James Stacy | |
Birth Name: | Maurice William Elias |
Birth Date: | December 23, 1936 |
Birth Place: | Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Death Place: | Ventura, California, U.S. |
Othername: | Jim Stacey Jim Stacy |
Occupation: | Actor |
Years Active: | 1956 - 1992 |
Partner: | Antigoni Tsamparlis (2000–2016; his death) |
Children: | 1 |
Maurice William Elias (December 23, 1936 September 9, 2016), known professionally as James Stacy, was an American film and television actor who starred in the late 1960s TV western Lancer.
In 1973, Stacy was hit by a drunk driver while riding his motorcycle, resulting in his left leg being severed. His left arm, nearly severed in the accident, was later amputated in the hospital. His girlfriend died in the crash. He returned to acting in 1975 before retiring in 1992.
Stacy was born Maurice William Elias on December 23, 1936,[1] in Los Angeles to an Ulster-Scots waitress and a Lebanese American bookmaker.
Stacy made his film debut in Sayonara in 1957, and his television debut in Highway Patrol. He had a recurring role as "Fred" in The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet from 1958 to 1963. During the 1960s he made guest appearances in television shows, including 5 episodes of Gunsmoke, Hazel, The Donna Reed Show, Have Gun - Will Travel, Combat!, and Perry Mason in the 1964 episode "The Case of the Simple Simon" and the series finale "The Case of the Final Fade-out" in 1966.
Stacy is perhaps best remembered as a star of the western series Lancer, along with Andrew Duggan, Wayne Maunder, and Paul Brinegar. Lancer aired on CBS from 1968 to 1970. Stacy played the character "Johnny Madrid Lancer", a former gunslinger, the son of Duggan's character, Murdoch Lancer. Stacy also acted in several motion pictures from the 1950s through the 1970s, including a minor part in the musical South Pacific.
On September 27, 1973, Stacy was taking Claire Cox[2] [3] for a ride on his motorcycle in the Hollywood Hills when a drunken driver struck them. Cox was killed and Stacy lost his left arm and leg. Stacy's ex-wife, actress and singer Connie Stevens, organized a 1974 celebrity gala to raise money for his expenses. The gala, whose attendees included Frank Sinatra and Barbra Streisand, raised $118,000 ($ today).[4] In 1976, Stacy won a $1.9 million lawsuit ($ million today) against the bar that had served the drunk driver.
After his recovery, Stacy appeared in roles created to accommodate his disability. His comeback film was the 1975 Kirk Douglas Western Posse, where he played newspaper editor Harold Hellman, a part Douglas had written for him. In 1977, Stacy starred in the TV movie Just a Little Inconvenience as a double-amputee Vietnam veteran. It earned him his first Primetime Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama or Comedy Special. In 1980, he starred in and produced the TV movie My Kidnapper, My Love. His brother, Louie Elias, a character actor and stuntman, wrote the screenplay, based on the novel by Oscar Saul, to accommodate Stacy's disability. Elias was also the associate producer. Stacy also played Ed, the Bartender in the Disney film Something Wicked This Way Comes.
Stacy's other TV appearances included Hotel, Cagney & Lacey (for which he was nominated for a second Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Guest Performer in a Drama Series) and Highway to Heaven. His last TV role was in five 1990 episodes of the cop series Wiseguy, as Ed Rogosheske.
Stacy was married twice. He married actress and singer Connie Stevens on October 12, 1963, in Hollywood.[5] They were divorced in November 1966.[6] His second marriage was to actress Kim Darby in 1968. They had a daughter, Heather, and divorced in 1969.[7] [8]
In November 1995, Stacy pleaded no contest to a charge of molesting an 11-year-old girl.[9] On December 7, 1995, he failed to appear for sentencing in Ventura County Superior Court and was arrested the next day in a Honolulu, Hawaii hospital after he fled California. He attempted suicide by jumping off a cliff. After recovering, he waived extradition and returned to California. On March 5, 1996, he received a six-year prison sentence. The prosecutor said she believed Stacy might have been eligible for probation for the molestation, but his post-arrest behavior, coupled with two arrests in June 1995 for prowling at the homes of other girls,[10] led her to seek a prison sentence.[11] [12] He served his sentence at the California Institution for Men in Chino, California.
On September 9, 2016, Stacy died of anaphylactic shock in Ventura, California after being administered an antibiotic injection at the office of Dr. Cedric Emery.[13] [14] He was 79.
Stacy is portrayed by Timothy Olyphant in the 2019 Quentin Tarantino film Once Upon a Time in Hollywood starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Brad Pitt.[15]
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1957 | Sayonara | Reporter | Uncredited | |
1958 | Lafayette Escadrille | Alan Nichols | Uncredited | |
1958 | South Pacific | Sailor / Seabee | Credited as Jim Stacey, Uncredited | |
1961 | Like Father, Like Son | Art | Credited as Jim Stacey | |
1963 | Summer Magic | Charles Bryant | ||
1965 | Winter A-Go-Go | Danny Frazer | ||
1965 | A Swingin' Summer | Mickey | ||
1969 | Flareup | Joe Brodnek | ||
1975 | Posse | Harold Hellman | ||
1982 | Double Exposure | B.J. Wilde | Alternative title: Model Killer | |
1983 | Something Wicked This Way Comes | Ed, the Bartender | ||
1991 | F/X2 | Cyborg | Alternative title: F/X 2: The Deadly Art of Illusion |
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1956–1963 | The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet | Fred | 19 episodes | |
1957 | Highway Patrol | Young Man in Car | Episode: "Female Hitchhiker" | |
1962 | Shannon | Cracker Coe | Episode: "The Jungle Kid" | |
1962 | Have Gun – Will Travel | Johnny Tully | Episode: "Man in an Hourglass" | |
1962 | The Donna Reed Show | Danny Steve | 2 episodes | |
1962 | Cheyenne | Luther James | Episode: "Showdown at Oxbend" | |
1963 | Hazel | Episode: "The Baby Came C.O.D." | ||
1964–1966 | Perry Mason | Scott Everett Barry Conrad | 2 episodes | |
1964–1973 | Gunsmoke | Various roles | 5 episodes | |
1965 | Mister Roberts | Episode: "Just Getting There Is Half the Fun" | ||
1966 | And Baby Makes Three | Dr. Peter Cooper | unsold TV pilot | |
1966 | The Monroes | Perry Hutchins | Episode: "Ride with Terror" | |
1966 | Combat! | Farley | Episode: "The Bankroll" | |
1968 | Premiere | Andrew Bass | Episode: "The Freebooters" (unsold pilot) | |
1968 | Cimarron Strip | Joe Bravo | Episode: "The Judgment" | |
1968–1970 | Lancer | Johnny Madrid Lancer | 51 episodes | |
1971 | Paper Man | Jerry | TV movie | |
1972 | Love, American Style | Segment: "Love and the Alibi" | ||
1972 | Heat of Anger | Gus Pride | TV movie | |
1972 | Medical Center | Neil | Episode: "Cycle of Peril" | |
1972 | The Streets of San Francisco | Peter Forrest | Episode: "Whose Little Boy Are You?" | |
1972 | Marcus Welby, M.D. | Phil Darrow | Episode: "Jason Be Nimble, Jason Be Quick" | |
1972 | Episode: "Starting Over Again" | |||
1973 | Ordeal | Andy Folsom | TV movie | |
1977 | Just a Little Inconvenience | Kenny Briggs | TV movie | |
1980 | My Kidnapper, My Love | Denny | TV movie | |
1981 | An Ozzie and Harriet Christmas | Self | TV special on KTLA in Los Angeles | |
1985 | Hotel | Jeremy Hale | Episode: "Saving Grace" | |
1986 | Cagney & Lacey | Ted Peters | Episode: "The Gimp" | |
1987 | Highway to Heaven | Joe Mason | Episode: "The Hero" | |
1990 | Wiseguy | Ed Rogosheske | 5 episodes | |
1990 | Matters of the Heart | Glen Harper | TV movie |