His first film with Mr. Allen was the comedy “Play It Once more, Sam” (1972), written by Mr. Allen however directed by Herbert Ross. Mr. Roberts performed a businessman who had had “the foresight to purchase Polaroid at 8 1/2” however is simply too busy to note that his spouse (Diane Keaton) is ravenous for consideration.
“Play It Once more, Sam” started on the Broadway stage in 1969, with Mr. Roberts, Mr. Allen and Ms. Keaton (and Jerry Lacy because the spirit of Humphrey Bogart) all taking part in the roles they’d play on movie. Regardless of faint-praise evaluations, the present ran for greater than a 12 months, and Mr. Roberts obtained a Tony Award nomination for greatest featured actor in a play.
He had already been nominated for a Tony the 12 months earlier than, for greatest actor in a musical, for his efficiency in “How Now, Dow Jones.” Mr. Barnes of The Occasions hated the present, a musical comedy a few Wall Avenue romance, however cherished Mr. Roberts, whom he described as a “bundle of expertise” with “an aggressively untamed terrier face and eyebrows with impartial suspension.” (It was Mr. Barnes who had famous Mr. Roberts’s “cautious nonchalance” in his appearing.)
That was an enchancment over what one other Occasions critic, Walter Kerr, had mentioned of an earlier Roberts efficiency in “Don’t Drink the Water” (1966), a comedy about an envoy’s son with severe conduct issues. It was Mr. Roberts’s first collaboration with Mr. Allen, who wrote it. “Mildly partaking,” Mr. Kerr shrugged.
The stage was a welcoming dwelling for Mr. Roberts, decade after decade. There was London, the place he starred with Betty Buckley within the musical “Guarantees, Guarantees” (1969). There was regional theater, the place he appeared in “Follies” (1998) on the Paper Mill Playhouse in New Jersey. And there was Broadway, the place he took on some two dozen roles, largely comedian and musical.
He was praised as “urbanely silly” by Mr. Barnes when he performed a downwardly cellular architect in Alan Ayckbourn’s comedy “Absurd Particular person Singular” (1974). He was a theater critic in a 1986 revival of “Arsenic and Previous Lace” and a retired Higher West Facet physician and annoyingly noble husband in Charles Busch’s “The Story of the Allergist’s Spouse” (2000). Ben Brantley of The Occasions, reviewing that play, known as Mr. Roberts “an skilled in resonant underplaying.”