A Look at Mel Brooks’ Illustrious Life and Career in Photos As the Legendary Actor Turns 99 Years Old Today

Mel Brooks has been making audiences laugh for more than six decades!
The legendary actor, director, comedian and producer, who turns 99 on June 28, 2025, kicked off his career in comedy by helping fellow funnyman Sid Caesar with hisYour Show of Shows. And the rest, well, is history!
Look back at the EGOT winner’s life and career in photos, from his military service to his indelible mark on Hollywood’s humor scene.
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Mel Brooks’ Early Years
Born Melvin Kaminsky on June 28, 1926, Mel Brooks was the youngest of four boys born to Abraham and Kate Kaminsky. (He eventually adapted his mother’s maiden name, Brookman, into his stage name.)
Abraham died when Brooks was only 2, leaving his brothers to help raise Mel and make ends meet in the household. (He’s pictured here at age 8 with, from left, cousin Merril and brothers Lenny, Irving and Bernie.)
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Mel Brooks’ Time in the Army
Brooks had started to make a name for himself entertaining guests at hotels in the Catskills. He writes in his autobiography All About Me! that in his job as a “pool tummeler,” whose sole purpose it was to keep poolgoers amused, he would put on a derby hat, alpaca coat and carry two rock-filled suitcases, then fall into the pool for laughs.
But World War II put a pause on his burgeoning show business career, and he joined the Army Specialized Training Reserve program at the Virginia Military Institute before going to basic training at Fort Sill. He served overseas at the end of the war in various duties, but once again got a chance to work as a performer when he was asked to join a touring variety show to entertain the troops in the Army camps still stationed in Europe.
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Mel Brooks’ ‘The 2,000 Year Old Man’
He became a household name for being a popular talk show guest — so in demand, in fact, that he appeared on the first-ever episode of The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson (seen here cracking up the host on the debut show in 1961).
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Mel Brooks and Anne Bancroft’s Love Story
Also in 1961, Brooks met the love of his life, actress Anne Bancroft. After seeing her rehearsing for a Perry Como show, he recalls in his autobiography All About Me!, “When the song was over, I leapt to my feet, applauded madly, and shouted, ‘Anne Bancroft! I love you!’ ” They dated for three years, but Brooks hadn’t quite found his footing financially so he hesitated to propose.
When his first sitcom, Get Smart!, took off, he and Bancroft finally wed at City Hall, he wrote, using her hoop earring in the place of the ring he’d forgotten.
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Mel Brooks in ‘Blazing Saddles’
After his success on TV, Brooks began writing and then directing comedies, including Blazing Saddles (seen here with Cleavon Little and Harvey Korman), which was a massive success — and an enduring one. In 2006, it was deemed “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant” by the Library of Congress and added to the National Film Registry for preservation.
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Mel Brooks in ‘A History of the World, Part I’
He continued to write, direct, produce and star in comedies throughout the years, including 1981’s A History of the World, Part I. (Seen here with Mary Margaret Humes.)
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Mel Brooks with His Son and Grandson at the Walk of Fame
Brooks and Bancroft had one son together, Max, now a screenwriter himself. Max and his son Henry joined Brooks as he got his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2010.
Brooks also has three children from his first marriage to dancer Florence Baum: Stefanie, Nicky and Eddie, as well as a granddaughter, Samantha.
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Mel Brooks’ Broadway Career
After years of success in TV and film, Brooks decided to try his hand at writing a Broadway musical, adapting his film The Producers for the stage. It debuted on April 19, 2001, with Matthew Broderick and Nathan Lane as stars, and went on to run for more than 2,500 performances and earn a record-breaking 12 Tony Awards. (Brooks is seen here with chorus girls from the show’s London debut.) He followed it up with a musical version of his film Young Frankenstein.
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Mel Brooks Is an EGOT
Brooks is one of the few entertainers to earn an EGOT (an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony) — and in fact, he’s won multiple of each.
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Mel Brooks on Losing Anne Bancroft
Brooks has also been given some of the highest honors the United States can bestow on its artists, including a Kennedy Center honor in 2009 alongside Robert De Niro, Bruce Springsteen, Dave Brubeck and Grace Bumbry.
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Mel Brooks Wins the National Medal of Arts
In 2015, President Barack Obama awarded Brooks the National Medal of Arts, the highest honor given to artists by the U.S. government. Despite it being a major occasion. Brooks couldn’t resist making light of the moment.
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Mel Brooks’ Lasting Friendships
Brooks and Reiner remained best friends until Reiner’s death in 2020, getting together nightly to eat dinner on TV trays and watch a movie or Jeopardy!. (Jerry Seinfeld visited the two during an episode of Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee.)
“I met him in 1950 when he joined Sid Caesar on Your Show of Shows and we’ve been best friends ever since,” Brooks said at the time. “I loved him.”
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Mel Brooks’ ‘Third Act’
Brooks is not only serving as a producer on the upcoming Josh Gad-led sequel to his 1987 comedy Spaceballs, on June 12, it was shared that the legendary actor, who turns 99 on June 28, will be in the film as well — reprising his role as Yogurt.
“I told you we’d be back,” Brooks wrote in a post he shared on X alongside video announcing that the untitled movie will premiere in 2027.
“After 40 years, we asked, ‘What do the fans want?’ But instead, we’re making this movie,” he says at the end of the video. “May the Schwartz be with you.
Source: People
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