View Full Version : Pernell Roberts Dies at 81


Zoneboy
01-25-2010, 08:01 PM
Link (http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-pernell-roberts26-2010jan26,0,6902139.story)

Pernell Roberts, a versatile actor best remembered for his portrayal of the handsome, eldest Cartwright son on the classic television western "Bonanza" and later as the lead character in the medical drama "Trapper John, M.D.," died at his Malibu home Sunday. He was 81.

His death after a two-year battle with cancer was confirmed by his wife, Eleanor Criswell.

Roberts became a star as Adam Cartwright, the heir apparent of the fictional Ponderosa ranch, a role he filled from the show's debut in 1959 until 1965, when he left the cast despite the series' immense popularity. "Bonanza" remained on the air for eight more years without him.

The longest-running TV western after "Gunsmoke" and the first to be broadcast in color, “Bonanza” broke the mold for its genre with its emphasis on character development over gunplay. The cast was headed by Lorne Greene, who played thrice-widowed patriarch Ben, and also featured Dan Blocker as the lovably oafish middle son, Hoss, and Michael Landon as the hot-headed youngest son, Little Joe.

Roberts was the well-educated and mature brother, who played Adam with a suave manner that won a legion of fans. He found the role unfulfilling, however, and left the show at its peak, a decision that caused him to be "scratched off by most of his contemporary fellow actors as some kind of a nut," Times critic Hal Humphrey wrote in 1967.

Roberts had several complaints, chief among which was the relationship between Ben Cartwright and his grown sons. "Isn't it just a bit silly for three adult males to get Father's permission for everything they do?" Roberts said in the Washington Post a few years before he departed the cast. "I have an impotent role. Everywhere I turn, there's the father image."

A political liberal who later took part in civil rights protests, he also chafed at the mostly white complexion of the cast. The notable exception was Victor Sen Yung, who played a stereotypical Chinese house servant.

Born May 18, 1928, in Waycross, Ga., Roberts grew up poor on the edge of the state's Okefenokee Swamp. In high school, he played the horn and acted in school and church plays.

He attended Georgia Tech and the University of Maryland but did not earn a degree from either institution, and he served in the Marine Corps band at Quantico, Va.

He began his theatrical career in 1950 at the Arena Stage in Washington, D.C, where he performed in more than a dozen plays. In 1952 he moved to New York City and appeared in one-act operas and ballets with the North American Lyric Theater.

In 1955 he won a Drama Desk Award as the best off-Broadway actor for his performance in "Macbeth." On Broadway he appeared with Joanne Woodward in "The Lovers."

In 1957 he arrived in Hollywood and won roles in three movies, including "Desire Under the Elms" (1958), which starred Sophia Loren, Anthony Perkins and Burl Ives.

True stardom eluded him, however, until he landed the part of Cartwright's No. 1 son in NBC's "Bonanza."

He helped his TV family maintain the ranch and fight off desperadoes and other scoundrels for six years, during which he also was given the opportunity to show off his singing voice a number of times.

But he frequently clashed with the show's writers and producer "about the scripts, character development and other things" and grew so unhappy about "artistic compromises" that he became, as one headline described his decision, a "Bonanza Deserter." His character was written out of the show.

Some of Roberts' first television roles after leaving "Bonanza" were on rival westerns, including "Gunsmoke," "The Big Valley" and "The Virginian."

He also appeared on other leading series of the 1970s, such as "Hawaii Five-O" and "Marcus Welby, M.D."

His comeback role was Dr. John McIntyre in the CBS drama “Trapper John, M.D.” based on the character from the popular comedy "MASH."

His work in "Trapper John" earned Roberts an Emmy nomination for best dramatic actor in 1981.

After the show ended in 1986, he made guest appearances on other series and TV movies, narrated a documentary and hosted the short-lived "FBI: The Untold Stories" (1991). He retired in the late 1990s.

A son from his first marriage, Chris, died in 1989. He is survived by Criswell, his fourth wife. Services will be private.

Roberts said in several interviews that he harbored no regrets about abandoning "Bonanza," which he said he left "for my own good."

He outlived the other Cartwrights: Blocker died in 1972, Greene in 1987 and Landon in 1991.


http://www.latimes.com/media/photo/2010-01/51846487.jpg

Mr. Television
01-25-2010, 08:05 PM
Wow this is so sad. Now all of the Cartwrights have passed on. I loved him in Trapper John M.D. too. That was my favorite medical tv show of all time. R.I.P. Pernell. :(

Marvo301
01-25-2010, 08:08 PM
:rip: Pernell Roberts.

catlover79
01-25-2010, 09:17 PM
:rip: How sad. Which Bonanza cast members are even left now, besides David Canary and Mitch Vogel?

Scoobiedoo30
01-25-2010, 10:20 PM
RIP

Pitooey
01-25-2010, 10:51 PM
He will be missed. :(

DLevine2
01-25-2010, 10:53 PM
R.I.P. Pernell:( :rip:

simmytbone
01-25-2010, 10:56 PM
:rip: How sad. Which Bonanza cast members are even left now, besides David Canary and Mitch Vogel?

Tim Matheson who played Grif in the 14th and Final Season of Bonanza

and also, the only remaining cast members of Trapper John, M.D. are Gregory Harrison, Christopher Norris, Brian Stokes Mitchell, Charles Siebert, Timothy Busfield, Lorna Luft, Kip Gilman and Janis Page

Zoneboy
01-25-2010, 10:57 PM
Hopefully Tv Land will do a tribute of some sort.

catlover79
01-25-2010, 11:53 PM
Tim Matheson who played Grif in the 14th and Final Season of Bonanza

and also, the only remaining cast members of Trapper John, M.D. are Gregory Harrison, Christopher Norris, Brian Stokes Mitchell, Charles Siebert, Timothy Busfield, Lorna Luft, Kip Gilman and Janis Page
Thanks! I know that both Tim Matheson and Mitch Vogel co-starred in Yours, Mine and Ours but never knew they were both on Bonanza!! :cool:

Mr. Television
01-26-2010, 12:00 AM
Hopefully Tv Land will do a tribute of some sort.
They should air some Trapper John episodes but I wouldn't count on it. Maybe they will have a Bonanza marathon though.

catlover79
01-26-2010, 12:02 AM
They should air some Trapper John episodes but I wouldn't count on it. Maybe they will have a Bonanza marathon though.
I think they still have the rights to Bonanza but am not sure. I think the last time I saw Trapper John MD was when it originally aired - and I was a little kid then!! :eek:

Mr. Television
01-26-2010, 12:07 AM
I think they still have the rights to Bonanza but am not sure. I think the last time I saw Trapper John MD was when it originally aired - and I was a little kid then!! :eek:
I remember seeing Trapper John in syndication but I think that was back in the 1980's or early 1990's. :eek: It was my favorite Medical Show. CBS sure had a great Sunday lineup back then. Trapper John had just the right amount of comedy and drama. They just don't make shows like that anymore. :cool:

catlover79
01-26-2010, 12:19 AM
I remember seeing Trapper John in syndication but I think that was back in the 1980's or early 1990's. :eek: It was my favorite Medical Show. CBS sure had a great Sunday lineup back then. Trapper John had just the right amount of comedy and drama. They just don't make shows like that anymore. :cool:
They don't - and it's such a shame. :( :mad:

Marvo301
01-26-2010, 12:24 AM
I remember seeing Trapper John in syndication but I think that was back in the 1980's or early 1990's. :eek: It was my favorite Medical Show. CBS sure had a great Sunday lineup back then. Trapper John had just the right amount of comedy and drama. They just don't make shows like that anymore. :cool:
Finding a balance between comedy and drama isn't easy and I'm afraid today's TV writers just aren't up to the task.

TV Knowledge Fan
01-26-2010, 12:51 AM
"Today's" TV LAND is radically different from the one established almost 14 years ago. The "original" TV LAND would have immediately scheduled a night of "BONANZA" episodes spotlighting Pernell Roberts- but the current regime has no time for that sort of "sentimentality". They're on the air to "push the product", and make as much profit from their "inventory" as possible....even if they have to schedule insipid "reality" shows and spotlight "baby-boomer" movies more than "repeats" (you watch and see how fast they'll "forget" about "BEWITCHED" after it returns in March)- even if they program multiple "blocks" of "THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW", "BONANZA", "GUNSMOKE", "ROSEANNE", "THE COSBY SHOW", et. al.

NBC did the same thing after Bob Hope died in 2003- they paid about two minutes of "tributes" to his memory shortly after his death, then went right into Jeff Zucker's pride and (ratings) joy that summer...."FEAR FACTOR".

Yeah, well, maybe TV LAND will pay some kind of "tribute" to Pernell Roberts. But it won't be a heartfelt one. "Okay, let's get this over with-we got 'HIGH SCHOOL REUNION', next".


:mad:

Zoneboy
01-26-2010, 12:54 AM
"Today's" TV LAND is radically different from the one established almost 14 years ago. The "original" TV LAND would have immediately scheduled a night of "BONANZA" episodes spotlighting Pernell Roberts- but the current regime has no time for that sort of "sentimentality". They're on the air to "push the product", and make as much profit from their "inventory" as possible....even if they have to schedule insipid "reality" shows and spotlight "baby-boomer" movies more than "repeats" (you watch and see how fast they'll "forget" about "BEWITCHED" after it returns in March)- even if they program multiple "blocks" of "THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW", "BONANZA", "GUNSMOKE", "ROSEANNE", "THE COSBY SHOW", et. al.

NBC did the same thing after Bob Hope died in 2003- they paid about two minutes of "tributes" to his memory shortly after his death, then went right into Jeff Zucker's pride and (ratings) joy that summer...."FEAR FACTOR".

Yeah, well, maybe TV LAND will pay some kind of "tribute" to Pernell Roberts. But it won't be a heartfelt one. "Okay, let's get this over with-we got 'HIGH SCHOOL REUNION', next".


:mad:


I guess this makes me look dumb for even questioning if they would do a tribute but whether it does or not doesn't matter, The fact is that you're right.

TV Knowledge Fan
01-26-2010, 01:06 AM
You're not "dumb", 'Zoneboy'....

they are, for not appreciating "classic TV" anymore. Especially someone of Pernell Roberts' stature.


:cheers:

Mr. Television
01-26-2010, 01:17 AM
You're not "dumb", 'Zoneboy'....

they are, for not appreciating "classic TV" anymore. Especially someone of Pernell Roberts' stature.


:cheers:
I remember when they did John Ritter's tribute. I watched TV Land everynight that week. They are a shell of what they once were. They barely acknowledged Aaron Spelling when he died so I doubt they'll do much for Pernell Roberts.

catlover79
01-26-2010, 02:22 AM
You're not "dumb", 'Zoneboy'....

they are, for not appreciating "classic TV" anymore. Especially someone of Pernell Roberts' stature.


:cheers:
BINGO!! TV Land is one of the biggest sell-outs of this past decade!! :mad: :mad: :mad: :mad: :mad:

MickeyMac
01-26-2010, 10:24 AM
Wow all the Cartwrights are gone now.:(

AB
01-26-2010, 06:11 PM
:rip: Very sad news, I always enjoyed watching him on Bonanza.

Ohio8
01-26-2010, 08:46 PM
:rip:

Zoneboy
01-30-2010, 10:08 PM
TVLand.com is inviting fans of Bonanza to vote for their favorite episodes of the series in honor of Pernell Roberts, who died recently of cancer at age 81.

Viewer-selected episodes will be showcased on the Web site for a limited run beginning Feb. 8.

Viewers can cast their vote at www.tvland.com/fullepisodes/bonanza.

TV Land celebrated the series' 50th anniversary in September.

catlover79
01-31-2010, 09:49 AM
TVLand.com is inviting fans of Bonanza to vote for their favorite episodes of the series in honor of Pernell Roberts, who died recently of cancer at age 81.

Viewer-selected episodes will be showcased on the Web site for a limited run beginning Feb. 8.

Viewers can cast their vote at www.tvland.com/fullepisodes/bonanza.

TV Land celebrated the series' 50th anniversary in September.
Well, that's better than nothing! Good to know that they are letting the fans choose their favorite Pernell Roberts eps of Bonanza.

ponytail
02-07-2010, 11:22 AM
I just heard about Pernell passing away. I knew he was in his 80's. It's sad the last of the Cartwrights is gone.

angiefan
02-21-2010, 08:35 PM
He was good looking on Bonanza. I wish Trapper John M.D. was on TV Land or dvd.