With well over 100 credits to his name no one can say that Martin Landau didn't have a fine and enduring career. But for such a fantastic talent, perhaps he remained undersung. After a brief stint as a cartoonist, he found his calling with acting and nabbed his first TV guest spots in the mid '50s. By the end of the decade he appeared in his first classic (Alfred Hitchcock's North by Northwest) but it wouldn't be his last. For the remainder of his long long career he toggled between TV (most notably three seasons in the mix of Mission Impossible in the 60s and leading the cult favorite Space 1999 in the 70s) and intermittent movie success.
You can't call it his late 80s/early 90s success a comeback, given that he never quit working, but it was a revival and a rediscovery...
He chased two consecutive Oscar nods (Tucker: The Man and His Dream and Crimes and Misdemeanors) with a win just a few years later (as Bela Lugosi in Tim Burton's glorious peak Ed Wood); Oscar is so often about momentum even when the performance is unarguably deserving.
A hearty thank you to the great Martin Landau for Ed Wood especially but so much more. His talent was thankfully immortalized on celluloid. Yet another reason we worship the preservable beauty of movies.
Further Reading
TFE Oscar Horrors: Martin Landau in Ed Wood
The Telegraph - Landau on his coded gay villain for Hitchcock
Balder & Dash - Dan Callahan on Landau as an actor