- Playing pretty much the same character in almost all his pictures, Fritz Feld, with his pencil-thin mustache, passed as barons, maitre d', hotel clerks and aristocrats. His famous trademark, usually when his character was incensed, was to "pop" his mouth by slapping it with the palm of his hand to indicate his "superior" annoyance. No one could ever determine his characters' nationality but he can be described as a mixture of "French and Belgianish" or from "somewhere in Europe.".
- With Joseph Schildkraut, co-founder of the Hollywood Playhouse theatre.
- Feld was married to character/supporting actress Virginia Christine, who was twenty years his junior, from 1940 until his death in 1993.
- He developed a characterization that came to define him. His trademark was to slap his mouth with the palm of his hand to create a "pop!" sound that indicated both his superiority and his annoyance. The first use of the "pop" sound was in Four Jacks and a Jill (1942).
- In one 1967 episode of The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1964), "The Napoleon's Tomb Affair", Feld played a banker, a beatnik, a diplomat, and a waiter.
- 1923 and 1925 passenger records to New York show him as single, but a 1926 passenger record and the 1930 census both list him as divorced.
- First toured the United States in 1923 with Max Reinhardt's production of 'The Miracle'.
- Appeared with the Marx Brothers in At the Circus (1939) in the small but memorable role of the French orchestra conductor Jardinet.
- Buried at Mount Sinai Memorial Park, Los Angeles, California - Moses Section 16, Lot 6520, Space 2
- Feld was a strong enough amateur chess player that 1948 U.S. champion Herman Steiner and international master George Koltanowski would come to his home some evenings in the 1940s, with the three of them playing chess until 6 o'clock the following morning, as mentioned in The Bobby Fischer I Knew and Other Stories (Denker & Parr, 1995).
- Feld filmed the sound sequences of the Cecil B. DeMille film The Godless Girl (1928), released by Pathé, without DeMille's supervision as DeMille had already broken his contract with Pathé, and signed with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
- In his later years, Feld appeared in several Walt Disney films and also played an uncharacteristically dramatic role in Barfly.
- In addition to films, he acted in numerous television series in guest roles, including the recurring role of "Zumdish", the manager of the intergalactic Celestial Department Store on Lost In Space.
- Younger brother of art director Rudi Feld.
- Appeared in the Harmonia Gardens musical scene in Hello, Dolly! (1969).
- He and his wife are interred at the Jewish Mount Sinai Memorial Park Cemetery in the Hollywood Hills section of Los Angeles.
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