Bernie Kopell

Bernie Kopell

ActorWriterSoundtrack
Born
June 21, 1933

Genial character comedian Bernie Kopell is undoubtedly best known as Dr. Adam Bricker, doling out sage advice on TV's The Love Boat (1977) for its entire run of ten seasons and 250 episodes. He once described the experience as "a paid vacation. We got to be in 98 countries". While this may have been…

Biography

Genial character comedian Bernie Kopell is undoubtedly best known as Dr. Adam Bricker, doling out sage advice on TV's The Love Boat (1977) for its entire run of ten seasons and 250 episodes. He once described the experience as "a paid vacation. We got to be in 98 countries". While this may have been his longest engagement on a series, his most memorable comic creation remains the iconic Siegfried in Get Smart (1965).

Bernie was born in Brooklyn, of Ukrainian and Jewish ancestry, as Bernard Morton Kopell to Abraham Bernard Kopell (1905-1965) and his wife Pauline (née Taran, 1911-2011). After finishing high school, he studied at New York University, graduating in 1955 with a bachelor of fine arts.

A year later, Bernie was drafted into the U.S. Navy, happily accepting the opportunity to serve as librarian at the Naval Operations Base, the Naval Air Station at Norfolk, Virginia, and (between 1956-57), aboard the World War II battleship U.S.S. Iowa. He later quipped "I got to read more books than I'd gotten to read at NYU, so it was just a glorious thing for me."

Back in New York after demobilization, Bernie was invited to Los Angeles by fellow NYU alumnus James Drury (of The Virginian (1962) fame). His first agent turned him down for being 'not handsome enough to be a leading man, not ugly enough to be a heavy.' For a while, he earned a crust as a taxi driver and vacuum cleaner salesman. A chance audition for casting director Marilyn Howard (then Marilyn Bodgen) then led to a small part in an early CBS daytime soap, The Brighter Day (1954), as a Cuban bad guy named Pablo. Bernie's aptitude for dialects impressed TV execs to the extent that he found himself typecast as Mexicans or Puerto Ricans in episodes of The Danny Thomas Show (1953), The Jack Benny Program (1950), My Favorite Martian (1963) and The Flying Nun (1967). Ultimately, his innate ability to bring levity to any scene earned him numerous guest starring turns on sitcoms like McHale's Navy (1962), The Lucy Show (1962), Petticoat Junction (1963), The Beverly Hillbillies (1962), Run Buddy Run (1966) and Green Acres (1965).

At the age of 33, Bernie got his first big break, cast as KAOS chief Siegfried in Get Smart by executive producer Leonard Stern. This character, replete with leather jacket, neat moustache and Heidelberg duelling scar, was essentially the primary nemesis of Control agents 86 and 99. Bernie, by his own admission, adopted Siegfried's German accent from an Austrian psychiatrist he was visiting at the time. The character became so popular with fans that the actor would often be asked to sign autographs with the catchphrase "we don't shush at KAOS, Shtarker". A classic line from the episode 'Rub-a-Dub-Dub... Three Spies in a Sub' has Siegfried explaining to Don Adams "As you go through the world of espionage Shmart, you will find that there are the good guys and the bad guys. I happen to be one of the bad guys."

In between Get Smart and Love Boat, Bernie alternated dramatic roles with comic ones, appearing in a wide variety of shows, ranging from Night Gallery (1969) (as a TV executive), Kolchak: The Night Stalker (1974) (Dr. Gravanites) and the live-action CBS children's sitcom The Ghost Busters (1975) (as Dr. Frankenstein) to the Mel Brooks spoof of Robin Hood, When Things Were Rotten (1975) (a recurring role as Alan-a-Dale). He appeared in nine episodes of Bewitched (1964), variously as the ancient Postlethwaite, aka Mr. Apothecary, the hippie warlock Alonzo, psychiatrists Chomsky and Rhinehouse and the Siegfried clone Baron von Fuchs). Bernie also had a co-starring role in a short-lived 1973 sitcom, Needles and Pins (1973), as a salesman for a ladies' clothing manufacturer in New York. His more recent appearances have included an ill-fated men's room attendant in Monk (2002), a coroner in Charmed (1998), a hayseed in My Name Is Earl (2005), a Holocaust survivor in Hawaii Five-0 (2010) and a senior citizen in the medical sitcom B Positive (2020).

For the stage, Bernie has appeared in Los Angeles productions of Death of a Salesman, and, as a Russian peddler, in The 49th Cousin. He had a leading role as Lenny Ganz in the Neil Simon farce Rumors at the Whitefire Theatre, Sherman Oaks (1996-97). As late as 2022, he headlined off-Broadway, alongside Hal Linden, as biblical characters Lou and Bud in Ed. Weinberger's comedy play, Two Jews Talking. Seemingly impervious to age, Bernie continues make regular appearances in films and on TV, albeit in smaller supporting roles. He is an avid tennis player and has hosted pro-celebrity tennis and golf tournaments with proceeds benefiting the Alzheimer's Association.

Writer

The Love BoatThe Love Boat(1977)

Actor

The Lincoln LawyerThe Lincoln Lawyer(2022)as Marvin Beedleman
Grey's AnatomyGrey's Anatomy(2005)as Father Christopher
B PositiveB Positive(2020)as Mr. Knudsen
Our Almost Completely True StoryOur Almost Completely True Story(2021)as Bernie
StumptownStumptown(2019)as Mr. Schumaker

Archive Footage

DevoDevo(2024)as Self
A Disturbance in the ForceA Disturbance in the Force(2023)as Self
History of the SitcomHistory of the Sitcom(2021)as Dr. Adam Bricker
Sidewalks EntertainmentSidewalks Entertainment(1994)as Self - Guest
Les enfants de la téléLes enfants de la télé(1994)as Doctor Adam Bricker

Known for

Contribute to this page · Edit page

Photos 48

Richard Dimitri, Dick Gautier, Bernie Kopell, Misty Rowe, David Sabin, and Dick Van Patten in When Things Were Rotten (1975)Richard Dimitri, Bernie Kopell, David Sabin, and Dick Van Patten in When Things Were Rotten (1975)Bernie Kopell and Dick Van Patten in When Things Were Rotten (1975)Bernie Kopell and Misty Rowe in When Things Were Rotten (1975)Richard Dimitri and Bernie Kopell in When Things Were Rotten (1975)Bernie Kopell, David Sabin, and Dick Van Patten in When Things Were Rotten (1975)

Credit Score: Bernie Kopell

98765
196219631964196519661967196819691970197119721973197419751976197719781979198019811982198319841985198619871988198919901991199219931994199519961997199819992000200120022003200420052006200720082009
Siegfried
Sun Sep 18 1966 – Fri May 15 1970
#NameScoreYearWinNomKnownWinsNomsVotes
1Get Smart60.0019658.271415179
2Kojak15.0019737.121510046
3That Girl7.3119657.3073729
4The Love Boat3.2519776.30515449
5Get Smart2.5020086.500237674
6Get Smart2.5019956.6001222
7Charlie's Angels2.5019766.60416016
8The Loved One2.5019656.9004246
9Follow Your Heart2.3819995.800195
10The Thrill of It All1.0019636.9006425