Roddy McDowall explained

Roddy McDowall
Birth Name:Roderick Andrew McDowall
Birth Date:17 September 1928
Birth Place:Herne Hill, London, England
Death Place:Studio City, California, U.S.
Citizenship:United Kingdom
United States (after 1949)
Years Active:1938–1998
Module:
Embed:yes
Allegiance: United States
Serviceyears:1946–1954
1960–1962
Rank:Corporal
Unit:Organized Reserve Corps
77th Infantry Division
Battles:World War II
Korean War

Roderick Andrew Anthony Jude McDowall (17 September 1928 – 3 October 1998) was a British and American actor, whose career spanned over 270 screen and stage roles across over 60 years.[1] Born in London, he began his acting career as a child in his native England, before moving to the United States at the outbreak of World War II. He achieved prominence for his starring roles in How Green Was My Valley (1941), My Friend Flicka (1943), and Lassie Come Home (1943). Unlike many of his contemporaries, McDowall managed to transition his child stardom into adulthood, and began to appear on Broadway as well as in films, winning a Tony Award for his performance in Jean Anouilh's The Fighting Cock. For portraying Octavian in the historical epic Cleopatra (1963), he was nominated for a Golden Globe Award.

McDowall was also known for playing Cornelius and Caesar in the original Planet of the Apes film series, as well as Galen in the short-lived spin-off television series. His other notable films included Orson Welles' Macbeth (1948), The Longest Day (1962), The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965), That Darn Cat! (1965), Inside Daisy Clover (1965), Bedknobs and Broomsticks (1971), The Poseidon Adventure (1972), Funny Lady (1975), The Black Hole (1979), Fright Night (1985) and its sequel Fright Night Part 2 (1988), Overboard (1987), Shakma (1990) and A Bug's Life (1998). He was also a frequent guest star on many television series, and won an Emmy Award for a 1961 episode of NBC Sunday Showcase.

McDowall also served in various positions on the Board of Governors for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and the Selection Committee for the Kennedy Center Honors, further contributing to various charities related to the film industry and film preservation. He was a founding Member of the National Film Preservation Board in 1989, and represented the Screen Actors Guild on this Board until his death. Aside from his acting career, McDowall was also active as a photographer and journalist, particularly of celebrities.

For his contributions to the film and television industry, he received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Biography

Early life

McDowall was born at 204 Herne Hill Road, Herne Hill, London, the only son of London-born Thomas Andrew McDowall (1896–1978), a merchant seaman of distant Scottish descent, and his Irish wife Winifred (née Corcoran).[2] [3] [4] Both of his parents were enthusiastic about the theatre. He and his elder sister, Virginia, were raised in their mother's Catholic faith. He attended St Joseph's College, Beulah Hill, Upper Norwood, a Roman Catholic secondary school in London.

British films

After appearing as a child model as a baby, McDowall appeared in several films as a boy. After winning an acting prize in a school play at age nine, he started appearing in films: Murder in the Family (1938), I See Ice (1938) with George Formby, John Halifax (1938) and Scruffy (1938).[5]

McDowall appeared in Convict 99 (1938) and Hey! Hey! USA (1938) with Will Hay, Yellow Sands (1938), The Outsider (1939), Murder Will Out (1939), Dead Man's Shoes (1940), Just William (1940), Saloon Bar (1940), You Will Remember (1941), and This England (1941).

Early US films

McDowall's family moved to the United States in 1940 after the outbreak of World War II. He became a naturalized United States citizen on 9 December 1949,[5] and lived in the United States for the rest of his life. McDowall served in the 67th Armored Battalion of the U.S. Army's Organized Reserve Corps (headquartered in Los Angeles) from 1946 to 1954, spanning the end of World War II to the Korean War.[6] He later served in the 77th Infantry Division between 1960 and 1962.[6]

McDowall's American career began with a part in the 1941 thriller Man Hunt, directed by Fritz Lang. It was made by 20th Century Fox, which also produced McDowall's next film How Green Was My Valley (1941), where he met and became lifelong friends with actress Maureen O'Hara. The film won the Academy Award for Best Picture, and McDowall's role as Huw Morgan made him a household name.[5]

Fox put him in another war film, Confirm or Deny (1941), then he played Tyrone Power as a boy in (1942).

Stardom

Fox promoted McDowall to top billing for On the Sunny Side (1942). He was billed second to Monty Woolley in The Pied Piper (1942), playing a war orphan, then he had top billing again for an adaptation of My Friend Flicka (1942).

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer borrowed McDowall for the star role in Lassie Come Home (1943), a film that introduced Elizabeth Taylor, an actress who became another lifelong friend. MGM kept him on to play a leading role in The White Cliffs of Dover (1944).

Back at Fox, he played Gregory Peck as a young man in The Keys of the Kingdom (1944). In 1944, exhibitors voted McDowall the number four "Star of Tomorrow".[7]

Fox gave McDowall another starring vehicle with Thunderhead – Son of Flicka (1945). The studio reunited him with Woolley in Molly and Me (1945), which was made as an attempt to turn Gracie Fields into a Hollywood star.

McDowall returned to MGM to support Walter Pidgeon in Holiday in Mexico (1946).

Theatre

McDowall turned to the theatre, taking the title role of Young Woodley in a summer stock production in Westport, Connecticut in July 1946.[8]

In 1947, he played Malcolm in Orson Welles's stage production of Macbeth in Salt Lake City, and he played the same role in the actor-director's film version in 1948.[5]

Monogram Pictures

McDowall then signed a three-year contract with Monogram Pictures, a low-budget studio that welcomed established stars, to make two films a year.[9]

McDowall starred in seven films for them, for which he also worked as associate producer: Rocky (1948), a boy and dog story directed by Phil Karlson; Kidnapped (1948), an adaptation of the Robert Louis Stevenson story, where he played David Balfour, directed by William Beaudine; Tuna Clipper (1949), a fishing tale, again directed by Beaudine; Black Midnight (1949), a horse story directed by Budd Boetticher; Killer Shark (1950), a shark hunting tale, again with Boetticher; Big Timber (1950), as a logger; The Steel Fist (1952), an anti-communist drama.[10]

1950s: Television and theatre

McDowall left Hollywood to move to New York City. He began appearing on television, notably shows like Celanese Theatre, Broadway Television Theatre, Medallion Theatre, Campbell Summer Soundstage, Armstrong Circle Theatre, Encounter, Robert Montgomery Presents (including an adaptation of Great Expectations where he played Pip), The Elgin Hour, Ponds Theater, General Electric Theater, The Kaiser Aluminum Hour, Lux Video Theatre, Goodyear Playhouse, The Alcoa Hour, Kraft Theatre, Matinee Theatre, Suspicion, Playhouse 90 (in an adaptation of Heart of Darkness), The United States Steel Hour, The DuPont Show of the Month (an adaptation of Billy Budd) and The Twilight Zone (the episode "People Are Alike All Over").

McDowall also had significant success on the Broadway stage. He was in a production of Misalliance (1953) that ran for 130 performances and which McDowall said "broke the mould" in how he was judged as an actor.[11]

He followed it with Escapade (1953) with Carroll Baker and Brian Aherne; Ira Levin's No Time for Sergeants (1955–57), which was a huge hit;[12] Diary of a Scoundrel (1956); and Good as Gold (1957).

He had a big critical success with Compulsion (1957–58) based on Leopold and Loeb – although McDowall was not cast in the film version. He followed it with Handful of Fire (1958), Noël Coward's Look After Lulu! (1959) and Peter Brook's The Fighting Cock (1960). The latter earned him a Tony Award.

1960: Return to Hollywood

McDowall was in another big Broadway hit when he played Mordred in the musical Camelot (1960–63) with Julie Andrews and Richard Burton.[13]

He played Ariel in a TV production of The Tempest (1960) with Richard Burton and Maurice Evans,[14] then appeared in his first film in almost a decade, The Subterraneans (1960). He followed it with Midnight Lace (1960).

McDowall continued to work on television in shows such as Sunday Showcase, Naked City, and Play of the Week. He was in a TV production of The Power and the Glory (1961) with Laurence Olivier, George C. Scott and Julie Harris.

In 1963, McDowall appeared as Octavian in the film production of Cleopatra, which starred Elizabeth Taylor. While filming in Europe, he appeared in Fox's war film The Longest Day (1962). He continued to guest on television series such as Arrest and Trial, The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, The Eleventh Hour, Kraft Suspense Theatre, Combat!, Ben Casey, Twelve O'Clock High, Run for Your Life, The Invaders, and appeared as a Special Guest Villain as The Bookworm on Batman.

He had supporting roles in Fox's Shock Treatment (1964) and United Artists' The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965). He was third billed in The Third Day (1965) and received billing as a member of the ensemble cast in The Loved One (1965). McDowall went to Disney for That Darn Cat! (1965) and had a role in Inside Daisy Clover (1965).

McDowall was given a starring role in Lord Love a Duck (1966). He also appeared in The Defector (1966) and returned briefly to Broadway for The Astrakhan Coat (1967).[15]

Disney gave him the star role in The Adventures of Bullwhip Griffin (1967) and he was top billed in The Cool Ones (1967) and It! (1967). He was in a TV production of Saint Joan (1967) and provided the voice for Cricket on the Hearth (1967). He guest-starred in the series The Felony Squad.

In 1968, McDowall appeared in one of his memorable roles when he was cast in Planet of the Apes as the ape Cornelius. He appeared in three sequels and a TV spin-off from the film.

He was Prince John in The Legend of Robin Hood (1968) for TV, and appeared in 5 Card Stud (1968), Journey to the Unknown, It Takes a Thief, Midas Run (1969), Hello Down There (1969), Angel, Angel, Down We Go (1969), Night Gallery (1969), The Name of the Game and Medical Center.

1970s

McDowall made his debut as director with The Ballad of Tam Lin (1970).[16]

As an actor he was in Pretty Maids All in a Row (1971). McDowall was not in the first Apes sequel but was in the second, Escape from the Planet of the Apes (1971). He was in the television film Terror in the Sky (1971), What's a Nice Girl Like You...? (1971) and A Taste of Evil (1971) and Disney's Bedknobs and Broomsticks (1971).

He guest starred on Ironside, The Carol Burnett Show, Columbo (1972, "Short Fuse"), The Delphi Bureau, The Rookies, Mission: Impossible, Barnaby Jones and McCloud.

McDowall made his third Apes film with 1972's Conquest of the Planet of the Apes. He had supporting roles in The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean (1972) and The Poseidon Adventure (1972) and starred in a pilot that did not go to series, Topper Returns (1973), and The Legend of Hell House (1973).[17]

His final Apes film was Battle for the Planet of the Apes (1973). He also appeared in McMillan & Wife, Love, American Style, Arnold (1973), a remake of Miracle on 34th Street (1973), The Elevator (1974), and The Snoop Sisters also (1974) an uncredited appearance as a grocery store manager in the film Dirty Mary Crazy Larry.

He starred in the short lived TV spin-off series of Planet of the Apes (1974). During a guest appearance on The Carol Burnett Show, he came onstage in his Planet of the Apes makeup and performed a love duet with Burnett.[18]

Asked about his career in a 1975 interview, McDowall said "I just hope to keep working and in interesting things."[19]

Late 1970s

For the rest of the 1970s, McDowall alternated between features, TV films and TV series. Features included Funny Lady (1975), Mean Johnny Barrows (1976), Embryo (1976), Sixth and Main (1977), Laserblast (1978), Rabbit Test (1978), The Cat from Outer Space (1978) for Disney, Circle of Iron (1978), Scavenger Hunt (1979), Nutcracker Fantasy (1979) (doing voice over for the English language edition), and Disney's The Black Hole (1979) in which he voiced one of the robot roles.

TV series included Police Woman, Mowgli's Brothers, Harry O, The Feather and Father Gang, Wonder Woman, Flying High, The Love Boat, $weepstake$, Supertrain, Hart to Hart, A Man Called Sloane, Trapper John, M.D. (the pilot episode), Buck Rogers in the 25th Century ("Planet of the Slave Girls") and Mork & Mindy. He also had a regular role in the short-lived sci-fi series The Fantastic Journey (1977).

TV films included Flood! (1977), The Rhinemann Exchange (1978), The Immigrants (1978), and The Thief of Baghdad (1978).

Early 1980s

McDowall's TV film /miniseries work in the 1980s included The Martian Chronicles (1980), The Memory of Eva Ryker (1980), The Return of the King (1980) (on which he did voice over work), Tales of the Gold Monkey (1980),The Million Dollar Face (1981), Judgement Day (1981), Twilight Theatre (1982), Mae West (1982), This Girl for Hire (1983), The Zany Adventures of Robin Hood (1984), London and Davis in New York (1984), Hollywood Wives (1985), and Alice in Wonderland (1985).

TV series included Boomer and Miss 21st Century, Fantasy Island (several times), Faerie Tale Theatre, Tales of the Gold Monkey (a series regular), Small and Frye, Hotel, and George Burns Comedy Week.

McDowall's features included Charlie Chan and the Curse of the Dragon Queen (1981), Evil Under the Sun (1982), Class of 1984 (1984), and the cult classic horror Fright Night (1985).

Voice-over work and late 1980s

McDowall had voice over roles in Zoo Ship (1985), (1986), and The Wind in the Willows (1987). TV series included Bridges to Cross (1986) (in which McDowall was a regular), The Wizard, Murder, She Wrote, Matlock, and Nightmare Classics, and TV films included and Around the World in 80 Days (1989).

In 1987, he had supporting roles in Dead of Winter and Overboard, on which he also served as executive producer. Other features included Doin' Time on Planet Earth (1988), Fright Night Part 2 (1989), The Big Picture (1989), Cutting Class (1989), and Heroes Stand Alone (1989).

In 1989, he said "I feel as Henry Fonda did that every job I get may be my last. I'm one of those creatures born to be working. I feel better when I'm working. I don't like it when I'm not working and I've never worked as much as I want to."[20]

1990s

McDowall's 1990s work included The Color of Evening (1990), Shakma (1990), Going Under (1990), An Inconvenient Woman (1991), Earth Angel (1991), Deadly Game (1991), The Naked Target (1992), Double Trouble (1992), The New Lassie (1992), Quantum Leap (A Leap for Lisa) (1992), The Evil Inside Me (1993), I Strahd: The Memoirs of a Vampaire (1993 audio book), Dream On, Heads (1994), Hart to Hart: Home Is Where the Hart Is (1994), (1994), Burke's Law, Angel 4: Undercover (1994), The Alien Within (1995), The Grass Harp (1995), Last Summer in the Hamptons (1995), Bullet Hearts (1996), Star Hunter (1996), It's My Party (1996), Tracey Takes On..., Dead Man's Island, Remember WENN, Unlikely Angel (1996), (1997), Something to Believe In (1998), and Loss of Faith (1998).

He voiced the Mad Hatter in the DC Animated Universe. He also did voice work for The Pirates of Dark Water (1991–92), Timmy's Gift: A Precious Moments Christmas (1992), Camp Candy, The Legend of Prince Valiant (1992), Darkwing Duck (1992), 2 Stupid Dogs, , Red Planet, The Tick, Galaxy Beat, Gargoyles, Duckman, Pinky and the Brain, A Bug's Life (1998), and .

He was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1993, when he was surprised by Michael Aspel at the Pacific Design Center in West Hollywood.

In 1997, McDowall hosted the MGM Musicals Tribute at Carnegie Hall.

Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences

McDowall served for several years in various capacities on the Board of Governors of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the organisation that presents the Oscar Awards, and on the selection committee for the Kennedy Center Awards. He was Chairman of the Actors' Branch for five terms. He was elected President of the Academy Foundation in 1998, the year that he died. He worked to support the Motion Pictures Retirement Home, where a rose garden named in his honour was officially dedicated on 9 October 2001 and remains a part of the campus.[21]

Photographer and author

McDowall received recognition as a photographer, working with Look, Vogue, Collier's, and Life. His work includes a cover story on Mae West for Life and the cover of the 1964 Barbra Streisand album, The Third Album. He took the photograph when Streisand performed on The Judy Garland Show in October 1963.

He published five books of photographs, each featuring photos and profile interviews of his celebrity friends interviewing each other, such as Elizabeth Taylor, Judy Garland, Judy Holliday, Maureen O'Hara, Katharine Hepburn, Lauren Bacall, and others. It started with Double Exposure in 1968.[22] [23]

Personal life

McDowall was a Democrat and supported Adlai Stevenson's campaign during the 1952 presidential election.[24]

In 1974, the FBI raided McDowall's home and seized his collection of films and television series in the course of an investigation into film piracy and copyright infringement. His collection consisted of 160 16-mm prints and more than 1,000 video cassettes, at a time before the era of commercial videotapes, when there was no legal aftermarket for films. McDowall had purchased Errol Flynn's home cinema films and transferred them all to tape for longer-lasting archival storage. No charges were filed.[25]

McDowall never married or had children. In Full Service: My Adventures in Hollywood and the Secret Sex Lives of the Stars (2012) by Scotty Bowers, a famous Hollywood procurer, Bowers claims McDowall was one of his homosexual clients.[26]

McDowall was in a relationship with American actor Montgomery Clift for several years in the early 1950s.[27] [28]

Death

On 3 October 1998 at age 70, McDowall died of lung cancer at his home in Studio City, California.[29] His body was cremated and his ashes were scattered into the Pacific Ocean on 7 October 1998 off Los Angeles County.[30] Dennis Osborne, a screenwriter, had cared for McDowall in his final months, and was quoted as saying, "It was very peaceful. It was just as he wanted it. It was exactly the way he planned."[31]

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
1938Convict 99N/A
1938Murder in the FamilyPeter Osborne
1938John HalifaxBoy
1939Poison PenChoir BoyUncredited
1940His Brother's KeeperBoy
1940Dead Man's ShoesBoy
1940Just WilliamGinger
1940Saloon BarBoy
1941You Will RememberYoung Bob Slater
1941Man HuntVaner
1941This EnglandHugo
1941How Green Was My ValleyHuw Morgan
1941Confirm or DenyAlbert Perkins
1942Young Benjamin Blake
1942On the SunnysideHugh Aylesworth
1942The Pied PiperRonnie Cavanaugh
1943My Friend FlickaKen McLaughlin
1943Lassie Come HomeJoe Carraclough
1944The White Cliffs of DoverYoung John Ashwood
1944The Keys of the KingdomYoung Francis Chisholm
1945Thunderhead, Son of FlickaKen McLaughlin
1945Molly and MeJimmy Graham
1946Holiday in MexicoStanley Owen
1948RockyChris Hammond
1948MacbethMalcolm
1948KidnappedDavid Balfour
1949Tuna ClipperAlec MacLennan
1949Black MidnightScott Jordan
1950Big TimberJimmy
1950Killer SharkTed
1952The Steel FistEric Kardin
1958The Big CountryHannassey WatchmanUncredited
1960The SubterraneansYuri Gilgoric
1960Midnight LaceMalcolm Stanley
1962The Longest DayPvt. Morris
1963CleopatraOctavian
1964Shock TreatmentMartin Ashley
1965The Greatest Story Ever ToldMatthew
1965That Darn Cat!Gregory Benson
1965The Third DayOliver Parsons
1965The Loved OneD.J. Jr.
1965Inside Daisy CloverWalter Baines
1966Lord Love a DuckAlan Musgrave
1966The DefectorAgent Adams
1967The Adventures of Bullwhip GriffinBullwhip Griffin
1967The Cool OnesTony Krum
1967It!Arthur Pimm
1968Planet of the ApesCornelius
19685 Card StudNick Evers
1969Midas RunWister
1969Hello Down ThereNate Ashbury
1969Angel, Angel, Down We GoSantoro
1971Pretty Maids All in a RowProffer
1971Escape from the Planet of the ApesCornelius
1971Terror in the SkyRalph Baird
1971Bedknobs and BroomsticksRowan Jelk
1972Conquest of the Planet of the ApesCaesar
1972The Life and Times of Judge Roy BeanFrank Gass
1972The Poseidon AdventureAcres
1973ArnoldRobert
1973The Legend of Hell HouseBenjamin Franklin Fischer
1973Battle for the Planet of the ApesCaesar
1974Dirty Mary Crazy LarryGrocery Store Manager
1975Funny LadyBobby
1976Mean Johnny BarrowsTony Da Vince
1976EmbryoFrank Riley
1977Sixth and MainSkateboard
1978LaserblastDr. Mellon
1978The Cat from Outer SpaceMr. Stallwood
1978Circle of IronWhite Robe
1978The Thief of BaghdadHasan
1979Scavenger HuntJenkins
1979Nutcracker FantasyFranz/Fritz[32]
1979The Black HoleV.I.N.CENT.Voice
1981Charlie Chan and the Curse of the Dragon QueenGillespie
1982Evil Under the SunRex Brewster
1982Class of 1984Terry Corrigan
1985Fright NightPeter Vincent
1986NuggitVoice
1986Friends Are Forever: Tales of the Little PrincessZak the CatVoice
1987Dead of WinterMr. Murray
1987OverboardAndrew
1988Doin' Time on Planet EarthMinister
1988Fright Night Part 2Peter Vincent
1989The Big PictureJudge
1989Cutting ClassMr. Dante
1990ShakmaSorenson
1991Timmy's Gift: A Precious Moments ChristmasNarratorVoice
1991Going UnderSecretary Neighbor
1992Double TroublePhilip Chamberlain
1993The Evil Inside MePauly
1993The Return of Captain SinbadNarratorVoice
1994Dr. Lasky
1995The Grass HarpAmos Legrand
1995The Alien WithinDr. Henry Lazarus
1995Last Summer in the HamptonsThomas
1995Star HunterRiecher
1996It's My PartyDamian Knowles
1997King Murphy
1998Something to Believe InGambler
1998A Bug's LifeMr. SoilVoice
1998Star Power: The Creation of United ArtistsNarrator (voice)Posthumous release (final film role)

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1951Family Theatre Private Huntington (The Professor) Episode: "Hill Number One: A Story of Faith and Inspiration"
1960The Twilight Zone Sam Conrad Episode: "People Are Alike All Over"
1960The Tempest ArielTelevision film
1961Naked City Donnie Benton Episode: "The Fault in Our Stars"
1963Arrest and Trial Paul LeDoux Episode: "Journey into Darkness"
1964The Alfred Hitchcock Hour George, Gerald Musgrove 2 episodes
1964Combat! Murfree Episode: "The Long Walk"
1964Kraft Suspense Theatre Robert "Professor" Benson Episode: "The Wine-Dark Sea"
1965Ben Casey Dwight Franklin Episode: "When I am grown to Man's Estate"
196612 O'Clock High Technical Sergeant Willets Episode: "Angel Babe"
1966Batman Bookworm 2 episodes
1966Run for Your Life Gyula Bognar Episode: "Don't Count on Tomorrow"
1967The Cricket on the Hearth Cricket Crocket Voice, television film
1967The Invaders Lloyd Lindstrom Episode: "The Experiment"
1968The Legend of Robin Hood Prince John Episode dated 18 February 1968
1969Journey to the Unknown Rollo Verdew Episode: "The Killing Bottle"
1969It Takes a Thief Roger Episode: "Boom at the Top"
1969Night Gallery Jeremy Evans Segment: "The Cemetery"
1969The Name of the Game Philip SaxonEpisode: "The White Birch"
1970The Name of the Game Early McCorley Episode: "Why I Blew Up Dakota"
1971Terror in the Sky Dr. Ralph Baird Television film
1971A Taste of Evil Dr. Michael Lomas Television film
1971What's a Nice Girl Like You...? Albert Soames Television film
1972Columbo Roger Stanford Episode: "Short Fuse"
1972The Rookies: Dirge for Sunday Fenner Episode: "Dirge for Sunday"
1972Mission: Impossible Leo Ostro Episode: "The Puppet"
1973–1974The Carol Burnett Show Himself – Guest
1973Barnaby Jones Stanley Lambert Episode: "See Some Evil... Do Some Evil"
1973Miracle on 34th Street Dr. Sawyer 1973 remake, television film
1973McMillan & Wife Jamie McMillan Episode: "Death of a Monster... Birth of a Legend"
1974Planet of the Apes Galen 14 episodes
1974The Elevator Marvin Ellis Television film
1976Ellery Queen The Amazing Armitage Episode: "The Adventure of the Black Falcon"
1976Flood! Mr. Franklin Television film
1976Mowgli's Brothers Narrator, Mowgli, Shere Khan, Baloo, Bagheera, Tabaqui Voice, television short
1977The Feather and Father Gang Vincent Stoddard Episode: "The Mayan Connection"
1977The Rhinemann Exchange Bobby Ballard 3 episodes
1977The Fantastic Journey Dr. Jonathan Willoway 8 episodes
1977Wonder Woman Henry Roberts, Professor Arthur Chapman 2 episodes
1978The Immigrants Mark Levy Television film
1978The Thief of Baghdad Hasan Television film
1979Buck Rogers in the 25th Century Governor Saroyan Episode: "Planet of the Slave Girls"
1979$weepstake$ Theodore Episode: "Billy, Wally and Ludmilla, and Theodore"
1979Supertrain Talcott Episode: "The Green Lady"
1979Fantasy Island Gary Pointer 1 episode
1979Hart to Hart Dr. Peterson Episode: "Hart to Hart"
1979The Love Boat Fred Beery Episode: "Second Chance/Don't Push Me/Like Father, Like Son" S2 E16
1979Mork & Mindy Chuck the Robot Voice, episode: "Dr. Morkenstein"
1980The Martian Chronicles Father Stone 3 episodes
1980The Memory of Eva Ryker MacFarland Television film
1980The Return of the King Samwise Gamgee Voice, television film
1980–1981Fantasy Island Mephistopheles 2 episodes
1981The Million Dollar Face Derek Kenyon Television film
1982–1983Tales of the Gold Monkey Bon Chance Louie 20 episodes
1984The Zany Adventures of Robin Hood Television film
1985Hollywood Wives Jason Swankle 3 episodes
1985Alice in Wonderland March HareTelevision film
1985–1989Murder, She Wrote Gordon Fairchild, Dr. Alger Kenyon 2 episodes
1985Bridges to Cross Norman Parks Episode: "Memories of Molly"
1987–1989Matlock Don Mosher, Christopher Hoyt 2 episodes
1987The Wind in the Willows Ratty Voice, television film
1988 Chuin Television film
1989Around the World in 80 Days McBaines 3 episodes
1991The Pirates of Dark Water Niddler Voice, 5 episodes
1991An Inconvenient Woman Cyril Rathbone 2 episodes
1991Timmy's Gift: A Precious Moments Christmas Narrator Voice
1992The Legend of Prince Valiant King Frederick Voice, episode: "The Battle of Greystone"
1992Quantum Leap Edward St. John V Episode: "A Leap for Lisa"
1992Darkwing Duck Sir Quackmire Mallard Voice, episode: "Inherit the Wimp"
1992–1994 Voice, 4 episodes
1992Camp Candy Voice, episode: "When it Rains... it Snows"
19932 Stupid Dogs Chameleon Voice, episode: "Chameleon"
1993SWAT Kats Lenny Ringtail, Madkat Voice, episode: "Enter the Madkat"
1994Hart to Hart: Home Is Where the Hart Is Jeremy Sennet Television film
1994Red Planet Headmaster Marcus Howe Voice, 3 episodes
1994The Tick Breadmaster Voice, episode: "The Tick vs. The Breadmaster"
1996Tracey Takes On... Rex Gaydon Episode: "Nostalgia"
1996Gargoyles Proteus Voice, episode: "The New Olympians"
1996Duckman Akers Voice, episode: "Apocalypse Not"
1996Pinky and the Brain Snowball Voice, 6 episodes
1996Dead Man's Island Trevor Dunnaway Television film
1996Unlikely Angel Saint Peter Television film
1998The New Batman Adventures Jervis Tetch / The Mad HatterVoice, 2 episodes
1998 Voice, episode: "Knight Time"
1998Behind the Planet of the Apes Narrator Television documentary
1999 Dr. Hugh Trevor Voice, episode: "DeadLoch"; posthumous role

Stage

Radio appearances

Year Program Episode/source
1943Lux Radio Theatre My Friend Flicka[34]
1947Suspense One Way Street[35]
1948The Voyage of the Scarlet Queen Rocky Iii and the Dead Mans Chest[36]
1952Family Theater A Lullaby for Christmas[37]

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Roddy Mcdowall . 19 January 2024 . tcm.com . en.
  2. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. 978-0-19-861412-8. 10.1093/ref:odnb/71136. 2004.
  3. News: Obituary: Roddy McDowall. London, UK. The Independent. Tom. Vallance. 5 October 1998.
  4. Web site: From the Archives: Roddy McDowall, Actor for 6 Decades, Dies at 70. . 4 October 1998.
  5. Web site: McDowall, Roddy . https://web.archive.org/web/20140909004948/http://www.bu.edu/phpbin/archives-cc/app/details.php?id=8239&return=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bu.edu%2Fphpbin%2Farchives-cc%2Fapp%2Fbrowse.php%3Fletter%3DM%26sort_column%3Dcomposite_name%26sort_direction%3DASC%26per_page%3D10%26offset%3D55%26set_page%3Dnext . 9 September 2014 . Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center . Boston University.
  6. https://www.xmoppet.org/perstats/perstats.html Roderick Andrew Anthony Jude McDowall at
  7. News: SAGA OF THE HIGH SEAS. The Mercury. Hobart, Tasmania. 11 November 1944. 24 April 2012. 9. National Library of Australia.
  8. News: Roddy McDowall as guest. 11 July 1946. The Christian Science Monitor. .
  9. News: Schallert, E.. DRAMA AND FILM.. 12 March 1947. Los Angeles Times. .
  10. News: Tuna Fisherman Role Will Star McDowall . Schallert . Edwin . Los Angeles Times . 22 May 1948 . 7.
  11. News: Steinmetz, J. . 10 February 1987. RODDY MCDOWALL'S BEST FRIEND: CAMERA. Chicago Tribune. .
  12. News: Roddy McDowall, stage actor. 21 September 1955. The Christian Science Monitor. .
  13. Web site: Roddy McDowall – Broadway Cast & Staff | IBDB. ibdb.com.
  14. News: Television: 'the tempest'. J. G.. 4 February 1960. The New York Times. .
  15. Web site: The Astrakhan Coat (Broadway, Helen Hayes Theatre, 1967) | Playbill.
  16. News: Reed, R.. 28 November 1971. Roddy McDowall: Survival of the fittest. Chicago Tribune. .
  17. News: Haber, J.. 9 December 1973. Superfan roddy, everybody's turn-on. Los Angeles Times. .
  18. http://pota.goatley.com/burnett.html The Carol Burnett Show with Roddy McDowall
  19. News: Movie talk with roddy McDowall. D. S.. 21 August 1975. The Christian Science Monitor. .
  20. News: Champlin, C.. 19 October 1989. Roddy McDowall pulls out all the F-stops. Los Angeles Times. .
  21. News: A Tribute to Roddy McDowall. The Roddy McDowall Memorial Rose Garden. 19 September 2016.
  22. McDowall, Roddy. Double Exposure; William Morrow & Co; 2 edition: 1 November 1990;
  23. News: Brady, J.. 13 December 1992. Roddy McDowall. The Washington Post. .
  24. Motion Picture and Television Magazine, November 1952, page 33, Ideal Publishers
  25. Web site: When Roddy McDowall Was Busted by the FBI for Pirating Films. 16 January 2017. 18 January 2017.
  26. Book: Bowers, Scotty . 2012 . Full Service: My Adventures in Hollywood and the Secret Sex Lives of the Stars . New York, NY . Grove/Atlantic, Inc.. 978-0-8021-2055-7 .
  27. Book: LaGuardia, Robert . Monty: A Biography of Montgomery Clift . 1978 . Avon . 978-0-380-01887-1 . 138–139 . en.
  28. Book: Bosworth, Patricia . Montgomery Clift: A Biography . 1978 . Bantam Books . 978-0-553-12455-2 . 281 . en.
  29. News: Roddy McDowall, 70, Dies; Child Star and Versatile Actor. The New York Times. 4 October 1998. 2 November 2016. Gussow. Mel.
  30. Wilson, Scott. Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons, 3d ed.: 2 (Kindle Locations 31331-31332). McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. Kindle Edition.
  31. http://www.deseretnews.com/article/655317/Actor-Roddy-McDowall-dies-of-cancer.html "Actor Roddy McDowall dies of cancer"
  32. Web site: Roddy McDowall (visual voices guide) . 7 September 2023 . Behind The Voice Actors. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its opening and/or closing credits and/or other reliable sources of information.
  33. Web site: Roddy McDowall – Broadway Cast & Staff . Internet Broadway Database . The Broadway League LLC . 13 August 2024.
  34. News: Lux Theatre Guest. Harrisburg Telegraph. 5 June 1943. 17. Newspapers.com. 23 December 2015.
  35. Web site: Miller. Christine. Suspense – One Way Street. Escape and Suspense!. 23 January 2017.
  36. News: Lewis. Elliott. Radio Echos. 11 February 1948.
  37. News: Kirby. Walter. Better Radio Programs for the Week. The Decatur Daily Review. 14 December 1952. 54.