Carroll O'Connor
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Carroll O'Connor | |
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O'Connor as Archie Bunker, 1975
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Born | John Carroll O'Connor August 2, 1924 Manhattan, New York, U.S. |
Died | June 21, 2001 (aged 76) Culver City, California, U.S. |
Alma mater | University of Montana-Missoula |
Occupation | Actor, comedian, producer, director |
Years active | 1960–2000 |
Spouse(s) | Nancy Fields O'Connor |
Children | Hugh O'Connor (deceased) |
In 1996, O'Connor was ranked #38 on TV Guide's 50 Greatest TV Stars of All Time.[2]
Contents
Early life
O'Connor, an Irish American, was the eldest of three sons born in Manhattan,[3] New York, to Edward Joseph O'Connor,[4] a lawyer, and his wife, Elise Patricia O'Connor. Both of his brothers became doctors: Hugh, who died in a motorcycle accident in 1961, and Robert, a psychiatrist in New York City.[3] O'Connor spent much of his youth in Elmhurst and Forest Hills, Queens, the same borough in which his character Archie Bunker would later live.[5]In 1941, Carroll O'Connor enrolled at Wake Forest University in North Carolina, but dropped out when the United States entered World War II. During World War II he was rejected by the United States Navy and enrolled in the United States Merchant Marine Academy for a short time. After leaving that institution, he became a merchant seaman.[6]
O'Connor attended the University of Montana-Missoula where he met Nancy Fields, who would later become his wife. He also worked at the Montana Kaimin student newspaper as an editor. At the University of Montana, he joined Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity.[7] At that time, however, O'Connor did not take any drama courses as an undergraduate. O'Connor later left the University of Montana to help his younger brother Hugh get into medical school in Ireland, where he completed his studies at the University College Dublin. It was there that he began his acting career.[3]
After she graduated from the University of Montana in 1951 with degrees in drama and English, O'Connor's fiancée, Nancy, sailed to Ireland to meet Carroll, who was visiting his brother, Hugh.[8] The couple married in Dublin on July 28, 1951.[4] In 1956, O'Connor returned to Missoula to earn a master's degree in speech.[8]
Prolific character actor
After acting in theatrical productions in Dublin (Ireland) and New York during the 1950s, O'Connor's breakthrough came when he was cast by director Burgess Meredith (assisted by John Astin) in a featured role in the Broadway adaptation of James Joyce's novel Ulysses. O'Connor and Meredith remained close, lifelong friends.[9]O'Connor made his television acting debut as a character actor on two episodes of Sunday Showcase. These two parts led to other roles on such television series as The Americans, The Eleventh Hour, Gunsmoke, Bonanza, The Fugitive, The Wild Wild West, Armstrong Circle Theatre, Death Valley Days, The Great Adventure, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., Dr. Kildare, I Spy, That Girl, Premiere, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, among many others. O'Connor starred as an Eastern European villain in the first season of "Mission Impossible" Season 1, Episode 18 "The Trial," brilliantly played and recognizable by his intense blue eyes. Late in his career, he appeared on several episodes of Mad About You as the father of Helen Hunt's character.
Considered roles
He was also among the actors considered for the roles of The Skipper on Gilligan's Island and Dr. Smith in the TV show Lost In Space, as well as being the visual template in the creation of Batman foe Rupert Thorne, a character who debuted at the height of All in the Family's success in Detective Comics #469 (published May 1976 by DC Comics).Television roles
All in the Family
O'Connor was living in Italy in 1968 when producer Norman Lear first asked him to come to New York to star in a pilot he was creating for ABC called Justice For All, with O'Connor playing Archie Justice, a lovable yet controversial bigot. After three pilots done between 1968 to 1970, a network change to CBS, and the last name of the character changed to Bunker, the new sitcom was renamed All in the Family. The show was based on the BBC's Til Death Us Do Part, with Bunker based on Alf Garnett, but somewhat less abrasive than the original. It has been stated that O'Connor's Queens background and New York accent influenced Lear to set the show in Queens.[10]Wanting a well-known actor to tackle the controversial material, Lear had approached Jackie Gleason and Mickey Rooney to play Archie; both declined. O'Connor accepted, not expecting the show to be a success and believing he would be able to move back to Europe. (In her book Archie & Edith, Mike & Gloria : the Tumultuous History of All in the Family, Donna McCrohan noted that O'Connor requested that Lear provide him with a return airline ticket to Rome as a condition of his accepting the role, so that he could return to Italy when the show failed.) Instead, the show became the highest-rated television program on American television for five consecutive seasons until the 1976-1977 season (the sixth season). The Cosby Show has since met the record set by All in the Family.
O'Connor's own politics were liberal. He understood the Bunker character and played him not only with bombast and humor but with touches of vulnerability. The writing on the show was consistently left of center, but O'Connor often deftly skewered the liberal pieties of the day. Although Bunker was famous for his malapropisms of the English language, O'Connor was highly educated and cultured and was an English professor before he turned to acting.
The show also starred a Broadway actress, also from New York City, Jean Stapleton, in the role of Archie Bunker's long-suffering wife, Edith Bunker, after Lear saw her in the play Damn Yankees. The producer sent the show over to ABC twice, but it didn't get picked up. They then approached CBS with more success, and accordingly, All in the Family was retooled and debuted early in 1971. The show also starred unknown character actors, such as Rob Reiner as Archie's liberal son-in-law, Michael "Meathead" Stivic and Sally Struthers as Archie and Edith's only child and Meathead's wife, Gloria Bunker-Stivic. The cast had a unique on- and off-camera chemistry, especially Reiner, who became O'Connor's best friend and favorite actor.
CBS was unsure whether the controversial subject matter of All in the Family would fit well into a sitcom. Racial issues, ethnicities, religions, and other timely topics were addressed. Like its British predecessor Til Death Do Us Part, the show lent dramatic social substance to the traditional sitcom format. Archie Bunker's popularity made O'Connor a top-billing star of the 1970s. O'Connor was afraid of being typecast for playing the role, but at the same time, he was protective of not just his character, but of the entire show.[11]
A contract dispute between O'Connor and Lear marred the beginning of the show's fifth season. Eventually, O'Connor got a raise and appeared in the series until it ended. For his work as Archie Bunker, he was nominated for eight Emmy Awards as Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series; he won the award four times (1972, 1977, 1978, and 1979).
At the end of the eighth season in 1978, Reiner and Struthers left the series to pursue other projects, but O'Connor and Stapleton still had one year left on their contracts. At the start of the final year, the show cast a child actress, Danielle Brisebois, in the role of Archie's and Edith's niece, Stephanie Mills.
Archie Bunker's Place
Main article: Archie Bunker's Place
When All In The Family ended after nine seasons, Archie Bunker's Place continue in its stead, and ran for four more years. Longtime friend and original series star Jean Stapleton's role as Edith Bunker,
was limited to about a half dozen guest appearances in season 1. In the
2nd-season premiere, her character died of a stroke, leaving Archie to
cope with the loss. The show was unceremoniously canceled in 1983.
O'Connor was angered[citation needed]
about the show's cancellation, maintaining that the show ended with an
inappropriate finale. He vowed never to work in any type of show with
CBS again,[citation needed] although he starred in In the Heat of the Night, which aired on CBS in that show's last three seasons.In the Heat of the Night
Main article: In the Heat of the Night (TV series)
While coping with his son's drug problem, O'Connor starred as Sparta, Mississippi, Police Chief Bill Gillespie, a tough veteran Mississippi cop on In the Heat of the Night. Based on the 1967 movie of the same name, the series debuted on NBC early in 1988 and performed well. He cast his son Hugh O'Connor as Officer Lonnie Jamison. The headquarters of the Sparta Police Department was actually the library in Covington, Georgia.Much like O'Connor himself, Gillespie was racially progressive and politically liberal. But the character of Bill Gillespie was also a smart and tough police officer who was not afraid to use his gun when the occasion called for it.
In 1989, while working on the set, O'Connor was hospitalized and had to undergo open heart surgery, which caused him to miss four episodes at the end of the second season (actor Joe Don Baker took his place in those episodes as an acting police chief.) The series was transferred from NBC to CBS in 1992 and cancelled two years later, after its seventh season. O'Connor reprised his role the following year for four two-hour In the Heat of the Night television films to critical acclaim[citation needed].
While on the series, O'Connor recorded "Bring A Torch, Jeanette Isabella," for the 1991 "In the Heat of the Night" Christmas CD "Christmas Time's A Comin'." He was joined by Grand Ole Opry star mandolinist Jesse McReynolds, Nashville accordionist Abe Manuel, Jr., and Nashville fiddlers Buddy Spicher and Randall Franks. CD Producer and series co-star Randall Franks created the arrangement which was co-produced by series co-star Alan Autry. He joined other members of the cast for a recording of "Jingle Bells" with vocals by Country Music Hall of Fame members Little Jimmy Dickens, Kitty Wells, Pee Wee King, and The Marksmen Quartet, Bobby Wright, Johnnie Wright and Ken Holloway.
Career honors
- Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Television Series Musical or Comedy, 1972, All in the Family[4]
- Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series, 1971, 1976, 1977, and 1978, All in the Family[4]
- George Foster Peabody Broadcasting Award, 1980, for Archie Alone episode, Archie Bunker's Place[4]
- Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series, 1989, In the Heat of the Night'[4]
- Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Television Series Drama, 1989, In the Heat of the Night[4]
- Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Television Series Drama nomination 1990, In the Heat of the Night'[4]'
- Television Academy Hall of Fame, inducted 1990 for contributions to the television industry[4]
- NAACP Image Award, 1992, In the Heat of the Night[4] Best Dramatic Series
- NAACP Image Award, 1993, In the Heat of the Night[4] Best Dramatic Series
Other honors
In 1973, his fraternity conferred its highest honor, Sigma Phi Epsilon Citation, on him.[12]Carroll O'Connor and Edie Falco are the only actors to have the distinction of having won the lead actor category in both the comedy and drama series categories.
In July 1991, O'Connor, Jean Stapleton, Rob Reiner and Sally Struthers were reunited to celebrate the 20th Anniversary of All in the Family, which made its debut on CBS. Thanks to reruns which aired in syndication, TV Land, Antenna TV, and on CBS, the show continued to be popular. Those reruns led producer Norman Lear to create a new sitcom, Sunday Dinner, which was soon cancelled. The following year, Lear created The Powers That Be, which was also unsuccessful.
In March 2000, he received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and was given a St. Patrick's Day tribute by MGM.
His caricature figures prominently in Sardi's restaurant, in New York City's Theater District.
Family life
In 1962, while he was in Rome, filming Cleopatra, O'Connor and his wife adopted a six-day-old boy, naming him Hugh after O'Connor's brother who had died a year earlier. 17-year-old Hugh later worked as a courier on the set of Archie Bunker's Place. O'Connor would eventually create the role of Officer Lonnie Jamison on In the Heat of the Night for his son.[13]In 1989, he was admitted to the hospital for heart bypass surgery.
In 1995, O'Connor's son Hugh committed suicide after a long battle with drug addiction. Following his son's death, O'Connor appeared in public service announcements for Partnership for a Drug Free America and spent the rest of his life working to raise awareness about drug addiction. O'Connor also successfully lobbied to get the State of California to pass legislation allowing family members of an addicted person or anyone injured by a drug dealer's actions, including employers, to sue for reimbursement for medical treatment and rehabilitation costs and other economic and non-economic damages. The law, known as the Drug Dealer Civil Liability Act in California, went into effect in 1997. It is also referred to as The Hugh O'Connor Memorial Law. The act is based on the Model Drug Dealer Liability Act authored in 1992 by then Hawaii U.S. Attorney Daniel Bent. The Model Drug Dealer Liability Act has been passed in 17 states and the Virgin Islands. A website devoted to the Act can be found at: www.ModelDDLA.com. Cases have been brought under the Act in California, Illinois, Utah and other states.
His son's suicide inspired O'Connor to start a crusade against the man who sold the drugs to Hugh. He called Harry Perzigian "a partner in murder" and a "sleazeball". Perzigian filed a defamation lawsuit against the actor. In 1997, a California jury threw out the case. In an interview on CNN's Larry King Live soon after the verdict, O'Connor said he would never be able to put his son's death behind him. "I can't forget it. There isn't a day that I don't think of him and want him back and miss him, and I'll feel that way until I'm not here anymore", he said.
During the late 1990s, O'Connor established a small automotive restoration shop in Newbury Park, California. Called "Carroll O'Connor Classics" the shop contained many of O'Connor's personal vehicles and the cars once owned by his late son.[14] Among the cars O'Connor owned were a Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow sold to him by William Harrah, a Maserati 3500 GT, and a Dodge Challenger equipped with the 440-cubic inch V-8 that was the car he drove during production of All In The Family.
In 1997, the O'Connors donated US$1 million to their alma mater to help match a challenge grant to the University of Montana from the National Endowment for the Humanities. The university named a regional studies and public policy institute the O'Connor Center for the Rocky Mountain West.[8] Afterward, O'Connor taught screenwriting at the university.
In 1998 O'Connor underwent a second surgery to clear the blockage in a cardiac artery, to reduce his risk of stroke.
Death
O'Connor died on June 21, 2001 in Culver City, California from a heart attack brought on by complications from diabetes. His funeral Mass was celebrated at St. Paul the Apostle Catholic Church in Westwood, Los Angeles, California and was attended by All in the Family cast members Rob Reiner, Sally Struthers and Danielle Brisebois, as well as producer Norman Lear. Actress Jean Stapleton, who played O'Connor's onscreen wife and who had been a close friend of O'Connor's since the early 1960s, did not attend the service due to a stage production performance commitment.[15]In honor of O'Connor's career, TV Land moved an entire weekend of programming to the next week and showed a continuous marathon of All in the Family. During the commercial breaks TV Land also showed interview footage of O'Connor and various All in the Family actors, producers with whom he had worked, and other associates. O'Connor's best friend Larry Hagman and his family were also there, alongside the surviving cast of In the Heat of the Night, including Alan Autry and Denise Nicholas, who also attended the memorial. Actor Martin Sheen, then starring on The West Wing, delivered the eulogy. O'Connor is buried at Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery with his son Hugh's cenotaph placed on his grave stone.
Friendship with other actors
Jean Stapleton
This section needs additional citations for verification. (October 2010) |
Larry Hagman
O'Connor had a long-running friendship with actor Larry Hagman, beginning in 1959, when O'Connor was working as an assistant stage manager for the Broadway play God and Kate Murphy, in which Hagman starred. Later as the two struggled as young actors, they rented apartments near each other in New York. Over the years they had a lot in common; just as O'Connor concluded contract negotiations for his salary on All in the Family, in 1974, missing two episodes, Hagman eventually found himself re-negotiating his salary on Dallas, with similar results. Hagman's daughter, Heidi, whom O'Connor had known since her childhood, joined the cast for one season of Archie Bunker's Place. Hagman directed several episodes of O'Connor's later series, In the Heat of the Night. They both endured serious health issues, with O'Connor's heart bypass surgery, and Hagman's liver transplant. Hagman remained close after O'Connor's loss of his son Hugh, and through the rest of O'Connor's life, delivering a eulogy at the funeral.Personal quotes
"Nothing will give me any peace. I've lost a son. And I'll go to my grave without any peace over that."[16]"It was a lack of system that made the '30s Depression as inevitable as all others previously suffered."[17]
"Get between your kid and drugs, any way you can, if you want to save the kid's life".[16]
"I thought that the public would kick us off the air, because of this egregious guy. No. They loved ... they knew him."[18]
On his son: "I should have spied on him. I should've taken away all his civil rights, spied on him, opened his mail, listened to telephone calls, everything."[18]
"I never heard Archie's kind of talk in my own family. My father was a lawyer and was in partnership with two Jews, who with their families were close to us. There were black families in our circle of friends. My father disliked talk like Archie's—he called it lowbrow."[19]
"The biggest part of my life was the acquiring and the loss of a son. I mean, nothing else was as important as that."[18]
"Conventional show-biz savvy held that Americans hated to be the objects of satire."[20]
(He would never be able to put his son's death behind him, he said) "I can't forget it. There isn't a day that I don't think of him and want him back and miss him, and I'll feel that way until I'm not here anymore," (In an interview on CNN's Larry King Live)
Partial credits
Starring roles
- All in the Family (1971–1979) as Archie Bunker (Salary $200,000 per episode)
- Archie Bunker's Place (1979–1983) as Archie Bunker (Salary $250,000 per episode)
- In the Heat of the Night (1988–1994) as Chief/Sheriff Bill Gillespie
- Mad About You (1996–1999) Gus Stemple #3
Films/made for television films
- Shakespeare's 'Julius Caesar' as Crassus (1956)
- The Sacco-Vanzetti Story (TV mini-series) (1960) as Frederick Katzman
- By Love Possessed (1961) .... Bernie Breck
- Parrish (1961) .... Firechief
- A Fever in the Blood (1961) .... Matt Keenan
- Lad: A Dog (1962) as Hamilcar Q. Glure
- Belle Sommers (TV) (1962)
- Lonely Are the Brave (1962) Hinton the Truck Driver
- The Silver Burro (TV) (1963)
- Cleopatra (1963) as Casca
- Nightmare in Chicago aka Once Upon a Savage Night (TV) (1964)
- In Harm's Way (1965) (uncredited) .... *Cmdr./Capt. Burke (USS Swayback)
- The Last Patrol episode of The Time Tunnel (1966) as British General Southall and Colonel Southall, his 1815 ancestor
- Not with My Wife, You Don't! (1966) as Gen. Maynard C. Parker
- Hawaii (1966) as Charles Bromley
- What Did You Do in the War, Daddy? (1966) as Gen. Bolt
- The Time Tunnel (1966)
- Waterhole #3 (1967) as Sheriff John H. Copperud
- Point Blank (1967) as Brewster
- Warning Shot (1967) as Paul Jerez
- For Love of Ivy (1968) as Frank Austin
- The Devil's Brigade (1968) as Maj. Gen. Hunter
- Marlowe (1969) as Lt. Christy French
- Death of a Gunfighter (1969) as Lester Locke
- Ride a Northbound Horse (TV)(1969)
- Fear No Evil (TV) (1969) as Myles Donovan
- Kelly's Heroes (1970) as Maj. Gen. Colt
- Doctors' Wives (1971) Dr. Joe Gray
- Of Thee I Sing (TV) (1972) President Wintergreen
- Law and Disorder (1974) as Willie
- The Last Hurrah (TV) (1977) as Frank Skeffington
- A Different Approach (1978)
- Brass aka Police Brass (TV) (1985) as Frank Nolan
- Convicted (1986) (TV) .... Lewis May
- The GLO Friends Save Christmas (1986) .... Santa
- The Father Clements Story (1987) (TV) .... Cardinal Cody
- Gideon (TV) (1999) as Leo Barnes
- 36 Hours to Die (TV) (1999) Jack 'Balls' O'Malley
- Return to Me (2000) as Marty O'Reilly
Writer
- Bronk (TV) (1975) Series creator
- The Last Hurrah (TV) (1977)
- Archie Bunker's Place (1979) TV series (writer)
- Brass aka Police Brass (TV) (1985) (credited as Matt Harris)
- In the Heat of the Night (1988–1995) Numerous episodes (credited as Matt Harris)
Producer
- Bronk (TV) (1975) Series (executive producer)
- The Last Hurrah (TV) (1977) (executive producer)
- In the Heat of the Night (TV) (1988–1995) (executive producer)
Director
- Archie Bunker's Place (TV) (1979) Series
- In the Heat of the Night (TV) (1988) Series
Crew
- In the Heat of the Night (TV) (1988) Series (executive story editor credited as Matt Harris)
Composer
- All in the Family (TV) (1971) Series "Remembering You" (together with Roger Kellaway)
- Archie Bunker's Place (TV) (1979) Series "Remembering You" (together with Roger Kellaway)
Series music
- All in the Family (TV) (1971) singing title song
Author
- I Think I'm Outta Here (ISBN 0-671-01760-8) (1999) Autobiography
Guest starring
- Shirley Temple's Storybook playing "Appleyard" 27 November 1960
- "The Black Arrow"
- The Americans playing "Captain Garbor" 8 May 1961
- "The Coward"
- The Untouchables playing "Arnie Kurtz aka Albert Krim" (2 episodes, 1961–1962)
- "Bird in the Hand"
- The Dick Powell Show playing "Leonard Barsevick" "Pericles on 31st Street" 12 April 1962
- Naked City 20 June 1962
- "Goodbye Mama, Hello Auntie Maud"
- Naked City playing "Tony Corran" 19 December 1962
- "Spectre of the Rose Street Gang"
- Stoney Burke
- Harry Clark in "Webb of Fear" (1963)
- The Defenders (2 episodes, 1962–1963)
- Ben Casey (2 episodes, 1962–1965)
- Dr. Kildare (2 episodes, 1962–1965)
- Death Valley Days playing "Senator Dave Broderick" 8 February 1963
- "A Gun Is Not a Gentleman"
- The Dick Powell Show playing "Dr. Lyman Savage" 12 February 1963
- "Luxury Liner"
- Bonanza playing "Tom Slayden" 19 May 1963
- "The Boss"
- The Outer Limits playing "Deimos" 13 January 1964
- "Controlled Experiment"
- The Fugitive playing "Sheriff Bray" 10 March 1964
- "Flight from the Final Demon"
- The Man from U.N.C.L.E. playing "Walter Brach" 27 October 1964
- "The Green Opal Affair"
- Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea playing "Old John" 21 December 1964
- "Long Live the King"
- I Spy playing "Dr. Karolyi" 13 April 1966
- "It's *All Done with Mirrors"
- The Time Tunnel playing "General Southall/Colonel Southall" 7 October 1966
- "The Last Patrol"
- The Wild Wild West playing "Fabian Lavendor" 25 November 1966
- "The Night of the Ready-Made Corpse"
- Mission: Impossible playing "Josef Varsh" 28 January 1967
- "The Trial"
- That Girl playing "Giuseppe Casanetti" 23 February 1967
- "A Tenor's Loving Care"
- Gunsmoke playing "Major Glenn Vanscoy" 30 October 1967
- "Major Glory"
- Dundee and the Culhane
- "The Duelist Brief" (1967)
- Insight (1970)
- "The Day God Died"
- Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In as "Guest Performer" 13 December 1971
- The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour as himself (2 episodes, 1971–1972)
- This Is Your Life as himself "Don Rickles" 12 January 1972
- The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson as himself (5 episodes, 1972–1975)
- The Dean Martin Show as himself "Celebrity Roast: Carroll O'Connor" 7 December 1973
- The Dick Cavett Show as himself "London - New York" 8 September 1976
- Saturday Night Live as himself (uncredited) 25 September 1976
- Bill Moyers' Journal as himself 16 May 1981
- Gloria playing "Archie Bunker" in episode: "Gloria, the First Day (un-aired pilot)" 1982
- The Redd Foxx Show "Old Buddies" 1 March 1986
- Party of Five (six episodes) as "Jake Gordon"
- The Rosie O'Donnell Show as himself 4 March 1998
- Biography: Carroll O'Connor 22 June 2001 as himself
Misc
- Remembering You (1972) An LP of classic songs Himself
- An All-Star Tribute to Elizabeth Taylor (1977) Himself
- CBS: On the Air (1978) mini-series part VII co-host
- The 30th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1978) Himself Winner
- All in the Family: 20th Anniversary Special (1991) Himself
- All in the Family: The E! True Hollywood Story (2000) Himself
- Intimate Portrait: Minnie Driver (2000) Narrator
- A&E Biography: Carroll O'Connor - All in a Lifetime (2001) Himself
Archive footage featuring Carroll O'Connor
- Bruce Lee: A Warrior's Journey (2000) (V)
- The 53rd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (2001) Memorial tribute
- Inside TV Land: African Americans in Television (2002)
- The 74th Annual Academy Awards (2002) Memorial tribute
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