Adir Miller turns a birthday spotlight on a career built on comedy, drama, and personal history
Adir Miller, one of Israel’s best-known entertainers for more than two decades, is being profiled on his birthday through 10 lesser-known facts about his life and career. The article says he was born in 1974 in Holon to Holocaust-survivor parents from Hungary and Czechoslovakia, grew up with three siblings, and later served in Unit 8200 of Military Intelligence, where he was a platoon commander.
Before his breakout in comedy, Miller worked as a flight attendant for El Al and also held a job at an insurance company while building his stand-up career. His major early exposure came in the late 1990s on the show “Domino,” alongside Asi Cohen, Guri Alfi and other comedians. From there, his career accelerated quickly.
Miller went on to create and write “Ramzor,” which became one of Israel’s most beloved comedies and also won the International Emmy, making it the first Israeli series to do so. Although most viewers know him for comedy, he also won the Ophir Prize for a dramatic role in Avi Nesher’s film “Paka Hayiti” (“Once I Was”). In “Tzomet Miller,” he played a comic version of himself, drawing heavily on his own life as a husband and father.
The article also notes that in 2005 he married family therapist and parenting instructor Shelly Caspi, and they have three children and live in Givatayim. During the Iron Swords War, Miller repeatedly visited hospitals and rehabilitation wards to meet wounded IDF soldiers and their families, trying to lift morale. His most personal project yet was his first feature film as a director, “HaTabaat” (“The Ring”), which combined fiction with elements of his family story, including the impact of the Holocaust on his relatives.