Early roles After the war, he worked for the
U.S. State Department as host of the
Your Voice of America series, then at
ABC News. In 1950, Savalas hosted a radio show called
The Coffeehouse in New York City. Savalas began as an executive director and then as senior director of the news special events at ABC. He then became an executive producer for the
Gillette Cavalcade of Sports, where he gave
Howard Cosell his first job in television. Before his acting career took off, Savalas directed
Scott Vincent and Cosell in
Report to New York,
WABC-TV's first regularly scheduled news program in fall 1959. Savalas did not consider acting as a career until asked if he could recommend an actor who could do a European accent. He did, but as the friend in question could not go, Savalas himself went to cover for his friend and ended up being cast on "And Bring Home a Baby", an episode of
Armstrong Circle Theatre in January 1958. He appeared on two more episodes of the series in 1959 and 1960, one, acting alongside a young
Sydney Pollack. He was also in a version of
The Iceman Cometh. He quickly became much in demand as a guest star on TV shows, appearing in
Sunday Showcase,
Diagnosis: Unknown,
Dow Hour of Great Mysteries (an adaptation of
The Cat and the Canary),
Naked City (alongside
Claude Rains),
The Witness (playing
Lucky Luciano in one episode and
Al Capone in another),
The United States Steel Hour, and
The Aquanauts. He was a regular on the short-lived NBC series
Acapulco (1961) with
Ralph Taeger and
James Coburn. Savalas made his film debut in
Mad Dog Coll (1961), playing a cop. His work had impressed fellow actor
Burt Lancaster, who arranged for Savalas to be cast in the
John Frankenheimer-directed
The Young Savages (also 1961 and again playing a cop). In one of his most acclaimed performances, Savalas reunited with Lancaster and Frankenheimer for
Birdman of Alcatraz (1962), where he was nominated for the
Academy Award and
Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actor. The same year, he appeared as a private detective in
Cape Fear (directed by
J. Lee Thompson with whom Savalas would work in future films), and
The Interns, reprising his role from the latter film in
The New Interns (1964). Savalas also guest-starred in a number of TV series during the decade including
The New Breed,
The Detectives,
Ben Casey,
The Twilight Zone (the episode "
Living Doll"), Already at a late stage of
male pattern baldness, he
shaved his head to play
Pontius Pilate in
The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965) He reunited with J. Lee Thompson in
John Goldfarb, Please Come Home! (1965), and was one of many names in
Genghis Khan (also 1965). Savalas attributed his success to "his complete ability to be himself." Savalas's first leading role in film was in the British crime comedy
Crooks and Coronets (1969). The same year, he appeared in the James Bond movie ''
On Her Majesty's Secret Service, playing Ernst Stavro Blofeld. He continued to appear in films during the 1970s including Kelly's Heroes (1970) (with Clint Eastwood); Clay Pigeon (1971); and several European features such as Violent City (1970) (with Charles Bronson); A Town Called Bastard (1971); Horror Express (with Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee); A Reason to Live, a Reason to Die; the title role in Pancho Villa (all 1972); and Redneck (1973). He reunited with Christopher Lee in the 1976 thriller Killer Force'', and also appeared in
Peter Hyams'
Capricorn One (1978). "I had worked my way up to star billing", he later said, "when the bottom dropped out of the movie business. I could have stayed in Europe and made Italian movies, but I discovered the big difference between an Italian and American movie is that in the American movie, you get paid." in ''
Mongo's Back in Town'' (1971)
Kojak Savalas first played Lt. Theophilus "Theo" Kojak in the TV movie
The Marcus–Nelson Murders (
CBS, 1973), which was based on the real-life
Career Girls murder case. Kojak was a bald New York City detective with a fondness for
lollipops and whose tagline was "Who loves ya, baby?" (He also liked to say, "Everybody should have a little Greek in them.") Although the lollipop gimmick was added to indulge his sweet tooth, Savalas also smoked heavily onscreen—cigarettes,
cigarillos, and cigars—throughout the first season's episodes. The lollipops had apparently given him three
cavities, and were part of an (unsuccessful) effort by Kojak (and Savalas himself) to curb his smoking. Critic
Clive James explained the lead actor's appeal as Kojak: "Telly Savalas can make bad slang sound like good slang and good slang sound like lyric poetry. It isn't what he is, so much as the way he talks, that gets you tuning in."
David Shipman later wrote: "Kojak was sympathetic to outcasts and ruthless with social predators. The show maintained a high quality to the end, mixing tension with some laughs and always anxious to tackle civic issues, one of its ''raisons d'etre'' in the first place. It was required viewing in Britain every Saturday evening for eight years. To almost everyone everywhere, Kojak means Savalas and vice versa, but to Savalas himself, the series was merely an interval, albeit a long one, in a distinguished career."
Kevin Dobson as Kojak's trusted young partner, Det. Bobby Crocker, whose on-screen chemistry with Savalas was a success story of 1970s television, and
Dan Frazer as Captain Frank McNeil. Due to a decline in ratings, the series was cancelled by CBS in 1978. Savalas and Frazer were the only actors to appear in all 118 episodes. Savalas was unhappy about the show's demise but got the chance to reprise the Kojak persona in several television movies, starting in 1985. The first film, subtitled
The Belarus File and broadcast in February 1985, reunited Savalas with several of his co-stars from the series: younger brother George,
Dan Frazer,
Mark Russell (Det. Saperstein) and Vince Conti (Det. Rizzo); this marked those actors' final appearances in the
Kojak franchise. A further six
Kojak TV movies were produced, titled
The Price of Justice (1987),
Ariana,
Fatal Flaw (both 1989),
Flowers for Matty, ''It's Always Something
—with Kevin Dobson reprising his role of Bobby Crocker, now an assistant district attorney—and None So Blind'' (all 1990).
Later work Savalas wrote, directed, and starred in the 1977
independent thriller
Beyond Reason, but the film was not released in cinemas; it was made available only on home media in 1985. Savalas was part of an all-star cast in the movies
Escape to Athena,
Beyond the Poseidon Adventure (both 1979), and
Cannonball Run II (1984), and continued to appear in a number of film and television guest roles during the 1980s, including
Border Cop (1980) and
Faceless (1988), the series
Tales of the Unexpected (1981), and two episodes each of
The Love Boat (1985) and
The Equalizer (1987); the latter series was produced by James McAdams, who had also produced
Kojak. Savalas was the lead actor in the TV movie ''
Hellinger's Law'' (1981), which was originally planned as a pilot for a series, but ultimately never materialized. In 1992, he appeared in three episodes of the TV series
The Commish (his son-in-law was one of the producers). This was Savalas's final television role. He appeared in two further feature films before his death,
Mind Twister (1993) and the posthumous release
Backfire! (1995). and his follow-up, a version of "
You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'" peaked at No. 47 in the UK. In February 1981, his version of
Don Williams' "
Some Broken Hearts Never Mend" topped the charts in Switzerland. He worked with composer and producer
John Cacavas on many albums, including
Telly (1974) (which peaked at No. 12 in the UK and No. 49 in Australia) and
Who Loves Ya, Baby (1976). In the late 1970s, Savalas narrated three UK travelogues titled
Telly Savalas Looks at Portsmouth,
Telly Savalas Looks at Aberdeen, and
Telly Savalas Looks at Birmingham. They were produced by
Harold Baim and were examples of
quota quickies, which were then part of a requirement that cinemas in the United Kingdom show a set percentage of British-produced films. In the 1980s and early 1990s, Savalas appeared in commercials for the Players' Club Gold Card. In 1982, along with
Bob Hope and
Linda Evans, he participated in the "world premiere" television ad introducing
Diet Coke to Americans. On October 28, 1987, Savalas hosted
Return to the Titanic Live, a two-hour television special broadcast from
Cité des Sciences et de l'Industrie in Paris, which was widely criticized as being insensitive and for making light of the
tragic sinking soon after its
wreck was discovered. He also hosted the 1989 video
UFOs and Channeling. He received a star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1983. In 1999,
TV Guide ranked him number 18 on its 50 Greatest TV Stars of All Time list. ==Personal life==