Patrick Wayne was born in 1939 in Los Angeles and is the son of John Wayne. He played small partsin his father’s films and can be seen in the racing scene in “The Quiet Man” in 1951. He was also in “The Searchers”, “Donovan’s Reef” and “The Commancheros”. In the 1970’s he made “Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger” and “The People that Time Gorgot” both in 1977.
Gary Brumburgh’s entry:
Possessing his father’s durable good looks, vigor and charm, this tall, strapping, exceedingly handsome second son of John Wayne had huge boots to fill in trying to escape his legendary father’s shadow and corral Hollywood fame on his own terms. But attempt he did and, looking back, he may not have achieved the outright stardom of his father but certainly did quite admirably, making over 40 films in his career — nine of them with his dad.
One of four children born to Duke’s first wife, Patrick John Wayne carried his father’s name, so it seems natural that a similar destiny would be in the making. Patrick made his debut film bit at age 11 in his father classic western Rio Grande (1950) and proceeded to apprentice in The Quiet Man (1952), The Sun Shines Bright (1953), The Long Gray Line (1955), Mister Roberts (1955), and The Searchers (1956), some with and some without his father’s name above the title credits. All the above-mentioned films, however, were helmed by family friend and iconic director John Ford. Following high school, Patrick attended Loyola University and graduated in 1961 (older brother Michael Wayne graduated five years earlier). During this time, he went out on his own to star in his own film, the second-string oater The Young Land (1959). Realizing he was not quite ready to carry his own film, he returned to the family fold and gained more on-camera confidence throughout the 1960s supporting his father in The Alamo (1960), Donovan’s Reef (1963), McLintock! (1963), and The Green Berets (1968). A few exceptions included a role in Ford’s sprawling epic Cheyenne Autumn (1964), his turn as James Stewart‘s son in the frontier adventure Shenandoah (1965) and in An Eye for an Eye (1966) in which he and Robert Lansing played bounty hunters. He also co-starred in the short-lived comedy western series The Rounders (1966).
Following work on his dad’s Big Jake (1971), Patrick broke away again and sought success on his own. Interestingly, he earned more recognition away from the dusty boots and saddle scene and into the sci-fi genre. His career peaked in the late 1970s as the titular hero braving Ray Harryhausen monsters and saving Tyrone Power‘s daughter Taryn in the popular matinée fantasy Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger (1977), then battled more special effects creatures in the Edgar Rice Burroughs film adaptation of The People That Time Forgot (1977).
Patrick was a smoother, more gentlemanly version of the Wayne package with a completely captivating smile and accessible personality. He co-starred as a romantic love interest to Shirley Jones in another brief TV series Shirley (1979), and occasionally forsook acting chores to emcee game shows and syndicated variety series. Although the scope of his talent was seldom tested over the years, he was a thoroughly enjoyable presence on all the popular TV shows of the 1970s and ’80s, including Fantasy Island(1977), Murder, She Wrote (1984), Charlie’s Angels (1976), and The Love Boat (1977). And he certainly wasn’t hard on the eyes.
Following the death of older brother Michael in 2003, Patrick became Chairman of the John Wayne Cancer Institute. Divorced in 1978 from Peggy Hunt, he is married (since 1999) to Misha Anderson.
– IMDb Mini Biography By: Gary Brumburgh / gr-home@pacbell.net
To view article on Patrick Wayne, please click here.
Earl Holliman was born in 1928 in Louisiana. His first film was “Scared Stiff” in 1953 starring Jerry Lewis and Dean Marin. He was featured in some major films of the 1950’s including “Broken Lance”, “Giant”, Gunfight at the O.K. Corral”, “Forbidden Planet” and “Hot Spell”. He starred with Andrew Prine in “The Wide Country” and with Angie Dickinson in “Police Woman”.
Gary Brumburgh’s entry:
Louisiana-born actor Earl Holliman, after a stint in the Navy, studied at UCLA and the Pasadena Playhouse before earning his break in the Martin/Lewis comedy Scared Stiff(1953). He gained clout after portraying a variety of young, manly characters in rugged westerns and war drama, ranging from dim and/or good-natured to overly impulsive and/or threatening. He won a Golden Globe for his support performance as a girl-crazy brother in The Rainmaker (1956), holding his own against stars Burt Lancaster andKatharine Hepburn. He distinguished himself in a number of “A” grade films around the same time, including Broken Lance (1954) with Spencer Tracy, Gunfight at the O.K. Corral(1957), again with Lancaster, Giant (1956) with Elizabeth Taylor and Rock Hudson, Visit to a Small Planet (1960), again with Jerry Lewis, Summer and Smoke (1961) withGeraldine Page and The Sons of Katie Elder (1965) with John Wayne.
When the film offers started drying up in the 60s, he found TV a more welcoming medium, scoring in a number of westerns. His virile stance was perfect for a series of crime yarns. It all culminated with a four-year stint as the macho partner to sexy Angie Dickinson in Police Woman (1974), a role that helped make him a household name. Holliman operated the Fiesta Dinner Theatre for many years in San Antonio, Texas.
– IMDb Mini Biography By: Gary Brumburgh / gr-home@pacbell.net
Ella Raines obituary in “The New York Times” in 1988.
Ella Raines was born in Washington D.C. in 1920. Her first film was “Corvette-K225” in 1943. She went on to make “Cry Havoc”, “Hail the Conquering Hero”, “Phantom Lady”, “The Suspect”, “The Strange Affair of Uncle Harry” amongst others. Ella Raines died in 1988 at the age of 67.
– IMDb Mini Biography By: Bill Hafker, pakhuntz @ runestone.n
The above IMDB entry can also be accessed online here.
Her “New York Times” obituary from 1988:
Ella Raines, an actress who starred in film dramas, comedies and westerns during the 1940’s, died of throat cancer May 30 in Los Angeles. She was 67 years old.
Ms. Raines’s film career took off in 1943. That year she starred opposite Randolph Scott in the wartime thriller ”Corvette K-255” and became the only actress under contract to a new $1 million production company founded by Howard Hawks and Charles Boyer. Her best-known starring role was in the suspense film ”Phantom Lady” in 1944. More often she appeared opposite some of the leading actors of the day, including John Wayne in ”Tall in the Saddle” (1944), Charles Laughton in ”Suspect” (1945) and William Powell in the Charles MacArthur-George S. Kaufman satire ”The Senator Was Indiscreet” (1947). Worked With Preston Sturges
She also worked with the director Preston Sturges in ”Hail the Conquering Hero” (1944). She starred in a television show, ”Janet Dean, R.N.” in 1953-54. More recently, she appeared in an episode of television’s ”Matt Houston,” although she had largely been in retirement.
A two-year marriage to her high-school sweetheart, Kenneth Trout, a lieutenant in the Army Air Force, ended in divorce in 1945. In 1947 she married an Air Force major, Robin Olds. A hero in World War II and Vietnam, he later became a brigadier general and commander of the United States Air Force Academy at Colorado Springs. They had two daughters.
After her marriage, Ms. Raines appeared in films less frequently. In 1967, when her husband was serving in Vietnam, she characterized herself in a newspaper article as ”an Army wife” and paid tribute to ”service wives . . . for maintaining a home that is as normal as possible for the children while keeping their worries to themselves.”
She and her husband were divorced in 1975. She is survived by her daughters, Christina Newman and Susan Olds, and a granddaughter.
John Bromfield was born in 1922 in South Bend, Indiana. At college he excelled in football and was a boxing champion. In 1948 he was featured as a detective in “Sorry Wrong Number” with Burt lancaster,. Barbara Stanwyck and Ann Richards. His other films include “Revenge of the Creature”. John Bromfield died in 2005 at the age of 83.
Gary Brumburgh’s entry:
The name may be hard-pressed to anyone but the most devoted film buffs, but dark-haired actor John Bromfield was a “B”-level leading man during the late 1950s. Possessed with a fine build and square-faced handsomeness, he was somewhat of a blend between Steve Cochran and Rory Calhoun, both 1950s hunks
. During his heyday, John headlined a handful of mediocre sci-fi programmers, melodramas and westerns and was often seen in skimpy outfits (especially a swim suit) that showed off his fine physique. Born in South Bend, Indiana, in 1922 and christened Farron Bromfield, his strong athleticism and good looks were not lost on the picture business. By age 26 he was in Hollywood and a contractee of Paramount. His first feature film came in the form of a small role in the Barbara Stanwyck/Burt Lancaster film noir tingler Sorry, Wrong Number (1948) for Paramount. Following the minor documentary/adventure Harpoon(1948) at Paramount, he made his third film, Rope of Sand (1949).
There he met his first wife, the delectable French actress Corinne Calvet, who was a co-star on the film and just starting to create an international stir. The couple married shortly after completing the film in 1948. The pairing proved beneficial for Bromfield and his career but the marriage itself lasted only five years. A featured performer in the early 1950s, he earned leading man status by 1955, but it was a very brief tenure.
Following his last movie (and 20th feature) in Crime Against Joe (1956) with sultry singer Julie London, he switched mediums and corralled the title role (and mild stardom) in the syndicated TV western series Sheriff of Cochise (1956), which was later retitled “U.S. Marshal” during its third season. In 1959, his second marriage ended after only 3 years and his western series soon bit the dust as well.
Unfulfilled with his life as an actor, John abruptly retired in 1960, finding renewed interest as a commercial fisherman. A hunting enthusiast most his life, he was an emcee at Chicago’s annual Sportsman’s Show in the 1980s. Not much else was heard until his recent passing from kidney failure on September 18, 2005, at the age of 83. He is survived by his third wife.
– IMDb Mini Biography By: Gary Brumburgh / gr-home@pacbell.net
It was widely assumed that no one with a name like Tuesday Weld was to be taken seriously. Besides, she made films with titles like “Rock, Rock, Rock” and “Sex Kittens Goes to College”. She was/is blonde and cute-faced like Sandra Dee. There was consternation, if not alarm, when, about her tenth film, critics started talking about her as an actress” – David Shipman in “The Great Movie Stars – The International Years” (1972).
Tuesday Weld is an actress with a huge cult following. She was born in 1943 in New York city. She was a child model before branching into movies. In 1956 she played the lead in “Rock, Rock, Rock”. In 1959 she played Danny Kaye’s daughter in “The Five Pennies”. Other films include “Return to Peyton Place”, “Wild in the Country” with Elvis Presley in 1961, “Soldier in the Rain” with Steve McQueen and “Falling Down” with Michael Douglas.
TCM Overview:
Heartbreak Hotel: Cinema 1-Sheet Poster
Luminous, ageless beauty who supported her family as a child model and TV performer; the strains precipitated a nervous breakdown at the age of nine, an alcohol problem at 10 and a suicide attempt at 12. Weld appeared in her first film in 1956 at the age of 13 and, drawing on experience beyond her years, played various oversexed and underage nymphets in a bevy of low-rent productions and the TV series “Dobie Gillis.”
Weld’s tempestuous off-screen adventures made her fodder for the gossip columnists, but she went on to display a quirky, unique talent in several fine dramas, including “The Cincinnati Kid” (1966) and “Pretty Poison” (1968)–in which she suggested both innocence and evil as few performers had since the heyday of Louise Brooks. Her reputation fully rehabilitated, Weld carved a niche as a dependable lead in a number of fine films, from “Lord Love a Duck” (1966), “A Safe Place” (1971), with Orson Welles and Jack Nicholson, and “Play It as It Lays” (1972). Beginning with “Looking for Mr. Goodbar” (1977), which earned her a Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination, she began alternating second leads and character roles with leads in films like “Thief” (1981). She worked more in TV as the 80s progressed, but still performed well in features including “Once Upon a Time in America” (1984). By the 90s, she had all but abandoned acting, appearing in only two features to date, “Falling Down” (1993) and “Feeling Minnesota” (1996). The above TCM overview can also be accessed online here.
George Segal was born in 1934 in Great Neck, New York. He is a 1955 graduate of Columbia University. In 1961 he made his movie debut in “The Young Doctors”. Other films in which he had leading roles include “Ship of Fools”, “King Rat”, “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf” and “Lost Command”. He gave a terrific performance in “No Way to Treat A Lady”. George Segal died in 2021 aged 87.
‘Guardian’ obituary in 2021
George Segal, who has died aged 87, was among the leading Hollywood stars from the mid-1960s until the mid-70s, and possessed the gift, as Jack Lemmon did, of making neurotic behaviour not only funny but sympathetic.
In 1965, as the eponymous King Rat in Bryan Forbes’s film set in a Japanese PoW camp, Segal was in his element as a smart-alec American among the stiff-upper-lip British, surviving by conning his fellow prisoners and camp officers. The following year, he was Oscar-nominated as best supporting actor for his role in Mike Nichols’s adaptation of Edward Albee’s play Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor were magnificent as the tired middle-aged academic and his wife who vent their long-simmering frustrations on two hapless guests, a young lecturer in biology and an understandably nervous wife. Segal and Sandy Dennis in the latter roles were not overshadowed by the virtuoso seasoned performers.
In the same year, Segal was Biff Loman in a CBS television production of Death of a Salesman, opposite Lee J Cobb (the original Willy Loman), and starred in an intriguing espionage thriller about the activities of neo-Nazis in contemporary Germany, The Quiller Memorandum. It was intriguing partly because Segal’s nervy acting style clashed fruitfully with the dry, understated sarcasm of his co-star, Alec Guinness.
In 1968, he appeared as George to Nicol Williamson’s Lennie in a TV production of John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men, and in Sidney Lumet’s Bye Bye Braverman, a New York comedy about a group of Jewish intellectuals who meet at the funeral of an old friend. As the latter proved, Segal’s forte was urbane neuroticism. This was seen to advantage in two films in which he played Jewish sons: No Way to Treat a Lady (1968), as a cop whose girlfriend (Lee Remick) meets disapproval from his mother (Eileen Heckart); and Where’s Poppa? (1970), in which Segal tries to give his mother (Ruth Gordon) a heart attack by dressing in a gorilla suit and jumping on to her bed. “You almost scared me to death,” she cries. “Almost is not good enough,” he replies.
In Loving (1970), Segal was amusing as a New York illustrator who finds that his family life, professional ambitions and extramarital involvements are settling into parallel ruts; and in The Owl and the Pussycat (also 1970), a pleasantly raunchy farce, Segal as a reserved wannabe writer was teamed successfully with Barbra Streisand as a garrulous part-time sex worker.
But his happiest pairing was with Glenda Jackson in the delightful A Touch of Class (1973), the kind of witty sex-war saga that was popular in the 70s, and in which Segal excelled.
The film boosted Segal’s career even further, but by the time the partnership was resumed in Lost and Found (1979), a so-called comedy in which Segal and Jackson played a pair of academics who meet and squabble on the ski slopes, it was heading downwards.
However, back in 1973, Segal was still on a roll with Paul Mazursky’s Blume in Love, a comedy both romantic and satirical, and Robert Altman’s California Split (1974), a freewheeling study of compulsive gambling. Despite having proved he had the emotional weight for drama, Segal decided thereafter to opt for light comedy, though his choices could be misguided. His comic flair failed to rescue The Black Bird (1975), a limp send-up of The Maltese Falcon and the 40s private-eye genre, nor could he do much to salvage The Duchess and the Dirtwater Fox (1976), a charmless jumble of western parodies and slapstick in which he was teamed with Goldie Hawn, or Fun With Dick and Jane (1977), with Jane Fonda and Segal as yuppie bank robbers.
Although Segal continued to work regularly throughout the following decades, even scaling some heights, his star power had burned itself out. In 1979, he turned his back on a film that might have rejuvenated his career. He walked off the lot on the first day of shooting Blake Edwards’s 10, protesting at the amount of control he felt his co-star, Julie Andrews, wife of the director, had over the film. He also insisted that his wife, Marion Sobel, should participate in the editing and production. Orion Pictures filed a legal action seeking damages and Segal counter-sued. With the crew and cast standing by, Edwards summoned Dudley Moore to take over the romantic lead, and the film was a huge hit.
Segal was born in New York, the youngest of four children of George Segal, a hop and malt agent, and Fannie (nee Bodkin), and grew up in Great Neck, Long Island. Although the family was Jewish, he was educated at a Quaker boarding school in Pennsylvania. An accomplished banjo player, Segal played with Bruno Lynch and his Imperial Jazz Band before enrolling at Columbia University to study drama. After graduation, he joined the off-Broadway company Circle in the Square. Following three years’ military service, Segal resettled in New York, becoming one of the original members of Theodore J Flicker’s satirical revue The Premise in 1960.
His film debut was in the entertaining hospital soap opera The Young Doctors (1961), as a rather bland intern. In The New Interns (1964), he was far better as a grim-faced ex-con doctor, and in the same year played a bitter civil war veteran, whom Yul Brynner is contracted to kill, in Invitation to a Gunfighter. In 1965, Segal held his own among a starry cast as a tortured artist in Stanley Kramer’s Ship of Fools, and moved into the most successful period of his career.
In the 80s and 90s, as his film roles declined, Segal found work mainly in TV dramas. In a 1994 episode of The Larry Sanders Show, Larry (alias Garry Shandling), a talkshow host, tries to stay awake while Segal (self-mockingly) reels off the titles of all the movies he has acted in recently that have had difficulty getting released. Afterwards, Larry is heard backstage telling everyone that he has got to start getting some fresh new guests.
Yet Segal did pop up in excellent supporting roles, mainly as fathers, in several films, such as the boorish businessman father of Kirstie Alley’s precocious baby in Look Who’s Talking (1989) and Look Who’s Talking Now (1993); Ben Stiller’s neurotic father in David O Russell’s Flirting With Disaster (1996); and Matthew Broderick’s father in The Cable Guy (1996).
From 1997 to 2003, Segal was looking sharp and playing, with comic finesse, the fashion magazine owner Jack Gallo in the TV sitcom Just Shoot Me!, and had another long-running TV role from 2013 onwards as Albert “Pops” Solomon in The Goldbergs. He was back on Broadway in Art in 1999, and in the same role at Wyndham’s theatre in London in 2001.
His marriage to Marion ended in divorce in 1983, after 27 years. His second wife, Linda Rogoff, whom he married in 1983, died in 1996. Later that year he married Sonia Schultz Greenbaum, his high-school sweetheart, whom he ran into at a class reunion. She survives him, as do two daughters, Polly and Elizabeth, from his first marriage.
George Segal, actor, born 13 February 1934; died 23 March 2021
Karl Malden was born in 1912 in Chicago. In 1934 he began trainig to be an actor at the Goodman School in his native city. He began acting on Broadway in 1937. He scored a big success in Artur Miller’s “All My Sons”. He began his film career in Moss Hart’s “Winged Victory” in 1945 and a few years later had a very profilic career in film. His movie highlights include “A Streetcar Named Desire”, “Halls of Montezuma”, “I Confess”, “On the Waterfront”, “Baby Doll”, “Fear Strikes Out”, “Pollyanna”, “Come Fly With Me” and “Patton”. He had a spectactular television success with Michael Douglas in “The Streets of San Francisco”. Karl Malden died in 2009 at the age of 97.
His “Guardian” obituary by Ronald Bergan:
For more than six decades Karl Malden, who has died at the age of 97, brought his Method-trained acting talents to bear on powerhouse performances on screen, notably for Elia Kazan in A Streetcar Named Desire (1951), for which he won an Oscar, and On The Waterfront (1954), as well as his mature cop in the long-running TV series The Streets of San Franscisco in the 1970s.
Like WC Fields and Jimmy Durante, Malden had one of the most celebrated non-Roman noses in cinema. But whereas those of the two former entertainers produced a comic effect — Fields’s bibulous one looked as if it were stuck on like a clown’s, and Durante’s schnozzle was like a carnival mask — Malden’s proboscis seemed to add dramatic intensity to his performances. The more impassioned he became, the more the nose seemed to go on red alert.
This particularity of Malden’s appearance came about because he broke his nose twice as a high school American footballer. He had won a scholarship to Arkansas state teachers college, but had to leave to support himself and his family by working in a steel mill in Gary, Indiana. Born Mladen Sekulovich in Chicago, he was brought up in Gary, where his father, Peter Sekulovich, who had been a provincial actor in Yugoslavia, was working in the mill. Karl also delivered milk to make money to go to New York, where he hoped to satisfy his ambition to become an actor.
In New York, in the late 1930s, Malden joined the leftist Group Theatre, which was devoted to social realities and ensemble acting inspired by Stanislavsky at the Moscow Arts Theatre. Its leading light was the playwright Clifford Odets, in whose Golden Boy (1937) Malden appeared as a boxing manager. Also in the play was future director Kazan, with whom Malden was to work several times on stage and screen.
After Malden returned from army service during the second world war, he became a member of the newly formed Actors’ Studio, among whom were Marlon Brando and Richard Widmark. In 1947, on Broadway, Kazan, one of the founders of the Actors’ Studio, directed Malden in both Arthur Miller’s All My Sons and Tennessee Williams’s A Streetcar Named Desire. The latter, in which Malden played Mitch opposite Brando and Jessica Tandy, led to a contract with 20th Century-Fox.
At the studio, Malden played vivid supporting roles in gritty thrillers such as Henry Hathaway’s 13 Rue Madeleine and The Kiss Of Death, Kazan’s Boomerang (all 1947) and Otto Preminger’s Where The Sidewalk Ends (1950). He also added realism to the Henry King western The Gunfighter, and Lewis Milestone’s war drama Halls Of Montezuma (both 1950).
During the same period, Malden appeared on Broadway as the Button Moulder in Lee Strasberg’s production of Ibsen’s Peer Gynt, with John Garfield in the title role, and in Eugene O’Neill’s Desire Under the Elms, as the domineering patriarch.
In 1951, Malden won the best supporting actor Oscar for reprising his stage role of Mitch, the shy, sweaty, balding middle-aged suitor of Blanche DuBois (Vivien Leigh) in A Streetcar Named Desire, again directed by Kazan. The most pitiless moment comes when Malden snaps on the naked bulb to expose Blanche’s ageing, powdered face to “reality”. “I don’t want the light, I want magic,” she entreats. “Oh, I knew you weren’t 16. But I was fool enough to believe you was straight,” he replies, his voice trembling with emotion.
The following year, he was playing a man caught in the clutches of a femme fatale (Jennifer Jones) in King Vidor’s Ruby Gentry and then the persistent cop who suspects Montgomery Clift’s priest of murder in Alfred Hitchcock’s I Confess (1953). If it were not already evident from his performances, the intelligence of an actor like Malden could be deduced from the number of major directors with whom he worked. In his best and most personal work he succeeded in exploring depths of moral ambiguity rare in the commercial cinema.
He gave two further powerful performances for Kazan. In On The Waterfront, he was Oscar-nominated for his role as the tough, crusading dockland Catholic priest, Father Barry, who helps bring an end to crooked waterfront politics. Even better was his wonderful portrayal of Archie Lee, the cotton-mill owner husband of a backward thumb-sucking virgin child bride (Carroll Baker) in Baby Doll (1956).
Driven frantic by her refusal to allow him into her bed, even though it is a child’s cot, too small for her ample proportions, the boorish, white-trash character is turned by Malden into a tragicomic figure uttering a sustained cry of sexual frustration. “Most actors want to be heroic, sexy and noble. Karl doesn’t mind if you to make him look silly. He is more a real person than an actor,” Kazan remarked at the time.
In Robert Mulligan’s Fear Strikes Out (1956), he played a well-meaning but domineering father who drives his highly strung son (Anthony Perkins) to the edge of madness — the two leads successfully vying with each other in the emotional stakes.
Apart from having taken over much of the direction from Delmer Daves of the Gary Cooper western The Hanging Tree (1958), in which he had the role of a lecherous half-wit, Malden was credited with one film as director, Time Limit (1957), starring his friend Richard Widmark. This Korean war drama was as taut and gripping as one of his performances, containing many of the pros and cons of his acting style, fervent but sometimes overemphatic.
Brando also directed one film, One Eyed Jacks (1961), a rambling self-indulgent revenge western in which Malden played the heavy, a former outlaw who has betrayed Brando, and who had become a respectable sheriff. Brando’s brooding, somnolent performance was counter-balanced by Malden’s grinning, extrovert one.
Included among Malden’s many varied roles in the 1960s were in two films by John Frankenheimer; as the drunken father in All Fall Down, and the prison warder in Birdman of Alcatraz (both 1962), and was utterly charming in his only musical, Mervyn LeRoy’s Gypsy (1962), though the one number which he got to sing, Together, with Rosalind Russell and Natalie Wood, was cut from the final print. He was also the weak double-dealer in Norman Jewison’s The Cincinnati Kid (1965).
For much of the 1970s Malden was busy playing the veteran police officer Detective Lieutenant Mike Stone in The Streets of San Francisco on television. A widower with 23 years’ experience of the force, he was partnered by Michael Douglas as the 28-year-old Steve Keller, a college graduate.
This lively combination — wise old head versus eager young enthusiast — produced enough sparks to keep it going for five seasons. Before the series began, Kirk Douglas told his son, “If anyone can teach you how to act it’s Karl”.
The rest of his film career was rather patchy; he made up the cast of a few disaster films, turned up in Blake Edwards’s misconceived “existential” western The Wild Rovers (1971), appeared in the dire sequel The Sting II (1982), but made a convincing General Omar Bradley in Patton (1970), having spent some time with the general before taking on the role. His last appearance on screen was as a priest in an episode of The West Wing (2000).
From 1989 Malden was president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Ten years later, he urged the academy to award an honorary Oscar to Elia Kazan. This was bitterly opposed by many who had never forgiven Kazan for being a “friendly witness” before the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1952. However, the apolitical Malden prevailed. “If anyone deserved this honorary award because of his talent and body of work, it was Kazan,” he remarked.
Malden, who is survived by his wife of more than 70 years, the former actor Mona Graham, and two daughters, once commented: “I’ve been incredibly lucky. I always knew I wasn’t a leading man — take a took at this face! But I felt: if I can make it the way I look, others can.”
The “Guardian” obituary can also be accessed here.
Charles Dierkop was born in 1936 in Wisconsin. He is best known for his role with Angie Dickinson in television’s “Police Woman”. His films include “The Hustler” and “Blood Red”.
Dennis Weaver was born in 1924 in Missouri. His first role on Broadway was as understudy in William Inge’s “Come Back Little Sheba” . In 1952 he got a contract with Universal studios and made his movie debut in “The Redhead from Wyoming” which starred Maureen O’Hara. He went on to make “Touch of Evil” with Charlton Heston and Orson Welles in 1958 and in 1967 in “Duel at Diable” a Western with James Garner, Sidney Poitier and Bill Travers. It is though on television that he achieved his greatest fame, in “Gunsmoke” as Chester Goode and as the title character in “McCloud” which began in 1970. He died in 2006 at the age of 81.
Anthony Hayward’s obituary of Dennis Weaver in “The Independent”:
Dennis Weaver was familiar in his Stetson to television viewers worldwide – first as the limping deputy sheriff, Chester Goode, to James Arness’s Matt Dillon in the classic western series Gunsmoke, then as the cowboy- lawman causing mayhem in the big city in McCloud. “McCloud was the kind of role I left Gunsmoke to get,” he said. “I wanted to be a leading man instead of a second banana.”
But the second banana was part of one of the biggest success stories in television’s so-called Golden Age. He played the sheriff’s number two during Gunsmoke’s early years (1955-64), speaking with a twang and always calling his 6ft 7in boss “Muster Dellon”.
The series, set in Dodge City during the late 19th century and styled as an “adult” western, but effectively a weekly morality play, began on radio and was given John Wayne’s seal of approval on screen when the film star – who turned down the lead role but recommended Arness – introduced the first episode. (In Britain, the programme was entitled Gun Law.) It continued until 1975, making it television’s longest-running western, but Weaver – whose performance won him an Emmy Best Supporting Actor award in 1959 – left halfway through, looking to be top banana himself.
He eventually resurfaced in McCloud (1970-77), as the law enforcer from Taos, New Mexico, despatched to New York to study policing methods in the Big Apple’s 27th Precinct. But, wearing a cowpoke hat, sheepskin jacket and boots, Deputy Marshal Sam McCloud went his own way and treated Manhattan like the Wild West.
Inspired by the 1968 Clint Eastwood film Coogan’s Bluff, the series had its tongue firmly in its cheek. McCloud was watched over by Police Chief Peter B. Clifford (J.D. Cannon), who was bemused as he watched his horse-riding subordinate bring rush-hour traffic to a halt on the streets of New York. Talking in a folksy, “down on the range” manner, McCloud brought with him from down south the catchphrase “There you go”.
Weaver was himself from south-west Missouri, born in 1924 in Joplin, where his father worked for the electric company and farmed 10 acres during the Depression. Weaver excelled as a track and field athlete, served in the US Navy during the Second World War, then graduated from the University of Oklahoma with a fine arts degree.
Although, in 1948, he came sixth in the United States’s decathon trials for the London Olympics, he opted for a stage career and studied at the Actors Studio, New York. After making his professional début as understudy for the role of a college athlete, Turk, in the Broadway production of Come Back, Little Sheba (Booth Theatre, 1950), he toured in that play with Shelley Winters and Sidney Blackmer, before gaining further stage experience in Tennessee Williams’s The Glass Menagerie and A Streetcar Named Desire (as Stanley Kowalski), and Arthur Miller’s All My Sons.
On the recommendation of Winters, Universal signed Weaver to a film contract and he made his screen début in the western Horizons West (alongside Robert Ryan and Rock Hudson, 1952). Twenty pictures followed, many of them westerns, as well as five bit parts in the television police series Dragnet (1954-55), before Weaver landed the role of Chester Goode in Gunsmoke.
He then had moderate success in two family dramas, as a vet and horse trainer who adopts a Chinese orphan in Kentucky Jones (1964-65) and the park ranger, Tom Wedloe, in Gentle Ben (1967-69), featuring a friendly, 600lb black bear.
While he was taking off as McCloud, Weaver also made waves in an American television film that gained cinema screenings around the world. Directed by Steven Spielberg, Duel (1971) starred the actor as a salesman driving along California backroads who finds himself in a nightmare tussle with a menacing petrol tanker.
He never quite left his western background behind, starring in the television series Buck James (1987-88) as a Texas hospital doctor who has a passion for ranching and the patriarch, Henry Ritter, trying to save his ranch from financial ruin while offering a new life to an 18-year-old girl out of a teen detention centre in Wildfire (2005).
Weaver was President of the Screen Actors Guild, 1973-75, and donned his western gear for Great Western Bank commercials from 1982, a role he took over from John Wayne after “The Duke’s” death.
A keen environmentalist, he had his solar-powered, 8,500sq ft, 16-room Colorado home built out of 3,000 recycled tyres and 3,000 aluminium cans and called it his “Earthship”. He also founded the Institute of Ecolonomics to tackle both economic and environmental problems. Appropriately, when he reprised one of his most famous characters in the television film The Return of Sam McCloud (1989), the law enforcer had become a New Mexico senator fighting for new environmental laws.
Anthony Hayward
The above “Guardian” obituary can also be accessed online here.