Jack Albertson (born June 16, 1907, Malden, Massachusetts, U.S.—died November 25, 1981, Hollywood Hills, California) was an American stage, television, and movie actor who was noted for his work in the Broadway plays The Subject Was Roses (1964–66) and The Sunshine Boys (1972–74) and the television series Chico and the Man (1974–78).
Born into poverty, Albertson earned a living as a pool hustler and working on a freighter. He moved to New York City to find work as a dancer and launched a career in vaudeville and burlesque, first as a dancer and then as a straight man. He later formed a partnership with comedian Phil Silvers. Albertson made his Broadway debut in the revue Meet the People in 1940 and went on to perform in Broadway comedies and musicals for the next decade, including A Lady Says Yes (1945), The Cradle Will Rock (1947), Tickets, Please! (1945), and Top Banana (1951), which starred Silvers.
Albertson appeared in a string of motion pictures, notably the movie version of Top Banana (1954), and he also began acting on television, including on The Phil Silvers Show (1956–57). His other movies included Man of a Thousand Faces (1957), Days of Wine and Roses (1962), How to Murder Your Wife (1965), and The Flim-Flam Man (1967). Albertson played Grandpa Joe in Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971) and Manny Rosen in the popular disaster movie The Poseidon Adventure (1972). He also had guest roles in dozens of TV series and variety shows as well as several made-for-television movies. He showed his versatility as an actor by garnering awards in three media; he won a Tony Award in 1965 for his Broadway performance as the surly Irish father in The Subject Was Roses, an Academy Award in 1969 for best supporting actor in the 1968 motion-picture version of that play, two Emmy Awards (1975 and 1976) for his portrayal of the cranky gas station–garage owner in the television series Chico and the Man, and another Emmy for a guest appearance on the Cher show in 1975. His last theatrical motion picture, Dead & Buried, was released in 1981, and his last two TV movies, My Body, My Child and Terror at Alcatraz, aired posthumously in 1982.