Background
Smith was born Paul Lawrence Smith in Everett, Massachusetts on June 24, 1936.
Smith was born Paul Lawrence Smith in Everett, Massachusetts on June 24, 1936.
He attended Miami Senior High School in Miami, Florida and graduated in 1954. Afterwards, Smith attended Brandeis University for a short time and transferred to Florida State University on a football scholarship graduating in 1959 with a Bachelor of Surgery degree in Philosophy.
His most notable roles include Hamidou, the vicious prison warden in Midnight Express (1978), Bluto in Popeye (1980), Gideon in Masada (1981), and Glossu Rabban in Dune (1984). Smith was sometimes credited as Paul Smith. On April 25, 2012, Smith died in Ra"anana, Israel.
Currently, his cause of death is unconfirmed.
At age 12, Smith weighed 200 pounds and was 6 foot tall. Smith"s first acting role was in Exodus, which was filmed in Israel.
This was his first visit to the country. In 1967, Smith returned to Israel as a Mahal volunteer in the Six-Day War and stayed there until 1973.
In that time, he participated in 5 productions filmed in Israel.
Afterwards, he moved to Italy where, due to his resemblance to Bud Spencer, he made a series of films with Michael Coby (pseudonym of Antonio Cantafora), Terence Hill lookalike. One of these films Convoy Buddies was picked up for American release by Film Ventures International where producer by Edward L. Montoro changed Smith"s name to Bob Spencer and Cantafora"s name to Terrance Hall. Smith sued successfully arguing that the only thing an actor has is his name and if that"s taken away, he has nothing.
The judicial system agreed with him and ruled against FVI who paid Smith damages and court costs.
In 1977, Smith moved to Hollywood, making appearances in such films as 21 Hours at Munich (1976), Midnight Express (1978), as Bluto in Popeye (1980), and as Glossu Rabban in Dune (1984). On April 25, 2012, Smith died in Ra"anana, Israel.
The cause of death is unconfirmed.