In 1977, he made his first film appearance in Judd Ne'eman's
Paratroopers. For a period of twenty years between 1978–1998, Glickman starred, alongside
Moni Moshonov,
Shlomo Bar-Aba and
Gidi Gov in Israel's longest running television show, the weekly satirical show
Zehu Ze!. In 1995, he starred in
Ephraim Kishon's TV comedy
Sipurey Efraim. In 2013, he played in the internationally acclaimed film
Big Bad Wolves, for which he won the Best Actor award at the
Fantasporto festival. During the years, he appeared in numerous notable theatre productions, as well as films. In 2013, he was cast in a lead role of TV drama
Shtisel, as the somber, wry, and charismatic Rabbi Shulem Shtisel, for which he won The Israeli Academy Award for Best Actor in a leading role, twice. During the 1990s, he revived his
Zehu-Ze character, Shaul, the flower salesmen in a
Yellow Pages ad campaign, where he coined the term "wa-wa-wi-wa" later used by
Sacha Baron Cohen. The campaign went on to become a TV series in 2002, written and created by Glickman. In 2016, he played the minister of commerce in
Josef Cedar's
Norman. In 2018 he played a holocaust survivor in the Austrian film:"Murer: Anatomie eines Prozesses", in the critically acclaimed miniseries "Stockholm", in Yankul Goldwasser's film "
Laces" for which he won the Israeli Academy Award for best actor in a supporting role, and in Yonathan Indurski's and Ori Alon series "The Conductor" opposite Lior Ashkenazi. Since 2016, he had been starring in the theatrical political comedy "Angina Pectoris", written by Michal Aharoni, in the leading role. In 2018/2019 he played Etgar in Burkhard C. Kosminski's highly acclaimed production of "Vögel" by Wajdi Mouawad at Schauspielhaus Stuttgart. ==See also==