
    and he played a dentist who invents a superglue in an episode of ''The
    Odd Couple'' on television and the boss at an upholstery factory in
    the Cheech and Chong film ''Up in Smoke'' (1978).

    Somewhat to his own surprise, he found himself on an Off Broadway
    stage in 1998 playing a beloved Italian grandfather in ''Over the
    River and Through the Woods.''

    That was an aberration in a career devoted to menace. While filming
    ''Russian Roulette'' Mr. Avery prevailed on the director to strip
    every line of dialogue from his role so that he could simply project
    wordless malevolence as a Russian dissident planning an assassination.

    The temptation to slip back into character was, it seems,
    irresistible. At the Lion's Head, a Greenwich Village tavern where he
    often drank with Cassavetes, Ben Gazzara and Peter Falk, he enjoyed
    fixing innocent customers with a look and then saying, ''I'll eat your
    liver.''

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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