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Los Angeles – Roy Gerber, a longtime talent manager who was the inspiration for the character of Oscar Madison in Neil Simon’s comedy “The Odd Couple,” has died. He was 82.

Gerber died Aug. 21 of complications of a brain tumor at his home in Beverly Hills, said his son, Bill Gerber.

As head of Roy Gerber and Associates from 1978 to 2002, Gerber managed entertainers such as Diahann Carroll, Vic Damone, George Gobel, Shirley Jones, Jack Jones, Sid Caesar and Arsenio Hall, among others.

Gerber was newly separated from his first wife in the early 1960s when Simon’s brother, comedy writer Danny Simon, also newly separated, moved into his West Hollywood home. Bill Gerber said his father was just like Oscar in “The Odd Couple.” “He was sloppy, he was a womanizer, he was the life of the party,” he said. And like the character Felix Ungar, he said, “Danny was literally anal-retentive; he did the cooking, the cleaning.”

One night the two men invited friends over for dinner, an occasion for which Simon cooked a pot roast. “My dad was late, and it got dry, and Danny never forgave him,” Bill Gerber said.

The next day, as the story goes, Gerber told Simon: “Sweetheart, that was a lovely dinner last night. What are we going to have tonight?” To which Simon replied: “What do you mean, cook you dinner? You never take me out to dinner. You never bring me flowers.”

Bill Gerber said Walter Matthau, who played Oscar on Broadway and in the 1968 movie of “The Odd Couple,” later told him that in playing the role, “I just did Roy, and it worked out great.”

Although Danny Simon originally planned to write a stage comedy about two divorced men who move in together, he stalled after 14 pages. He passed the idea to brother Neil, who thought it was a great idea for a play. “The Odd Couple,” which opened on Broadway in 1965, won four Tony Awards, including one for Neil Simon as best author.

In addition to his son Bill, Gerber is survived by his wife of 27 years, Terrie; children Bobby, Pam and Missy; his brother, Jay; and eight grandchildren.

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