on the set of
Ben Casey As a young man, he lived in
Greenwich Village in the same apartment building as a young
John Huston. The two men became good friends and remained so for life. Jaffe was later to star in two of Huston's films:
The Asphalt Jungle and
The Barbarian and the Geisha. Jaffe's closest friends included
Zero Mostel,
Edward G. Robinson,
Ray Bradbury, and
Igor Stravinsky. In 1923 he appeared in the Broadway premiere of
God of Vengeance (Got fun Nekome) by
Sholem Asch, as Reb Ali. The production became notorious after the cast, producer, and theatre owner were indicted and found guilty on charges of indecency in May 1923. Jaffe began to work in film in
1934, rising to prominence with his first role as the mad
Tsar Peter III in
The Scarlet Empress. In 1938, Jaffe was forty-seven years old when he played the title role of
bhisti (waterbearer)
Gunga Din. Jaffe was
blacklisted by the
Hollywood movie studio bosses during the 1950s, supposedly for being a
communist sympathizer. Despite being blacklisted, he was hired first by
Robert Wise for
The Day the Earth Stood Still and then by director
William Wyler for his role in the
1959 Academy Award-winning version of
Ben-Hur. Jaffe co-starred in the
ABC television series,
Ben Casey, as Dr. David Zorba from 1961 to 1965, alongside
Vince Edwards. He also had many guest-starring roles on other series, including
Batman (as Mr. Zoltan Zorba) and in the western
Alias Smith and Jones. In 1975, he co-starred as a retired doctor who is murdered by
Janet Leigh in the
Columbo episode "Forgotten Lady". He also appeared with an all-star cast in the TV pilot film of
Rod Serling's
Night Gallery and as
Emperor Norton in one episode of
Bonanza. ==Personal life and death==