Michael Cole (actor) explained

Michael Cole
Birth Date:3 July 1940[1]
Occupation:Actor
Yearsactive:1961–2010
Children:3

Michael Cole (born July 3, 1940) is an American actor. He is best known for his role as Pete Cochran on the television crime drama The Mod Squad (1968–1973). He is the last surviving member of the original cast.

Career

Cole has appeared in numerous films and TV shows, beginning in 1961 with a role in the film drama Forbid Them Not. Other film credits include the role of Mark in the 1966 science fiction film The Bubble, later re-titled Fantastic Invasion of Planet Earth; Spivey in the western Chuka (1967); Alan Miller in The Last Child (1971),[2] which was nominated for a Golden Globe Award; and as Cliff Norris in Beg, Borrow or Steal (1973). He did a great deal of stage work after The Mod Squad went off the air, including Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.

Cole has also appeared on Gunsmoke, in 1966, as Kipp. During the 1970s, he had many guest appearances on Wonder Woman, The Love Boat and CHiPs, and appeared in the made-for-TV thriller Evening in Byzantium in 1978. In the 1980s and 1990s, he worked on Nickel Mountain. He also worked on shows such as The Eddie Capra Mysteries; Murder, She Wrote; Fantasy Island, and . Later, Cole appeared as the disturbed adult Henry Bowers in Stephen King's 1990 two-part TV miniseries It. In 1991, he joined the cast of General Hospital in the role of Harlan Barrett.

But it was his role as Pete Cochran, a troubled youth turned crime fighter in The Mod Squad (1968–1973), that made Cole an international celebrity. Cole's boyish good looks and brooding, deep-voiced personality meshed perfectly with his character's backstory—a ne'er-do-well son of wealthy parents who had evicted him from their home after he had stolen a car.[3] Produced by Aaron Spelling and Danny Thomas, The Mod Squad resonated with counterculture-era viewers and ran for five seasons, during which a total of 123 episodes were produced.

According to TV Guide, Cole originally balked at the part of Peter Cochran when he realized he would be playing an undercover cop, saying: "I'm not going to take the part of a guy who finks on his friends!" He changed his mind, however, when he read the script and gathered the show's potential appeal.

Cole went through treatment in the Betty Ford Clinic in the early 1990s to get his drinking problem under control.[4]

Cole continues to act in various film and television projects, and played the character Charles Hadley in a 2006 episode of the television series ER. Also in 2006, Cole played opposite Clarence Williams III in Mystery Woman: At First Sight, an episode of the Mystery Woman film series that aired on the Hallmark Channel. Cole later made an appearance in the 2007 thriller Mr. Brooks as the attorney for Demi Moore's character of Detective Tracy Atwood.

Personal life

He was married three times and divorced twice. He has two children from his first marriage, and a daughter from the second marriage. Cole has been married to Shelley Funes since 1996.[5] Funes helped stage an intervention for Cole's alcoholism; Cole has been living sober ever since.

Filmography

Bibliography

I Played the White Guy (2018)

Notes and References

  1. Book: Cole . Michael . I Played The White Guy . 2018 . BearManor Media . 978-1-62933-297-0 . subscription.
  2. News: The Golden Age of TV Movies: The Last Child (1971). Nahmod, David-Elijah. SF Weekly. August 26, 2015. 26 August 2015.
  3. Web site: The Mod Squad TV Show Unofficial Home Page w/ Pictures & Episode Guide. 2022-11-20. www.chezgrae.com.
  4. Web site: The book on Madison's 'Mod Squad' star Michael Cole . Doug . Moe . July 6, 2009 . Onalaska Holmen Courier Life . West Salem, Wisconsin . December 21, 2009.
  5. Book: Cole, Michael. I Played the White Guy. BearManor Media. 2018. 978-1-62933-296-3.