- Was blacklisted during the 1950s when he was exposed as a Communist Party member during the House Un-American Activities Committee hearings. Marc Lawrence had testified that Stander told him that joining the Party would make him more attractive to women. In his own HUAC testimony, Stander denounced Lawrence as a psychopath and presented a letter that gave Lawrence's mental history and revealed that he had been hospitalized after a mental breakdown just prior to his HUAC testimony.
- Stander's name is mentioned along with Sterling Hayden's in the movie Guilty by Suspicion (1991), from a script by the blacklisted Communist Abraham Polonsky, when the protagonist is grilled by an inquisitorial committee bearing a resemblance to HUAC.
- Tried to recruit Melvyn Douglas, a prominent liberal, to the Communist Party.
- Played "Spider" in both "The Milky Way" (1936) and its remake, "The Kid From Brooklyn" (1946).
- Became a member of the Screen Actors Guild in late 1935.
- His character of the train conductor in The Cassandra Crossing (1973) and the Hart's trusted assistant in Hart To Hart (TV Series, 1979-1984) were both named Max.
- Was originally cast as the henchman Reece in Silver Streak. However he was replaced by towering actor Richard Kiel who was most known as the menacing villain Jaws in the two James Bond movies The Spy Who Loved Me and Moonraker.
- Crepa padrone, crepa tranquillo aka Die Boss Die (1970) with James Mason, Alain Delon, and Lionel Stander was abandoned in mid production.
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