Zoneboy
02-25-2006, 09:54 PM
http://www.darrenmcgavin.net
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View Full Version : Darren McGavin Has Passed Away Zoneboy 02-25-2006, 09:54 PM http://www.darrenmcgavin.net staypuftman2004 02-25-2006, 10:28 PM :rip: Kristen 02-26-2006, 12:12 AM Awww, that's sad. :( I loved him on Murphy Brown. Madness 02-26-2006, 12:35 AM Wow, another celebrity passes away:( I liked him on A Christmas Story. R.I.P. 80sTrivia 02-26-2006, 08:56 AM So very sad to hear of Darren's passing. A Christmas Story is one of my all-time favorite movies and he was brilliant in that role. He will be missed... :( tv star collector 02-26-2006, 09:13 AM I remember Darren from RIVERBOAT, KOLCHAK: THE NIGHT STALKER and many, many other TV shows and movies. A great actor. Will certainly be missed. Did you know he played a cop in Jerry Lewis's first solo movie ("The Delicate Delinquent"), in a role originally written for Dean Martin? Lamont 02-26-2006, 10:16 AM to real sci fi nerds like me, KOLCHAK THE NIGHT STALKER was the ultimate in cool in the 1970s not to mention is fine work on Riverboat, Mike Hammer and more sorry to see him go http://entertainment.tv.yahoo.com/entnews/ap/20060226/114096234000.html sbeamish 02-26-2006, 10:23 AM I remember him from The Night Stalker and The Delicate Delinquent, but I really came to love him as "The Old Man" from A Christmas Story. Like my father, he sounded tough, but he loved his family. staypuftman2004 02-26-2006, 11:27 AM :( ABlairican Pie 02-26-2006, 12:05 PM Actor Darren McGavin dies at 83 Played dad in classic ‘A Christmas Story,’ TV private eye Mike Hammer The Associated Press Updated: 11:53 p.m. ET Feb. 25, 2006 LOS ANGELES - Darren McGavin, the husky, tough-talking actor who starred in the TV series “Mike Hammer,” played a grouchy dad in the holiday classic “A Christmas Story” and had other strong roles in such films as “The Man with the Golden Arm” and “The Natural,” died Saturday. He was 83. http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/j/msnbc/Components/Photos/060225/060225_mcgavin_vsml_9p.vsmall.jpgDarren McGavin is seen in character as Mike Hammer in this 1958 file photo. The actor died Saturday at age 83. McGavin died of natural causes at a Los Angeles-area hospital with his family at his side, said his son Bogart McGavin. McGavin made his film debut in 1945 when he switched from painter of movie sets to bit actor in “A Song to Remember.” After a decade of learning his craft in New York, he returned to Hollywood and became one of the busiest actors in television and films. He starred in five series, including cult favorite “Kolchak: The Night Stalker” and “Riverboat,” and became a prolific actor in TV movies. Among his memorable portrayals was Gen. George Patton in the 1979 TV biography “Ike.” Despite his busy career in television, McGavin was awarded only one Emmy: in 1990 for an appearance as Candice Bergen’s opinionated father in an episode of “Murphy Brown.” He may be best recognized for his role as the hot-tempered father of a boy yearning for the gift of a BB gun in the 1983 comedy “A Christmas Story.” The film has become a holiday-season staple on TV. Strong supporting roles in film McGavin lacked the prominence in films he enjoyed in television, but he registered strongly in featured roles such as the young artist in Venice in “Summertime,” David Lean’s 1955 film with Katharine Hepburn and Rosanno Brazzi; Frank Sinatra’s crafty drug supplier in “The Man with the Golden Arm” (1955); and Jerry Lewis’s parole officer in “The Delicate Delinquent.” McGavin’s other films include “The Court-martial of Billy Mitchell,” “Airport ’77” and “Billy Madison.” Throughout his television career, McGavin gained a reputation as a curmudgeon willing to bad-mouth his series and combat studio bosses. Of the private eye series “Mike Hammer,” he told a reporter in 1968: “Hammer was a dummy. I made 72 of those shows, and I thought it was a comedy. In fact, I played it camp. He was the kind of guy who would’ve waved the flag for George Wallace.” McGavin’s other series: “Crime Photographer,” “The Outsider” and a short-lived sitcom, “Small & Frye.” Childhood on the run Born in Spokane, Wash., McGavin was sketchy in interviews about his childhood. He told TV Guide in 1973 that he was a constant runaway at 10 and 11, and as a teen lived in warehouses in Tacoma, Wash., and dodged the police and welfare workers. His parents disappeared, he said. He spent a year at College of the Pacific in Stockton, Calif., taking part in dramatics, then landed in Los Angeles. He washed dishes and was hired to paint sets at Columbia studio. He was working on “A Song to Remember” when an agent told him of an opening for a small role. “I climbed off a painter’s ladder and washed up at a nearby gas station,” McGavin said. “I returned through Columbia’s front gate with the agent.” The director, Charles Vidor, hired him. No one recognized him but the paint foreman, who said, “You’re fired.” McGavin studied at the Neighborhood Playhouse and the Actors Studio and began working in live TV drama and on Broadway. He appeared with Charlton Heston in “Macbeth” on TV and played Happy in “Death of a Salesman” in New York and on the road. His strong presence and assertiveness made him an ideal star for TV drama series. He is survived by his four children York, Megan, Bridget and Bogart. © 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. © 2006 MSNBC.com savageamusement 02-26-2006, 12:06 PM a sad weekend for tv fans......:crying: :crying: Polniaczek033 02-26-2006, 12:08 PM :( First Don Knotts, now this? :rip: swedeace 02-26-2006, 12:13 PM Oh, that's sad. :( Janice 02-26-2006, 12:22 PM I always liked him. When I was a teen, I thought he was so handsome. Cactus Jack 02-26-2006, 12:27 PM RIP Darren :( http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B0001I55QA.01._SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg cooltvshows 02-26-2006, 03:42 PM Some folks who have only recently begun trading old TV shows or who are younger than a certain age range may not even remember Darren McGavin except possibly for his role in A Christmas Story from 1983. He became known as the King of TV Movies in the 1970s, when the ABC TV Movie of the Week spawned many imitations and the TV movie reached its zenith. (Since the 1990s, the TV movie has largely disappeared, with the major networks producing only a tiny fraction of the TV movies they once did. From 1970 to roughly 1990, TV fans could count on seeing at least 2 or 3 different TV movies every week...many of them superbly written and brilliantly acted, like Short Walk To Daylight, or High Ice or Money To Burn or Deliver Us From Evil or City Beneath The Sea or Earth II or The Alpha Caper or The Stranger Within.) Darren McGavin's fame rests on his superb performances in many of those 70s TV movies. Sometimes it seems like McGavin was in half of them. Kolchak The Night Stalker became justifiably famous...but remember that Kolchak the series actually started out as two extremely popular TV movies, both aired on the ABC TV Movie of the Week. The Night Stalker was at that time the highest-rated TV Movie ever broadcast, written by Richard Matheson, the author of classic screenplays like The Incredible Shrinking Man and the adaptation of Jules Verne's Master of the World (a very fine adaptation, which collapsed both of Verne's novels Master of the World and Robur the Conquerer into a single screenplay.) McGavin only ever had 2 TV series of his own: the very early 1950s series Mike Hammer and the short-lived Kolchak the Night Stalker. Many outstanding screenwriters and directors who later became hugely famous and successful, like Richard Donner, started out doing TV movies. McGavin never stopped doing TV movies and TV series guest star roles. He didn't ever break out into the big screen in a big way. As a result, he never got an academy award and never got any special honors as far as I know (did he ever even win an Emmy?), but he was a superb actor, and his incredible body of work remains immensely impressive. TV movies like The Challenge remain classics, even 35 years after they were made. Darren McGavin's great performances in TV movies like The Challenge and The Death Of Me Yet and Tribes and Something Evil and The Night Strangler were a huge part of the reason why those TV movies are still so much fun to watch so many years after they were made. Sharop 02-26-2006, 07:19 PM I've only seen him in "A Christmas Story", but really liked him in that. Remember how fascinated he was with that leg lamp? "It's a major prize, a major prize! Isn't it beautiful? I know just the place for it! Right in the middle of our front room window!" KristenJ 02-26-2006, 07:28 PM :( gosh this is so sad! Jonathan 02-26-2006, 08:32 PM I loved him in A Christmas Story. Rest In Peace. Mrs. John Ritter 02-26-2006, 09:50 PM Wow. That is so sad. I loved him on A Christmas Story. I can't believe he died. He will be missed. R.I.P Darren McGavin *Pleasant Tomorrow* 02-26-2006, 10:29 PM RIP :( |