This month is all about our favorite characters. Richard Slattery definitely fits the bill.
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Born in New York in 1925, Slattery attended Blessed Sacrament grade school and then graduated from All Hallows High School before attending Fordham University under a track and football scholarship. At one point, he seriously considered attending seminary to become a Jesuit priest. During WWII, he left school to join the US Air Force, serving as a lieutenant in the Pacific Theater.
After returning home, he became a police officer in 1947, working in New York until 1958. His father was a policeman, so it was a natural fit for him. He worked in several precincts including the tough 41st station in the Bronx and as a plainclothes man for a vice squad.
He appeared in a few police academy training films at a community theater in the Bronx which gave him the acting bug. While working as a cop, he also appeared in several off-Broadway productions, finally making it to a Broadway show in 1961. About that time he asked for a yearâs leave of absence from his police duty to see if he could make acting a paid profession. He never returned to the force.
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For three decades from the sixties through the eighties, you could see him on many of your favorite shows. His first television episode was Deadline in 1959 and his last was in Dragnet in 1990. In between he appeared in 82 different series.
Most of his roles were as policemen. Forty-eight of his 108 credits were for a policeman or military man including the three shows he joined as a cast member. In 1962 he was Sgt McKenna on The Gallant Men for 26 episodes. The description for this show on imdb is âThe 36th infantry is fighting its way through Italy under the spirited leadership of Captain Jim Benedict. His men include flirt D’Angelo, who carries his guitar along, plus pals Lucavich and Hanson. McKenna is the free-wheeling Sergeant.â
In 1965 he took on Captain Morton for 30 episodes on Mister Roberts, which is described as âLt. Roberts is far from the war action while stationed on The Reluctant, a cargo ship. While trying to get transferred he must also deal with irascible Captain Morton while trying to reign in the impulsive Ensign Pulver.â
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His last regular role was in 1977 when he joined CPO Sharkey as Captain Buckner for 22 episodes. This one starred Don Rickles as an acid-tongued officer who is verbally abusive to his men, a band of misfits, even though itâs obvious he cares for them and wants them to succeed. I remember watching, or trying to watch this one, when it aired. It was just too hard hitting for me, at least at that time. However, Rickles was always too vicious for me as a comic also.
Another role Slattery was known for was Murph the gas station attendant for Union 76 gasoline station ads for 17 years.
Slattery followed the formula of the third time being the charm in his marriages. In 1958 he married actress Pegeen Rose, and they were together for a decade. In 1970 he tried again with Mary Shelquist, and they made it 9 years. In 1988 he married Helene Vergauwen and they were together until his death nine years later. He was buried at sea off the coast of Catalina Island.
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Catalina Island was his home for the last decade or so of his life. He and his wife owned several shops including Sea Rags and Driftless gift stores, Boots and Straps shoe store, and Murphâs Wok Away Chinese take out. He was part of the menâs club and the theater on the Island. He also was an avid golfer and is often mentioned in the paper at celebrity tournaments or golfing with friends. The one sport he didnât do on the Island was boating! He got sea sick and did not even own a boat.
While he definitely was often typecast as a policeman, it is what he did for his first career for more than a decade. Iâm glad he got the chance to become an actor. I’m even more glad that although he died at a young 71 years of age, he was able to enjoy life on the Island after his retirement.
We are right in the middle of our âMen of Novemberâ blog series, and today we spend some time getting to know a prolific television and film star, Brian Keith.
Photo: wikipedia.com
Brian Keith (Robert Alba Keith) was born in 1921 in New Jersey. His parents were both actors. They divorced shortly after his birth and at age 2, he moved to Hollywood and made his acting debut in a silent film, Pied Piper Malone, at the age of three.
While his mother was relocating for stage and radio work, his grandmother raised him on Long Island, New York.
His father remarried in 1927, but his second wife, Peg Entwistle, was involved in a tragic incident which is one of the Hollywood legends. She committed suicide by jumping of the H of the iconic Hollywood sign.
Photo: pinterest.com
After high school graduation, Keith joined the US Marine Corps from 1942-5. He served as a machine gunner and received an Air Medal.
In an interview with the Press and Sun-Bulletin in 1966, Keith related that he had no intention of becoming an actor. He had a passion for a career at sea and wanted to go to school at the Merchant Marine Academy. He said unfortunately, âYou canât be a shipâs officer without passing a few math courses and I came up with a big fat zero in algebra. In fact, no matter how many times I repeated the course, it still came up zero. So, it was goodbye Navy career.â
After the war, Brian decided to follow in his parentsâ footsteps and made his Broadway debut in 1948 in Mister Roberts. His father played Doc in the same production.
While working on television, Keith also began appearing on the big screen. During his career, he would he would make 65 movies. In the fifties he was in Storm Center with Bette Davis and The Young Philadelphians with Paul Newman.
Crusader Photo: sitcomsonline.com
While continuing to appear on the stage, television was starting to pull him in that direction. He was given his first television role in 1951 in Hands of Mystery. He did a variety of television work in the 1950s, starting off in more dramas and ending the decade in westerns. Last week we learned a bit about Gale Gordon. If you remember, Gale starred in a short-lived series called The Box Brothers, and Brian happened to be in one of those episodes in 1957. From 1955-56, he received a regular role on Crusader, making 52 episodes. He starred as Matt Anders, a journalist who, in the aftermath of his motherâs death in a Nazi concentration camp during World War II, travels the world to battle injustice.
The Westerner Photo: nostalgiacentral.com
Moving into the sixties, Keith continued his western appearances and was given the lead in Sam Peckinpahâs television series, The Westerner. Unfortunately, it only lasted for 13 episodes. Keith said that âonly four or five of those were any good, but those four or five were as good as anything anybody has ever done.â He played Dave Blassingame, a cowboy drifter who sometimes does questionable things trying to earn enough money to buy a ranch, but in the end, always does the right thing.
The Parent Trap Photo: pinterest.com
It was also in the sixties that he began his connection with Disney, starring in The Parent Trap in 1961.
During this decade, he was offered a show of his own that he is probably best known forâFamily Affair. From 1966-1971, he appeared as Bill Davis, an engineer, who takes in his two nieces and nephew when their parents are killed. Kathy Garver, Anissa Jones, and Johnny Whitaker played the kids and Sebastian Cabot was Mr. French, who helped raise the children. Keith received three Emmy nominations for Best Actor in a Comedy Series, but lost to Don Adams for Get Smart from all three years, 1967-1969, (In 1968 Sebastian Cabot was also nominated for Best Actor and the show was nominated for Best Comedy in 1968 and 1969, losing to Get Smart.)
Photo: dailytimes.com
Brian received the same type of contract as Fred MacMurray did in My Three Sons. It allowed him to tape his work in two-three months, leaving three-quarters of the year for traveling, relaxation, and film work.
With Six You Get Eggroll Photo: pinterest.com
During the seriesâ run, he continued to make films including With Six You Get Eggroll with Doris Day.
The Brian Keith Show Photo: pinterest.com
When Family Affair ended, it set off a rapid production of shows starring Keith, most of them with short runs. The Brian Keith Show was on air from 1972-74; Keith was pediatrician Dr. Sean Jamison and worked with his daughter played by Shelly Fabares. Keith said he accepted the role because the show was produced by Garry Marshall and it was shot in Hawaii.
Photo: amazon.com
In 1974 he accepted the lead in a six-part miniseries, The Zoo Gang about a group of underground French resistance fighters. In 1975 we saw him in Archer, a television series about a detective which also ran only six episodes. Keith described Archer as âan underdog. He gets beaten. Heâs no superhuman. He drives a broken-down Mustang. Heâs not particularly fond of the finer things in life. Music is noise to him, painting is decoration, sculpture is âthat stuffâ and he doesnât read books.â
Hardcastle and McCormick Photo: pinterest.com
In 1983, Keith co-starred with Daniel Hugh Kelly in Hardcastle and McCormick. Keith portrayed a retired judge Milton Hardcastle while Kelly was ex-con Mark McCormick. The duo team up because the ex-judge was tired of people getting off on technicalities. The show was on the air for three years.
Photo: sitcomsonline.com
The following year, he began a stint on The Pursuit of Happiness which only lasted for ten episodes. In a different role for him, he played Professor Roland Duncan who taught at a small college in Philadelphia.
Photo: sitcomsonline.com
1989 found him on Heartland which was also cancelled after ten episodes. On this show, Keith played BL McCutcheon, an older farmer who loses his farm and moves in with this daughter and her family, a bit of a rural Archie Bunker.
During the 1990s, Keith showed up on a variety of shows including Young Riders, Evening Shade, Major Dad, Cybill, Pacific Blue, and Walker Texas Ranger. He tried his hand at one more sitcom, starring in Walter and Emily. After 13 episodes, the show was finished. Keith is Walter Collins. He and his wife Emily (Cloris Leachman) help raise their grandson while their son Matt travels for his sports writing career.
Keith lived on a 200-acre ranch in Redlands, California. Brian had a lot of hobbies including golfing, swimming, cooking, sailing, horseback riding, spending time with his family, painting, and reading. When asked about whether he wanted to live a long life, he said, âIf I live to be a hundredâand I hope I doâI wonât have time to read all the books I want to read or talk to the people I want to know. Not party talk. Thatâs a waste of time. Real talk.â
While Keith had a successful career, his personal life was not as sunny. He was married three times to Frances Helm from 1948 to 1954, to Judy Landon, an actress who made an appearance on Family Affair from 1954 till 1969, and to Victoria Young, another actress who showed up on The Brian Keith Show as a nurse, from 1970 till his death.
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He also suffered from several physical problems. He had been a long-time smoker, and suffered from both emphysema and lung cancer. He had been a spokesperson for Camel Cigarettes in the 1950s but quit smoking in the late 80s.
Brianâs son, Michael died from pneumonia when he was eight. In 1997, his daughter Daisy committed suicide when she was 27. Daisy had also entered the acting profession and worked with her dad on Heartland. Daisyâs death and financial problems pulled Keith into a depression and he committed suicide in June of 1997.
Early in his career, Keith established a stereotype as the handsome, burly guy with the gruff voice, but he transitioned into that character who also had moments of warmth and humor.
Photo: amazon.com
I love his performance in The Parent Trap, and I like to picture Keith as being Mitch in real life, a guy who loves his kids and his ranch and takes pleasure in a variety of outdoor activities but also savors reading on the porch.
Keith remained close to Maureen OâHara, his costar in the Parent Trap as well as with Kathy Garver and Johnny Whitaker. (Anissa Jones died from a fatal overdose in 1976 at age 18.)
Photo: pinterest.com
With more than 166 acting credits, Keith had a full and successful career and brought a lot of enjoyment to generations of fans during his six decades as an actor. He had to endure a lot of heartache off the camera. Both Family Affair and Hardcastle and McCormick are worth watching if you have a free weekend. You can also see a lot of amazing performances of his on the large screen.