Bradford Dillman
- Birth Date:
- 14.04.1930
- Death date:
- 16.01.2018
- Categories:
- Actor
- Nationality:
- american
- Cemetery:
- Set cemetery
Bradford Dillman (April 14, 1930 – January 16, 2018) was an American actor and author.
Spouses
Frieda Harding McIntosh (m. 1956; div. 1962)
Suzy Parker (m. 1963; her death 2003)
Juliette Gréco - partner
Contents
Early life
Bradford Dillman was born on April 14, 1930 in San Francisco, California, the son of Josephine (née Moore) and Dean Dillman, a stockbroker.
Bradford's paternal grandparents were Charles Francis Dillman and Stella Borland Dean. He studied at Town School for Boys and St. Ignatius High School. He later attended the Hotchkiss School in Connecticut, where he became involved in school theatre productions. While at Yale, he enlisted in the U.S. Naval Reserve in 1948. He graduated from Yale University in 1951 with a BA in English Literature. While a student, he was a member of the Yale Dramat, Fence Club, Torch Honor Society, The Society of Orpheus and Bacchus, WYBC and Berzelius.
After graduation, he entered the United States Marine Corps as an officer candidate, training at Parris Island. He was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Marine Corps in September 1951. As he was preparing to deploy to Korea, his orders were changed, and he spent the rest of his time in the Marine Corps, 1951 to 1953, teaching communication in the Instructors' Orientation Course. He was discharged in 1953 at the rank of first lieutenant.
Career
Studying with the Actors Studio, he spent several seasons apprenticing with the Sharon, Connecticut Playhouse before making his professional acting debut in The Scarecrow in 1953.
Broadway
Dillman took his initial Broadway bow in the Eugene O'Neill play Long Day's Journey Into Night in 1956, playing the author's alter ego character Edmund Tyrone and winning a Theatre World Award in the process. The production also featured Frederic March, Florence Eldridge and Jason Robards Jr., and ran for 390 performances until 1958.
In 1955 he appeared in an episode of the Big Picture as an MP patrolling the city of Augusta. In 1957, Katharine Cornell cast him in a Hallmark Hall of Fame television production of Robert E. Sherwood's Pulitzer Prize winning 1940 play, There Shall Be No Night.
20th Century Fox
Dillman was cast in the melodrama A Certain Smile (1958), for which he earned a Golden Globe award. He followed this with In Love and War (1958), a wartime melodrama starring many of 20th Century Fox's young contract players. It was a box office success. So too was Compulsion (1959), starring Dillman, Dean Stockwell and Orson Welles for producer Richard Zanuck and director Richard Fleischer.
Dillman shared a Best Actor award with co-stars Stockwell and Welles at the Cannes Film Festival. After making A Circle of Deception(1960) in London, Dillman was reunited with Welles, Fleischer and Zanuck for Crack in the Mirror (1960), shot in Paris. It was a flop. Back in Hollywood, Fox cast Dillman in support of Yves Montand and Lee Remick in Sanctuary (1961). They also put him in the title role in Francis of Assisi (1961).
Television
When he left Fox, Dillman mostly concentrated on television. He co-starred with Barbara Barrie on The Alfred Hitchcock Hour in the episode "Isabel" (1964) and with Peter Graves in Court Martial (1966). He guest-starred on series such as Ironside, Shane, The Name of the Game, Columbo, Wild Wild West, The Eleventh Hour, Wagon Train, The Greatest Show on Earth, Breaking Point, Mission Impossible, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Barnaby Jones and Three for the Road, and a two part episode of The Man From U.N.C.L.E., which was made into the feature film The Helicopter Spies (1968).
Dillman appeared twice on the Western television series, The Big Valley (1965–69), once in Season 2, episode 15, entitled Day of the Comet, airing on December 26, 1966, and the second time in Season 3, episode 9 appearing in the episode entitled A Noose is Waiting, which aired on November 13, 1967. He appeared in occasional films during this period such as A Rage to Live (1965), Sergeant Ryker(1968), and The Bridge at Remagen (1969).
Dillman played painter Richard Pickman in the TV adaptation of H.P. Lovecraft's 1926 story, "Pickman's Model", presented as the opening act of a December 1971 Night Gallery episode.
Later career
Dillman appeared in made-for-TV movies such as Fear No Evil (1969), Moon of the Wolf (1972), and Deliver Us from Evil (1973).[18] His film work included Escape from the Planet of the Apes (1971), The Way We Were (1973), Gold (1974), Bug (1975), The Enforcer (1976), The Swarm (1978), Piranha (1978), Sudden Impact (1983), and Lords of the Deep (1989). His last known acting appearance was on an episode of Murder, She Wrote in 1995, a series in which he made eight guest appearances.
Dillman's football fan book, Inside the New York Giants, was published in 1995. An autobiography, Are You Anybody?: An Actor's Life, followed in 1997.
Personal life
From 1956 to 1962, Dillman was married to Frieda Harding, and had two children (Jeffrey and Pamela) with her. He met actress and model Suzy Parker during the filming of A Circle of Deception (1960). The couple married on April 20, 1963, and had three children, Dinah, Charles, and Christopher. The marriage lasted until Parker died on May 3, 2003.
Dillman lived for many years in Montecito, California, and helped raise money for medical research. He died in Santa Barbara, Californiaon January 16, 2018, aged 87, from complications of pneumonia.
Bradford Dillman was the actor's real name. He said "Bradford Dillman sounded like a distinguished, phony, theatrical name -- so I kept it."
Selected filmography
- A Certain Smile (1958) - Bertrand Griot
- In Love and War (1958) - Alan Newcombe
- Compulsion (1959) - Arthur A. Straus
- Crack in the Mirror (1960) - Larnier / Claude
- A Circle of Deception (1960) - Capt. Paul Raine
- Sanctuary (1961) - Gowan Stevens
- Francis of Assisi (1961) - Francis Bernardone of Assisi
- Monstrosity (1963) - Narrator (voice, uncredited)
- A Rage to Live (1965) - Sidney Tate
- The Plainsman (1966) - Lt. Stiles
- The Helicopter Spies (1968) - Luther Sebastian (archive footage)
- Sergeant Ryker (1968) - Capt. David Young
- Jigsaw (1968) - Jonathan Fields
- Fear No Evil (1969, TV Movie) - Paul Varney
- The Bridge at Remagen (1969) - Major Barnes
- Black Water Gold (1970, TV Movie) - Lyle Fawcett
- Suppose They Gave a War and Nobody Came? (1970) - Capt. Myerson
- Brother John (1971) - Lloyd Thomas
- The Mephisto Waltz (1971) - Bill Delancey
- Escape from the Planet of the Apes (1971) - Dr. Lewis Dixon
- Five Desperate Women (1971, TV Movie) - Jim Meeker
- The Resurrection of Zachary Wheeler (1971) - Sen. Clayton Zachary Wheeler
- Moon of the Wolf (1972, TV Movie) - Andrew Rodanthe
- Deliver Us from Evil (1973, TV Movie) - Steven Dennis
- The Way We Were (1973) - J.J.
- The Iceman Cometh (1973) - Willie Oban
- Chosen Survivors (1974) - Peter Macomber
- 99 and 44/100% Dead (1974) - Big Eddie
- A Black Ribbon for Deborah (1974) - Michel Lagrange
- Gold (1974) - Manfred Steyner
- The Disappearance of Flight 412 (1974, TV Movie) - Maj. Mike Dunning
- Bug (1975) - James Parmiter
- Mastermind (1976) - Jabez Link
- The Enforcer (1976) - Capt. Jerome McKay
- One Away (1976) - Ruben Bass
- The Hostage Heart (1977, TV Movie) - Dr. Eric Lake
- The Lincoln Conspiracy (1977) - John Wilkes Booth
- The Amsterdam Kill (1977) - Howard Odums
- The Swarm (1978) - Major Baker
- Piranha (1978) - Paul Grogan
- Love and Bullets (1979) - Brickman
- Guyana: Crime of the Century (1979) - Dr. Gary Shaw
- The Memory of Eva Ryker (1980, TV Movie) - Jason Eddington
- Running Scared (1980) - Arthur Jaeger
- The Legend of Walks Far Woman (1982, TV Movie) - Singer
- Sudden Impact (1983) - Captain Briggs
- Treasure of the Amazon (1985) - Clark
- Man Outside (1987) - Frank Simmons
- Lords of the Deep (1989) - Dobler
- Heroes Stand Alone (1989) - Walt Simmons
Source: wikipedia.org
No places
Relation name | Relation type | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Suzy Parker | Wife | ||
2 | Dorian Leigh | Sister in-law | ||
3 | Patrick O'Neal | Coworker | ||
4 | Yves Montand | Coworker |