Richard Belzer, Detective Munch on ‘Law & Order: S.V.U.,’ Dies at 78
A stand-up comic, he called his hard-boiled character on the long-running TV drama “Lenny Bruce with a badge.”
Richard
Belzer with Mariska Hargitay in “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit”
in 2003. His character, Detective John Munch, appeared on 10 different
TV shows.Credit...Will Hart/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal, via Getty Images
Richard
Belzer, who became one of American television’s most enduring police
detectives as John Munch on “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” and
several other shows, died on Sunday at his home in Beaulieu-sur-Mer,
France. He was 78.
The death was
confirmed by Bill Scheft, a friend of Mr. Belzer. Mr. Scheft, who has
been working on a documentary about Mr. Belzer’s life and career, said
that the actor had suffered from circulatory and respiratory issues for
years.
As Detective Munch, Mr. Belzer
was brainy but hard-boiled, cynical but sensitive. He wore sunglasses at
night and listened to the horror stories of rape victims in stony
silence. He was the kind of cop who made casual references to Friedrich
Nietzsche and the novelist Elmore Leonard. He spoke in quips; when
accused of being a dirty old man, he responded: “Who are you calling
old?”
In a 2010 interview with AARP The Magazine, Mr. Belzer — who was a stand-up comic when he was not playing Munch — described his television alter ego as “Lenny Bruce with a badge.”
With
Munch, Mr. Belzer found phenomenal success. In 2013, when the character
was written out of “SVU” — as the “Law & Order” spinoff is often
called — Mr. Belzer wrote in The Huffington Post that he had appeared as Munch in more than 500 hours of programming on 10 different shows.
The
character’s run began in 1993, on “Homicide: Life on the Street,” and
included guest appearances on “Sesame Street” and “30 Rock.”
At
his retirement, Mr. Belzer was often described as the actor with the
longest run playing the same character on television, as well as the
actor who had played the same character on the largest number of
different shows.
A life of mistreatment, misbehavior and missed opportunities prepared Mr. Belzer for his star turn as a streetwise detective.
Richard
Jay Belzer was born on Aug. 4, 1944, in Bridgeport, Conn. He grew up in
a housing project in the city. His father, Charles, co-owned a
wholesale tobacco and candy distributor, and his mother, Frances
(Gurfein) Belzer, was a homemaker.
“Our mother didn’t know how to love her sons appropriately,” Leonard, Mr. Belzer’s brother and a fellow comedian, told People magazine in 1993. “She always had some rationale for hitting us.”
Richard added, “My kitchen was the toughest room I ever worked. I had to make my mom laugh or I’d get my ass kicked.”
She
died of cancer, and Charles died by suicide before Mr. Belzer turned
25. Leonard jumped from the roof of his Upper West Side apartment
building and died in 2014.
Mr.
Belzer routinely fought authority. “I was thrown out of every school I
ever went to,” he told AARP. He served in the army for a little under a
year, then received a discharge on psychiatric grounds after repeatedly
injuring himself.
He went on to work
as a truck driver, jewelry salesman, dress salesman, dock worker, census
taker and reporter for The Bridgeport Post. In that job, he dreamed of
becoming a serious writer — but instead spent his free time dealing
drugs.
In
1971, Mr. Belzer answered an ad in The Village Voice for auditions for a
sketch show, and soon enough he found himself performing stand-up. In
1975, he began working as a warm-up comic for the “Saturday Night Live”
audience, but his friend Lorne Michaels did not invite him to join the
cast. Mr. Belzer accused Mr. Michaels of breaking a promise to him — a
charge Mr. Michaels did not comment on to People.
Absent
fame or fortune, Mr. Belzer became the bohemian prince of New York City
comedy. His fans included Robert De Niro, John Belushi and Richard
Pryor. Mr. Belzer gained renown for working the crowd, which often meant
insults — labeling, for instance, the bejeweled get-up of a drunk
audience member as “Aztec pimp” — but could also include his attempting
to start a brawl.
He held court at an
Upper East Side club called Catch a Rising Star, where he was given an
hourlong slot on a nightly basis. In 1981, a Rolling Stone profile
described him as spending his final three dollars on a taxi to his set,
performing while on quaaludes and mocking a famous talent manager in the
audience.
“On the outside, he was
still ‘The Belz,’ in shades and black leather punk jacket, coke-dealer
thin, lupine, always cool and relentlessly self-assured,” David Hirshey
and Jay Lovinger wrote. But on the inside, he was “scared” — 37 years
old and still struggling to afford meals.
His
life began turning around in the mid-1980s, when Mr. Belzer survived
testicular cancer, quit drugs and married Harlee McBride, a former
Playboy model and actress.
In 1990, he found financial stability in a characteristically absurd and brutal fashion. Five years earlier, Hulk Hogan, demonstrating
a wrestling move on Mr. Belzer on TV, knocked out the comic and dropped
him headfirst to the ground. An out-of-court settlement enabled Mr.
Belzer and Ms. McBride to buy a home in France, which they called
variously the Hulk Hogan Estate and Chez Hogan.
His career took off after he began appearing as Detective Munch on “Homicide,” when he was nearly 50 years old.
Mr.
Belzer’s first two marriages — to Gail Susan Ross and Dalia Danoch —
ended in divorce. He is survived by Ms. McBride; two stepdaughters, Bree
and Jessica Benton; and six step-grandchildren.
Mr.
Belzer came to own two homes in the south of France, and he built a
basketball court at one of them. He enjoyed shooting baskets and waiting
for one of his dogs to collect the rebounds. He read up on Roman
history and visited ancient ruins.
At
the start of his career in television, he spoke happily about leaving
behind his romantic, rough-and-tumble years in stand-up comedy.
“I tell you,” he said to People, “I won’t miss making drunks laugh at 2 in the morning.”
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