Career
He was blacklisted under McCarthyism and committed suicide in response. Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Loeb first performed in a high school production of Lady Gregory"s The Workhouse Ward. He served in the Army, then worked as stage manager of The Green Goddess.
His stage career gained strength in the early 1920s when he became associated with the newly formed Theatre Guild in New York City.
He worked in a number of plays throughout the decade. His stage work lessened in the 1930s, while he worked with Actors" Equity Association.
(lieutenant is his work with Equity that is thought to have prompted the charges of Communist leanings)
In 1948, Loeb portrayed the role of Jake Goldberg on Broadway in Gertrude Berg"s play Maine and Molly which was based on Berg"s long-running radio show The Goldbergs. After the play, he reprised the role on the television adaptation of The Goldbergs on Columbia Broadcasting System. Loeb became a viewer favorite as the sometimes exasperated but always loving husband Jake to Berg"s sometimes meddlesome but always bighearted Molly Goldberg, and it looked as though he would become a television fixture.
In June 1950, Red Channels: The Report of Communist Influence in Radio and Television, named Loeb as a Communist.
Loeb denied being a Communist, but the sponsors of The Goldbergs, General Foods, insisted that he be dropped from the show"s cast due to his "controversiality". Berg (who had created the show and owned it on both radio and television) refused to fire Loeb, but Loeb soon resigned, accepting a settlement which was estimated at $40,000. Loeb"s last acting job was in the 1952 Broadway production of Time Out Foreign Ginger and its subsequent Chicago production in 1954.
In his memoirs, Inside Out, blacklisted screenwriter Walter Bernstein describes Loeb as being disconsolate and depressed as a result of the blacklisting.
Loeb was the sole support of a mentally disturbed son, and was burdened with money worries. The following year Loeb committed suicide by taking an overdose of sleeping pills in the Taft Hotel in midtown New York City on September 1, 1955.
Number note was foundation Loeb was buried in Mount Sinai Cemetery in his native Philadelphia.
The American Academy of Dramatic Arts—where Loeb was an instructor—awards an annual scholarship in his memory. Equity briefly issued the Philip Loeb Humanitarian Award.