Hollywood Actors

Collection of Classic Hollywood Actors

Tommy Tune
Tommy Tune

Tommy Tune

Tommy Tune was born in 1939 in Texas. In 1965 he made his debut on Broadway in the musical “Baker Street”. He sonn became a noted Broadway performer and director and has won nine Tony Awards. His few films include “Hello Dolly” in 1969 and “The Boyfriend” which was made in England in 1971 co-starring with Twiggy. He and Twiggy went on to have huge success on Broaday in the musical “My One and Only” in 1983.

TCM Overview:

An amiable, lanky 6′ 7″ former chorus dancer, Tommy Tune has inherited the mantle of his mentor, the late Michael Bennett, as one of the few director-choreographers working in contemporary American theater. He is unique, however, in that he is also a musical theater star. In fact, Tune, who has won nine Tony Awards, is the only individual to have won the medallion in four different categories.

Born and raised in Texas, Tune headed to NYC in the early 1960s and on his first day in Manhattan landed his first job in the chorus of a touring company of “Irma La Douce”. He first worked with Michael Bennett as a chorus dancer in the Broadway show “A Joyful Noise” (1966) and had his breakthrough under Bennett’s guidance, playing the first openly gay character in a musical, the choreographer David in “Seesaw” (1973-74). Tune won his first Tony as Featured Actor in a Musical for the role, which had him tap dancing to a New York State statute (“Chapter 54, Number 1909”) and provided him with the showstopping, balloon-filled eleven-o’clock number “It’s Not Where You Start”.

Tommy Tune
Tommy Tune

Despite this acclaim, Tune was not able to find a suitable follow-up role, Instead, he turned to directing with the gender-bending Off-Broadway “The Club” (1976), which featured an all-female cast in male drag. He handled similar terrain with Caryl Churchill’s “Cloud 9” (1981), which had its cast playing characters of both genders. Tune segued to choreographing and staging musicals in tandem with Thommie Walsh and Peter Masterson respectively with “The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas” (1978). He has gone on to earn numerous accolades and awards for his polished, stylish musical stagings of such Broadway musicals as “”A Day in Hollywood/A Night in the Ukraine” (1980); “Nine” (1982), the highly-stylized musical version of Fellini’s “8 1/2”; “My One and Only” (1983); the Broadway version of the film classic “Grand Hotel” (1990); and “The Will Rogers Follies” (1991).

In 1983, Tune scored a personal triumph as star, director and co-choreographer of “My One and Only”, a reworking of the Gershwin musical “Funny Face”. Re-teaming with British model-turned-actress Twiggy (with whom he had co-starred in Ken Russell’s “The Boy Friend” in 1971). he proved a delight, invoking the ghost of Fred Astaire who had originated the role. After a long hiatus. Tune resumed performing opposite Ann Reinking in a touring company of “Bye Bye Birdie” in 1991. He has continued to perform his nightclub act “Tommy Tune Tonight!” (backed by the Manhattan Rhythm Kings) around the USA. His anticipated return to Broadway in 1995’s “Busker Alley”, a musicalization of the 1938 Charles Laughton starrer “St Martin’s Lane”, was curtailed when he broke his foot while performing in Tampa, FL. During his recovery from his injury, Tune recorded his first solo album, “Slow Dancing”, and penned his memoirs. “Footnotes” (both 1997). In 1998, it was announced that he was working on a musical stage adaptation of the Irving Berlin movie musical “Easter Parade” which would team him with Sandy Duncan. A 1999 Broadway opening was anticipated.

The above TCM overview can also be accessed online here.

Pamela Franklin
Pamela Franklin
Pamela Franklin
Pamela Franklin

Pamela Franklin. IMDB.

Pamela Franklin was a very talented child actress who had a very successful transition to adult roles before retiring from the screen to raise her family. She was born to a British family in Japan in 1950.

iMDB entry:

She made her film debut in England in 1961 in Jack Clayton’s masterful “The Innocents” with Deborah Kerr. The following year she played the daughter of William Holden and Capucine in “The Lion”. In 1964 she went to Hollywood to make “A Tiger Walks” with Sabu for Walt Disney. She gave an insightful performance as Sandy in “The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie” where she held her own acting opposite Maggie Smith at her best. In the early 1970’s she concentrated her career in Hollywood films and made her last (to date) television appearance in the series “Vegas” in 1981.

Lovely, petite, and beguiling brunette British actress Pamela Franklin was born in Yokohama, Japan. Because her father was an importer/exporter, Pamela grew up all over the world in such places as Hong Kong and Australia. Franklin studied dance at the Elmhurst School of Ballet in England and originally planned on becoming a dancer.

Franklin made her film debut at age 11 as “Flora” in the marvelously eerie The Innocents(1961). Pamela was quite appealing as “Tina” in The Lion (1962) and held her own alongside Bette Davis in the fine Hammer chiller The Nanny (1965). An adorable child, Pamela grew up to become a strikingly sensual and beautiful woman who was cast in more bold adult parts as she got older.

Pamela gave a terrific performance as the rebellious “Sandy” in the outstanding drama The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1969) and was memorable as a hapless kidnap victim in The Night of the Following Day (1968). Franklin carved out a nice little niche as a personable and captivating scream queen in a handful of hugely enjoyable 70s horror features: the imperiled “Jane” in the harrowingAnd Soon the Darkness (1970), the equally endangered “Lori Brandon” in Necromancy(1972);

at her best as vulnerable psychic medium “Florence Tanner” in the superior haunted house winner The Legend of Hell House (1973), the plucky “Elizabeth Sayers” in the fun made-for-TV movie Satan’s School for Girls (1973), and feisty scientist “Lorna Scott” in the outrageously tacky The Food of the Gods (1976). Among the many TV shows Pamela did guest spots on are Fantasy Island (1977), Vega$ (1978), Trapper John, M.D.(1979), Barnaby Jones (1973), Police Woman (1974), Hawaii Five-O (1968), Thriller(1973), Medical Center (1969), Mannix (1967), Cannon (1971), The Six Million Dollar Man(1974), The Streets of San Francisco (1972), Bonanza (1959), Green Acres (1965) andWalt Disney’s Wonderful World of Color (1954). Franklin voluntarily quit acting in the early 80s. She married actor Harvey Jason in 1970-they met on the set of Necromancy(1972)-and has two children. Pamela Franklin still lives in Hollywood, California.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: woodyanders

The above IMDB entry can also be accessed online here.

Michael Douglas

Michael Douglas is the son of actors Diana Douglas and Kirk Douglas. He was born in New Jersey in 1944. He has starred in some of the most popular films of the past thirty five  years including “The China Syndrome” in 1979 with Jane Fonda. “Romancing the Stone” with Kathleen Turner in 1984, “Fatal Attraction” with Glenn Close” in 1987 and “Basic Instinct” in 1992.

TCM Overview:

Actor and producer Michael Douglas enjoyed great success by avoiding the heroic leading-man archetype by creating smart, flawed, sympathetically human characters. His popularity grew through several star-making hits, including “Romancing the Stone” (1984), “Fatal Attraction” (1987) and “Basic Instinct” (1992) and held strong as he portrayed midlife professionals at a crossroads in “Wall Street” (1987) and “Wonder Boys” (2000). Douglas rarely dominated a movie like his famous father Kirk Douglas had during his 1950s heyday, and, though his $20-million price tag might have suggested otherwise, the younger Douglas remained more of a complementary player who allowed a collection of strong actors to drive a film. In addition to his movie-star status, Douglas was well known as a film producer, garnering a Best Picture Oscar for his first outing, “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” (1975), and maintaining his reputation with films including “The China Syndrome” (1979) and “The Rainmaker” (1997). The respected and well-liked actor raised eyebrows, however, when he married the much-younger screen beauty Catherine Zeta-Jones, with whom he later co-starred in the drug war drama “Traffic” (2000). Douglas’ professional output decreased at the start of the new millennium, marked by lesser efforts such as the remake of “The In-Laws” (2003), but it was a succession of tragic events – the fatal overdose of half-brother Eric; the conviction of son Cameron for drug dealing; and Douglas himself being diagnosed with throat cancer – that cast a pall on the venerable star’s personal life. Exhibiting the strength of character he had become known for, Douglas resurrected his most famous character, Gordon Gekko, in “Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps” (2010), garnering critical praise and reminding the world that Douglas was still a force to be reckoned with.

Michael Douglas was born on Sept. 25, 1944, to budding actors Kirk Douglas and Diana Dill. The couple was divorced when Douglas was five years old and he was raised by his mother and stepfather, William Darrid, in New York and his mother’s homeland of Bermuda. Douglas and his father had a tumultuous relationship and saw little of each other while the son and his brothers were growing up. After graduating from the tony private school, Choate, in Connecticut, Douglas went on to the University of California in Santa Barbara, where the beach environment and political stirrings transformed the “uptight” teen into a self-proclaimed “hippie.” On the brink of flunking out, Douglas was forced to declare a major and reluctantly chose theater. Anticipating that stage fright might hinder his career, Douglas reconnected with his father and learned some behind-the-scenes skills as an assistant director on Kirk’s “The Heroes of Telmark” (1965) and “Cast a Giant Shadow” (1966). Reportedly, the elder Douglas was not encouraged by his offspring’s acting potential after seeing him in a college production of “As You Like It,” however Douglas did get his theater degree in 1968 and moved to New York where he continued training at the Neighborhood Playhouse with Sanford Meisner.

After getting his feet wet in off-Broadway and regional theater productions, a deal to appear in “CBS Playhouse” (CBS, 1967-1970) brought Douglas to Los Angeles. In early TV roles, he often portrayed idealistic youths confronting the issues of the day in offerings like “Hail, Hero” (1969), “Adam at 6 A.M.” (1970) and “Summertree” (1971). He significantly upped his profile as the college-educated, idealistic partner of veteran detective (Karl Malden) on the TV cop drama “The Streets of San Francisco” (ABC, 1972-1980). The show not only polished Douglas’ acting chops enough to earn him three consecutive Emmys, it exposed him to every aspect of production. Douglas fell in love with the process and eventually began to direct episodes starring his idol, Malden. Douglas left the show in 1976 to pursue the opportunity to produce his first feature, Milos Forman’s “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” (1975), adapted from the novel by Ken Kesey. His father, who had played the lead role of Randel McMurphy on Broadway, owned the film rights and tried unsuccessfully for a decade to put together a screen version of the feisty misfit who inspires his fellow mental patients to assert themselves. Douglas breathed new life into the project and the result was runaway box office returns and a sweep of the top five Oscars. Douglas shared Best Picture honors with Saul Zaentz and Kirk made a hefty profit, though it must have been difficult for the fading screen hero to see his newcomer son take home an Oscar while he had never earned one himself.

Joining forces with Jane Fonda’s IPC Films, Douglas next co-produced and starred alongside Fonda and Jack Lemmon in “The China Syndrome” (1979), a powerful political drama which benefited from the fortuitously timed near meltdown at New York state’s Three Mile Island nuclear power facility. The following year, Douglas suffered a skiing accident which led to knee surgery and an absence from the screen for three years. He was still regarded as more of a producer than an actor when he returned to the game in “Romancing the Stone” (1984), but his superb portrayal of the amiable, smug adventurer Jack Colton – a sort of black sheep Indiana Jones – began to change that perception. The film profitably teamed him with Kathleen Turner and Danny De Vito for a rollicking, fast-paced comedy adventure. After the trio made the inevitable, successful but critically maligned sequel, “Jewel of the Nile” (1985), Douglas found himself in ninth place on the annual exhibitors’ poll of the Top 10 box office stars, despite never having a track record as a leading man. In 1987, Douglas was handed the first dramatic lead that showed his real acting potential. Even though “Wall Street” was more about Charlie Sheen’s newbie character, Bud Fox, Douglas won the Best Actor Oscar and Golden Globe for his infinitely more intriguing Gordon Gekko – a wonderfully smarmy and arrogant corporate raider and the high-rolling epitome of 80s excess and greed. In fact, it was Gekko’s “greed is good” speech that entered the pop cultural lexicon. That same year, he took what could have been the unlikable role of a husband who endangers his family by trying to get away with adultery, and earned audience forgiveness with his human frailty in the megahit cautionary tale, “Fatal Attraction.” Perhaps even more with the latter film, Douglas effectively resonated with audiences as a morally lazy and thrill-seeking Everyman caught in the spider’s web of his own making.

Douglas reunited with De Vito and Turner in the marital black comedy “The War of the Roses” (1989), with the actor scoring again with a delicious, Golden Globe-nominated performance in the satiric commentary on “yuppie” materialism. Back in the producer’s chair, he formed Stonebridge Entertainment, Inc. in 1988 and went on to produce Joel Schumacher’s “Flatliners” (1990) and Richard Donner’s “Radio Flyer” (1992). In another box office hit resonant of his earlier victimization by Close, Douglas was drawn to the flame of a bisexual, man-eating lover (Sharon Stone) in “Basic Instinct” (1992). The film brought a firestorm of criticism from the gay community, but audiences flocked to see Paul Verhoeven’s sexy and stylish thriller. Around that same time, Douglas went through a stint of treatment for alcohol abuse, and the following year, scored again at the box office as a government employee on a revenge spree in Schumacher’s “Falling Down” (1993), though the critically lambasted film was tagged “wildly stupid” and “morally dangerous.”

Douglas produced “Made in America” (1993), a questionable comic pairing of Whoopi Goldberg and Ted Danson, before succumbing to a woman once again in “Disclosure” (1994). Based on Michael Crichton’s best-selling novel, the film told the story of a male executive sexually harassed by his female boss (Demi Moore). In a more lighthearted exploration of the battle of the sexes, Douglas starred as a single, handsome, commander-in-chief in Rob Reiner’s charming romantic comedy “The American President” (1995). He earned a Golden Globe nomination for his light and breezy performance as a widowed President trying to run the free world while romancing an environmental lobbyist (Annette Bening). In 1994, he signed a development deal at Paramount and produced and starred in the historical adventure “The Ghost and the Darkness” (1996), but the studio was much happier with two producing projects in which he did not act – John Woo’s actioner “Face/Off” (1997) and “John Grisham’s The Rainmaker” (1997).

Returning to the screen, Douglas had a box office hit as a ruthless businessman whose ne’er-do-well brother gives him an unusual birthday present in David Fincher’s dark thriller “The Game” (1997). After plotting the death of a wealthy young trophy wife (Gwyneth Paltrow) in “A Perfect Murder” (1998), Douglas delivered one of his most critically hailed roles as a pot-smoking college professor plagued by writer’s block in the sleeper hit “Wonder Boys” (2000). Onscreen he elicited sympathy for his bathrobe-clad sad sack, but offscreen the actor received a flurry of gossip attention over the end of his 23-year marriage to Diandra Douglas – amidst rumors of sex addiction and infidelity – and the beginning of his new romance and extravagant 2000 Plaza Hotel wedding to bombshell Catherine Zeta-Jones, 25 years his junior. Douglas reportedly fell in love with the Welsh beauty after seeing her in “The Mark of Zorro” (1998), proclaiming to all who would listen that he would one day make that woman his wife. The two were prominently (though separately) featured in “Traffic” (2000), the Steven Soderbergh Best Picture Oscar winner in which Douglas played a drug czar trying to rid the U.S. of substance abuse while his own crack and heroin-addicted daughter slips into ruin.

In 2001, Douglas could be seen as an Elvis-like hit man in the black comedy “One Night at McCool’s” and subsequently as a psychiatrist blackmailed into treating a patient with key information in the thriller “Don’t Say a Word.” After a long absence from television, the handsomely aging actor had a guest-starring appearance on the sitcom “Will & Grace” (NBC, 1998-2006) in 2002, earned yet another Emmy Award for his role as a gay suitor. The following year, while riding along in the media whirlwind surrounding his wife’s acclaimed performance in “Chicago” (2003), Douglas unfortunately earned more headlines than box office earnings for his starring turn as the head of a dysfunctional clan in “It Runs in the Family,” his first professional collaboration with his father. The father – having suffered from a stroke – and son made the inevitable press rounds, discussing their often complicated and conscientious relationship. Also that year, Douglas starred in the remake of the classic 1979 comedy “The In-Laws,” directed by Andrew Fleming, playing a gonzo CIA agent to Albert Brooks’ nebbish dentist.

After a small role as the bride’s (Kate Hudson) dad in the romantic comedy “You, Me and Dupree” (2004) and dealing with the grief of losing his half-brother, Eric, to a July 6, 2004 drug overdose, Douglas produced and starred in the uneven political thriller “The Sentinel” (2004) but fared better in the little-seen indie comedy, “The King of California” (2007), where he played a manic depressive dad obsessed with finding buried treasure in the San Fernando Valley. Two years later, Douglas proved to be the only saving grace in the wholly unnecessary romantic comedy “Ghosts of Girlfriends Past” (2009), a tired reimagining of Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol,” starring Matthew McConaughey at his smarmiest. That same year Douglas starred in the less onerous, although completely overlooked courtroom thriller, “Beyond a Reasonable Doubt” (2009). Douglas made news in early 2010 when his eldest son, Cameron Douglas, was sentenced to five years in prison for drug charges. Douglas and ex-wife Diandra appeared in court for his sentencing. Douglas, Zeta-Jones and Kirk Douglas all received a bit of bad press for writing separate plea letters for leniency to the judge, but after the verdict was read, Douglas seemed resigned and relieved, declaring the verdict “fair” and that “I think he’s in a safe place. He’ll be there for a while. And [he’ll] start a new life.” All of the legal drama unfolded just as he released the family dramedy, “A Solitary Man” (2010), in which Douglas received strong notices as a down-on-his-luck scoundrel desperately trying to get his life back on track.

The revered actor’s personal life took another dire turn in the summer of that year when he was diagnosed with stage-four throat cancer. The sad news immediately triggered widespread speculation as to the chances of his survival, even as Douglas prepared for the release of a film resurrecting one of his most iconic roles. In Oliver Stone’s long-awaited sequel “Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps” (2010), Douglas played fallen financial powerhouse Gordon Gekko, who, after being released from prison, seeks to repair the damaged relationship with his daughter (Carey Mulligan), enlisting her fiancé (Shia LaBeouf) in the effort. Soon after completing his initial round of chemotherapy treatments, Douglas at last received some good news when he was nominated for a Best Supporting Actor Golden Globe for his performance in the “Wall Street” sequel. In January 2011, Douglas announced more good news – that the tumor was gone and that his prognosis looked good, leaving him “relieved.”

Slowing down a bit after his illness, Douglas reunited with Soderbergh for his next two projects, appearing in the tense action film “Haywire” (2012) and then, much more significantly, portraying Liberace in the HBO TV movie “Behind the Candelabra” (2013), co-starring Matt Damon as the flamboyant musician’s notably younger lover.

TCM Overview can also be accessed online here.

 
Rick Lenz
Rick Lenz
Rick Lenz

Rick Lenz. Wikipedia

Rick Lenz was born in 1939, Springfield, Illinois)  is an American actor, author and playwright.

Lenz directed the Jackson, Michigan Civic Theater for two years before relocating to New York to seek work as an actor. In 1965, made his Broadway debut in Mating Dance, starring Van Johnson. Though the show closed opening night, stage impresario David Merrick was in the audience, and soon afterward cast Lenz in the Broadway hit Cactus Flower as understudy for the juvenile lead role, Igor Sullivan. Lenz later took over the role and played it for a year. Film producer Mike Frankovich and Walter Matthau saw him in the part and cast him as Igor in the film version, with Goldie Hawn.

Rick Lenz
Rick Lenz

In the 1970s, Rick Lenz appeared in several Hollywood movies, including How Do I Love Thee? (1970), Scandalous John (1971), Where Does It Hurt? (1972), The Shootist (1976), The Little Dragons (1980) and Melvin and Howard (1980).

Lenz has appeared in such television shows as Green AcresHec RamseyOwen Marshall: Counselor at LawThe Six Million Dollar ManThe Bionic WomanMurder, She WroteSimon & SimonFalcon CrestSilver SpoonsAirwolfElvis and the Beauty Queen, and Malice in Wonderland.

Lenz wrote The Epic of Buster Friend, which was produced off-Broadway in 1973 at the Theatre De Lys (now the Lucille Lortel Theatre) in New York City, and was later directed for PBS by Michael Kahn.

In 1981, he co-wrote the pilot of the ABC television series Aloha Paradise, as well writing several of the episodes. Lenz published his memoir North of Hollywood on February 15, 2012.

Rick Lenz
Rick Lenz

As of 2017, Lenz resides in Los Angeles with his spouse, Linda; the couple married in May 1982. He has three children; sons Scott and Charlie, and daughter, Abigail.

Linda Cristal
Linda Cristal
Linda Cristal
Linda Cristal

‘The Guardian” obituary in 2020

Linda Cristal starred in all 97 episodes of the popular American TV western series The High Chaparral as the fiery Victoria Cannon, Mexican wife of the rancher “Big John”. 

In her 2019 memoir, A Life Unexpected, she recalled reading about plans for the programme in a trade magazine, then barging into a meeting of the producers and its creator, David Dortort, to audition for the role. Discarding the script she was given – which she regarded as bland – Cristal improvised in order to portray the character as strong and tempestuous, “a heroine with fire and spunk”, as she described it.

That was enough to win her the role as the aristocratic Mexican rancher’s daughter who marries John (played by Leif Erickson) following the death of his first wife in the opening episode. The mixed marriage was groundbreaking for television in the 1960s, alongside stories of the Cannons’ attempts to live in harmony with Apaches near their ranch in the Arizona desert and bandits from across the Mexican border. The series ran from 1967 to 1971 and won Cristal a Golden Globe award as best TV actress.

Cristal was born Marta Victoria Moya in Buenos Aires, to a French mother, Rosario (nee Peggo), and an Italian father, Antonio Moya Burges, a magazine publisher. When she was five, her father came into conflict with the local mafia, so the family fled to Montevideo, the capital of Uruguay, where they lived in poverty in a tenement.

Later, following her parents’ deaths, Marta headed for Mexico, where her ambition to act led her to the producer Miguel Alemán. He launched her screen career with the role of a schoolgirl in Cuando Levanta la Niebla (When the Fog Lifts, 1952) and another producer, Raul de Anda, gave her the professional name Linda Cristal.

She appeared in half a dozen Mexican films, then heard that the Hollywood studio United Artists was planning to feature a Latina heroine alongside Dana Andrews in the western Comanche (1956) and successfully auditioned for the part.

The studio signed her to a contract and her roles included the Mexican ranch owner’s daughter who catches the eye of Jock Mahoney’s gunfighter in The Last of the Fast Guns (1958), a Cuban firebrand who marries a New York-based Puerto Rican criminal (John Saxon) in Cry Tough (1959) and the Argentinian pin-up accompanying Tony Curtis on a trip to Paris in the director Blake Edwards’s services comedy The Perfect Furlough (1958), a performance that won her a Golden Globe award as most promising newcomer.

Cristal appeared to get her biggest break when she starred as Cleopatra in the 1959 Italian-French-Spanish co-production Le Legioni di Cleopatra (The Legions of Cleopatra), but 20th Century-Fox bought the film and gave it only a limited release in advance of its own forthcoming 1963 epic Cleopatra, with Elizabeth Taylor.

Consolation came with The Alamo (1960) and the role of a Mexican beauty who has a passing romance with John Wayne. Fulfilling his ambition to play the frontier legend Davy Crockett on screen, the star directed it himself. However, he hired the master of the western genre, John Ford, to direct second-unit sequences. After Cristal met him, he cast her in Two Rode Together (1961) as a Mexican – previously kidnapped by Comanches – whom James Stewart’s Texas marshal rescues from her warrior husband.

She switched to television for one-off appearances in series such as Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (1964) before she made such an impact in The High Chaparral.

Then, after playing a Mexican migrant and union leader working for a melon farmer (Charles Bronson) in Mr Majestyk (1974), film parts dried up, but Cristal returned to TV with guest roles in Barnaby Jones (in 1979), The Love Boat and Fantasy Island (both in 1981).

Soap operas also kept her in work. Following parts as a gangster’s lover in El Chofer (1974) in Mexico and a widow with a blind son in Rossé (1985) in Argentina, she played a mobster’s girlfriend in the American daytime serial General Hospital during 1988. Then she retired to run an import-export business and invested in property.

Cristal’s 1950 marriage to the Argentinian actor Tito Gómez was annulled within weeks. Her second marriage, to the industrialist Robert Champion in 1958, ended in divorce the following year. In 1960 she married the actor Yale Wexler and they had two sons, Gregory and Jordan. They divorced in 1966, and her sons survive her. 

• Linda Cristal (Marta Victoria Moya) actor, born 23 February 1931; died 27 June 2020

Linda Cristal. Wikipedia.

Linda Cristal was born in 1934 and died in 2020 was an Argentine-American actress. She appeared in a number of Western films during the 1950s, before winning a Golden Globe Award for her performance in the 1958 comedy film The Perfect Furlough.

From 1967 to 1971, Cristal starred as Victoria Cannon in the NBC series The High Chaparral.  For her performance she won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Television Series Drama in 1970, and received two Emmy Award nominations.

The daughter of a French father and an Italian mother, Cristal was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Her father was a publisher who moved the family to Montevideo, Uruguay, because of political problems. Her education came at Conservatoria Franklin in Uruguay.

Cristal appeared in films in Argentina and Mexico before taking on her first English-language role as Margarita in the 1956 Western film Comanche.[1] Following her Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year in The Perfect Furlough (1958), Cristal went on to roles in Cry Tough (1959),  Legions of the Nile (1959), The Pharaohs’ Woman (1960), and was asked by John Wayne to play the part of Flaca in his epic The Alamo (1960) In 1961 she had a key role in the western Two Rode Together.

Along with these and other film roles, Cristal appeared in episodes of network television series. She played a kidnapped Countess opposite Eric Fleming and Clint Eastwood in a 1959 episode of Rawhide. She also had a role as a female matador in NBC‘s The Tab Hunter Show, the 1964 episode “City Beneath the Sea” on Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea and others.

Cristal semi-retired in 1964 to raise her two children. She was coaxed out of retirement when she became the last cast member to be added as a regular on the NBC series The High Chaparral (1967-1971).

Her performance in the series, as Victoria Cannon, earned her two more Golden Globe nominations (winning Best Actress – Television Drama in 1968) and two Emmy Awardnominations.

Cristal worked sparingly after The High Chaparral, with a few television and film roles, such as the film Mr. Majestyk (1974) and the television miniseries Condominium (1980).

She last appeared in the starring role of Victoria “Rossé” Wilson on the Argentine television series Rossé (1985).

Cristal’s 1950 marriage was annulled after five days. On April 24, 1958, in Pomona, California, she married Robert Champion, a businessman. They divorced on December 9, 1959.

In 1960, she married Yale Wexler, a former actor who worked in real estate. They divorced in December 1966.


Fernand Gravey
Fernand Gravey.
Fernand Gravey.

Fernand Gravey was born in Brussels, Belgium in 1905. He made his first film (a silent) in 1913. He began his career in French and British films and then went to Hollywood in 1937. His most famous movie was “The Great Waltz” with Luise Rainer. He returned to France before the Nazi occupation. His later films included “La Ronde” with Simone Simon in 1950. He died in France in 1970.

One of director Alfred Machin’s favorite actresses was Fernande Dépernay of the Théâtre des Galeries. Dépernay was married to Georges Mertens, another of Machin’s regular actors. Their son, Fernand Mertens, born in 1904. He made his acting debut in ‘Saïda Makes Off with Manneken Pis’ and in 1914 played the role of little Kef in ‘A Tragedy in the Clouds’ alongside his parents. Much later, under the pseudonym Fernand Garvey, he went to become one of France’s most renowned actors.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: Anonymous

IMDB entry:

Peter Cookson
Peter Cookson
Peter Cookson

Peter Cookson was born in 1913 in Oregon. He was most prolific on stage and in film in the 1940’s and 50’s. His films include “Fear” and “G.I. Honeymoon” in 1945. Starred in “Can Can” on Broadway in 1955. His wife was the actress Beatrice Straight. Peter Cookson died in 1990.

Katharine Houghton
Katharine Houghton

In 1967, Katharine Houghton had the lead role opposite Sidney Poitier in “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner”, where she played the daughter of Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn (her real life aunt). Surprisingly it did not lead to a major cinema career. Her last film appearance was in “The Last Airbender” in 2010. She was born in Hartford, Connecticut in 1945 and attended Sarah Lawerence College. She has has had an extensive stage career.

IMDB entry:

Katharine Houghton was born on March 10, 1945, in Hartford, Connecticut, the daughter of Marion Hepburn Grant (Katharine Hepburn‘s younger sister) and Ellsworth Grant. Before going into the movies, she went to Sarah Lawrence College and majored in philosophy. Her debut in the movies was in 1967’s Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner (1967) as “Joanna Drayton”. This movie also starred her aunt, Katharine Hepburn (with whom which she has had a close relationship), Spencer Tracy and Sidney Poitier. Since this time, she has starred in over fifty on and off Broadway and New England regional theater productions. She is also a playwright and amongst her credits are such productions as: “Best Kept Secret”, “Merlin”, “The Marry Month Of May”, “Mortal Friends”, “On The Shady Side”, “The Right Number”, “Phone Play” and her translation of Anouilh’s “Antigone”. She also presents lectures: “Katharine X Three”, “My Grandmother’s House Near The River” and “The Secret Life of Louisa May Alcott”.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: Marcia <Ssspiceey@yahoo.com>

The above IMDB entry can also be accessed online here.

Celia Kaye

Celia Kaye

Celia Kaye. Wikipedia

Celia Kaye was born in 1942 in Jasper County, Missouri. She came to national fame in the U.S. for her part in the television series “The New Loretta Young Show” in 1961. Her movies include “Island of the Blue Dolphins” in 1964, “Wild Seed” with Michael Parks and “Fluffy” with Shirley Jones. She was featured in the iconic “Big Wednesday in 1978 which was directed by her then husband John Milius.”

“Wikipedia” entry:

Celia Kaye (born Celia Kay Burkholder on February 24, 1942) is an American former actress who appeared in a recurring role as Marnie Massey, daughter of the character Christine Massey played by Loretta Young, on the comedy-drama seriesThe New Loretta Young Show. The program aired for twenty-six weeks on CBS from 1962 to 1963. Most of Kaye’s work was on television between 1962 and 1974, with final credited film appearances ten years apart – in 1978 and 1988.[1]

In 1965, Kaye, along with Mia Farrow and Mary Ann Mobley, shared the honor of the Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year – Actress, a reflection on her 1964 role as Karana in the film Island of the Blue Dolphins, directed by James B. Clark. The movie is based on the Scott O’Dell novel of the same name. Island of the Blue Dolphins is a fictionalized account of the true story of Juana Maria, an Indian girl stranded for eighteen years during the 19th century on one of the isolated Channel Islands of California.

Of German and Cherokee ancestry, Kaye was born in Carthage, near JoplinMissouri to chemical engineer John W. Burkholder and his wife, Kathryn, who ran a private pre-school. When she was one year old, her family moved to WilmingtonDelaware, where her brother, Johnny, was born. She is a graduate of the now-defunct Henry C. Conrad High School near Wilmington as well as the Philadelphia Modeling and Charm School.[3] In high school, she was already interested in acting as a member of the National Thespian Society and performed in such school plays as Time Out for Ginger and Brigadoon. She listed her ambition at the time as “to be happy and successful.”

After high school, Kaye moved to California, where she won a scholarship to the Pasadena Playhouse, from which she graduated in 1961. In 1962, a few months before The New Loretta Young Show premiered, Kaye made her television debut as the character “Julie Trenton” in the segment “The Traveler”, one of the last episodes filmed of the ABC westernseries Tales of Wells Fargo, starring Dale Robertson. While working on The New Loretta Young Show, she continued her education, attending Los Angeles City College at night and studying modern jazz at Eugene Loring’s American School of Dance.

Kaye considers her association with Loretta Young “a very lucky first experience in show business … She was absolutely amazing. … She was just so warm and so inclusive of everyone that my ‘awestruck’ situation went away immediately….This woman walked in and it was her set. And it was her game, and her show, and it’s like she had it all together and everybody just seemed to fall into place. She was in charge of everything without being harsh about it or bossy.”

When The New Loretta Young Show ended, Kaye appeared twice, once as a character with her own name of “Celia”, in the long-running ABC sitcom The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet.[1] On December 6, 1964, six months after the premiere of Island of the Blue Dolphins, Kaye was cast as “Ann Shelby” opposite Dwayne Hickman in his title guest-starring role of the episode “The Clay Shelby Story” of ABC’s Wagon Train. Other guest stars in the segment were Richard Carlson and Mort Mills, who were cast as military officers.

In 1965, Kaye played Daphne in the film Wild Seed, opposite Michael Parks. That same year she was “Sally Brighton” in the film Fluffy, starring Shirley Jones. In 1967, she played “Melissa Neal” on ABC’s The Green Hornet in a two-part episode entitled “Corpse of the Year.” That same year, she portrayed a character “Emily” in the episode “Decision at Sundown” of the second Dale Robertson series, The Iron Horse, a fictional account of a railroad moving into the American West. Other television appearances were in 1970 in the ABC series, The Young Lawyers, starring Lee J. Cobb, and in 1973 in Adam’s Rib, starring Ken Howard and Blythe Danner. Kaye’s last television role was in 1974 as Willa Sweeney in “Hundred Mile Walk” of NBC‘s Little House on the Prairie.

Kaye’s last film roles were in the coming of age picture Big Wednesday (1978) opposite Sam Melville, and the horror story, Vampire at Midnight, also known as Murder at Midnight(1988) as “Sandra.”

Kaye has a child, Amanda Milius, from her 1978 marriage to director and screenwriter John Milius, who directed Big Wednesday.

The above “Wikipedia” entry can also be accessed online here.