Some stars show no signs of slowing down as they approach their 100th birthdays.
Dick Van Dyke (born 1925)
The Emmy-winning star of the ’60s sitcom “The Dick Van Dyke Show” also broke out on the big screen in films like 1964’s “Mary Poppins” and 1968’s “Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.” But he’s had a resurgence in this century with roles in the “Night at the Museum” series, Showtime’s “Kidding” and 2018’s “Mary Poppins Returns.”
Mel Brooks (born 1926)
The EGOT winner and comedy legend has kept working into his 90s, with roles in films like 2018’s “Hotel Transylvania 3” and 2019’s “Toy Story 4.” He’s also been working on a stage musical adaptation of his 1974 comedy Western “Blazing Saddles.”
David Attenborough (born 1926)
The legendary British broadcaster, who first rose to prominence hosting the 1954 BBC series “Zoo Quest,” has continued his work producing and narrating nature documentaries like the series “Planet Earth” and “Frozen Planet” well into his 90s.
Estelle Parsons (born 1927)
Parsons won an Oscar for 1967’s “Bonnie and Clyde” and she’s kept working on both stage and screen well into her 90s, appearing in shows like “The Good Wife,” “Grace and Frankie” and “The Conners.”
Bob Newhart (born 1929)
The standup comic became a sitcom legend with three shows that bore his name. And he’s made appearances in shows like “The Big Bang Theory” (finally winning his first Emmy in 2013) as well as “The Librarians” and “Young Sheldon.”
Robert Wagner (born 1930)
The actor, who got his start in Hollywood in the 1950s in films like “The Halls of Montezuma.” But he found bigger fame on the small screen as a leading man in shows like “It Takes a Thief” (1968-70) and “Hart to Hart” (1979-84). He got a boost playing Dr. Evil’s henchman Number 2 in the “Austin Powers” films. In recent years, he’s appeared on “NCIS” and in the 2022 indie comedy “The Trouble With Billy.”
Joel Grey (born 1932)
The actor, who won both a Tony Award and an Oscar playing the emcee in the musical “Cabaret,” has kept working. He directed an acclaimed Off Broadway revival of “Fiddler on the Roof” (in Yiddish) in 2018-20, and had a cameo in Lin-Manuel Miranda’s 2021 film “Tick Tick…BOOM!”