Simcha Barbiro

Simcha Barbiro (Hebrew: שמחה ברבירו; born April 27, 1967) is an Israeli actor and voice actor.[1]

Simcha Barbiro
Born (1967-04-27) April 27, 1967
Israel
OccupationActor, voice actor
Years active1980–present

Biography

Barbiro graduated from Beit Zvi Actors School of Performing Arts in 1991.[2]

He is known for his voice-over work in animated TV shows and feature films. Some of his prominent work includes the Hebrew dubs for Stitch and Dr. Hamsterviel in Lilo & Stitch: The Series and its anime television adaptation, Mort from the Madagascar series, Harvey Bullock from Batman: The Animated Series, Krillin and Frieza from Dragon Ball ("Z" and "GT").

Following the death of Yoni Chen in 1995, Barbiro replaced him in Looney Tunes feature film, Bugs Bunny's 3rd Movie: 1001 Rabbit Tales as Elmer Fudd (until the first DVD edition dub) and Sylvester (until The Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries). Both roles were passed on to Ami Mandelman.

Following Giora Kenneth's retirement from voice work in 2007, due to health problems in his throat, Barbiro replaced him as Mr. Herriman in Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends and Minimus P.U. in Atomic Betty.

He is a close friend of Yoram Yosefsberg who co-played Allot in dubbing works.

As an actor, Barbiro has participated in TV shows, radio commercials and plays.

Filmography

Dubbing

Animation and live action TV

Animated and live action films/direct-to-video films

Games

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Acting

Stage productions

TV shows

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gollark: But how?
gollark: Someone find a U+180E.
gollark: ~~**-**~~
gollark: * *

References

  1. Simcha Barbiro’s filmography (in Hebrew)
  2. "Profile of Simacha Barbiro at Beit-Zvi" (Hebrew)
  3. Lev-Ari, Shimon (June 2014), "צייזלר בת-שבע", מדריך 100 שנה לתאטרון העברי 1889-1989, Tel Aviv University, retrieved 29 March 2015, שיחקה בהצגות: את ואני והמלחמה הבאה, כל מה שרצית לדעת על אופן ולא העזת לשאול את באך, אופרת הקבצנים, אנדרטה הפוכה, אינטימיות, גבירתי הנאוה, החולה המדומה, כוכב הבכי, בת שבע ושמחה הולכים לברודווי, כוכב הבכי ועוד.
  4. Kaye, Helen (11 January 2015). "Theater Review: Ivanov". The Jerusalem Post. p. 24. Retrieved 29 March 2015. The two harpies, Kaplan’s Zuzushka and Ben-Yehuda’s Marfusha gloriously provide more comic relief, as does Simcha Barbiro as petty-thief and sponger Kossich. [sic: Kosykh]

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