Bio

The son of actress Viveca Lindfors and director Don Siegel, American actor Kristoffer Tabori worked professionally under the last name of his stepfather, writer George Tabori. At age 8, Kristoffer made his first film, the very obscure Weddings and Babies (1960) in the company of his mother. As a teenager on the brink of adulthood, Tabori was featured in such "sixties hip" films as John and Mary (1969). He attained star status in Making It (1971), a quirky but engaging coming-of-age film shot in Albuquerque. Kristofer Tabori was most familiar to TV viewers for his continuing roles as Al Blackman on NBC's Seventh Avenue (1977) and as Dr. Max Carson on the same network's Chicago Story (1982). Additionally, Tabori was starred in PBS American Short Story adaptation of Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Rappacini's Daughter," and played John Savage in the 1980 TV movie version of Aldous Huxley's Brave New World.
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Kristoffer Tabori
August 4, 1952 (age 72)
Malibu, California, USA

Bio

The son of actress Viveca Lindfors and director Don Siegel, American actor Kristoffer Tabori worked professionally under the last name of his stepfather, writer George Tabori. At age 8, Kristoffer made his first film, the very obscure Weddings and Babies (1960) in the company of his mother. As a teenager on the brink of adulthood, Tabori was featured in such "sixties hip" films as John and Mary (1969). He attained star status in Making It (1971), a quirky but engaging coming-of-age film shot in Albuquerque. Kristofer Tabori was most familiar to TV viewers for his continuing roles as Al Blackman on NBC's Seventh Avenue (1977) and as Dr. Max Carson on the same network's Chicago Story (1982). Additionally, Tabori was starred in PBS American Short Story adaptation of Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Rappacini's Daughter," and played John Savage in the 1980 TV movie version of Aldous Huxley's Brave New World.
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