Brian Keith

For other people named Brian Keith, see Brian Keith (disambiguation).
Brian Keith

Keith in Dino, 1957
Born Robert Alba Keith
(1921-11-14)November 14, 1921
Bayonne, New Jersey, U.S.
Died June 24, 1997(1997-06-24) (aged 75)
Malibu, California, U.S.
Cause of death Self-inflicted gunshot wound
Resting place Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery
Nationality American
Other names Robert Keith, Jr.
Education East Rockaway High School
Occupation Actor
Years active 19461997
Spouse(s) Frances Helm (m. 1948–54)
Judy Landon (m. 1954–69)
Victoria Young (m. 1970–97)
Children Seven
Parent(s) Robert Keith
Helena Shipman

Brian Keith (né Robert Alba Keith; November 14, 1921 June 24, 1997) was an American film, television, and stage actor who in his six-decade-long career gained recognition for his work in movies such as the Disney family film The Parent Trap (1961), the comedy The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming (1966), and the adventure saga The Wind and the Lion (1975), in which he portrayed President Theodore Roosevelt.

On television, two of his best-known roles were those of bachelor-uncle-turned-reluctant-parent Bill Davis in the 1960s sitcom Family Affair, and a tough retired judge in the 1980s light hearted crime drama, Hardcastle and McCormick. He also starred in the The Brian Keith Show, which aired on NBC from 1972 to 1974, where he portrayed a pediatrician who operated a free clinic on Oahu, as well as in the CBS comedy series Heartland.

Early life

Keith was born Robert Alba Keith[1] in Bayonne, New Jersey, on November 14, 1921, to actor Robert Keith and stage actress Helena Shipman, a native of Aberdeen, Washington. Some sources also list his full name as Brian Robert Keith.[2] He was raised Roman Catholic.[3]

Keith's parents divorced, and he moved to Hollywood and started his acting career at the age of two. He made his acting debut in the silent film Pied Piper Malone (1924), at the age of three.

His mother continued to perform on stage and radio, while his grandmother Apker helped to raise him on Long Island, New York, just 37 miles east of where he was born.[1] She taught young Keith to read books over his age level.

Prior to learning to read, he spent a lot of time backstage while his parents performed, keeping quiet for hours. Helena fondly recalled keeping her little son in the dressing room in one of her dressing room drawers. He remained calm and quiet, and would sleep through the entire show.

From 1927 through 1929, Keith's stepmother was Peg Entwistle, a well-known Broadway actress who committed suicide by jumping from the "H" of the famous Hollywood Sign in 1932.

After graduating from East Rockaway High School in 1939, in East Rockaway, New York, Keith joined the United States Marine Corps (1942–1945). He served during World War II as an air gunner (he was a radio-gunner in the rear cockpit of a two-man Douglas SBD Dauntless dive bomber in a U.S. Marine squadron) and received an Air Medal.

Career

Keith and Spike in The Westerner (1960)

After the war, Keith became a stage actor, branching out into films and then television. In 1952, he made his debut on three episodes of Tales of Tomorrow, which led him to other roles in shows such as Police Story, a 1950s anthology show, Eye Witness, The United States Steel Hour, Robert Montgomery Presents, The Motorola Television Hour, Campbell Playhouse, The Pepsi-Cola Playhouse, The Elgin Hour, The Adventures of Ellery Queen, and Jane Wyman Presents: The Fireside Theatre. In 1955, Keith starred in his own series, Crusader, as the fictional journalist Matt Anders, who tries to free captive peoples from communist countries.

During the 1950s and 1960s, Keith also had guest roles on The Ford Television Theatre, Wire Service, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Climax!, Zane Grey Theater, Rawhide, Laramie, The Untouchables, The Americans, Outlaws, The Virginian, The Fugitive, two episodes of Wagon Train, and five episodes of 77 Sunset Strip, among many others.

In 1960, he won acclaim for his starring role in Sam Peckinpah's extremely hard-bitten, adult, and short-lived series The Westerner (1960). The following year, Keith appeared as the father of twins in the film The Parent Trap (1961), costarring Hayley Mills and Maureen O'Hara. In 1966, Keith costarred with Steve McQueen as traveling gunsmith Jonas Cord in the western film Nevada Smith. In 1968, as widower Jake Iverson, he costarred with Doris Day in the comedy, With Six You Get Eggroll.

Family Affair

Keith (center right) with Sebastian Cabot (top) and the other costars of Family Affair

In 1966, Keith landed the role of Uncle Bill Davis on CBS's popular television situation comedy Family Affair. This role earned him three Emmy Award nominations for Best Actor in a Comedy Series.[4] The show made him a household name. It was in the vein of such successful 1960s and 1970s sitcoms that dealt with widowhood and/or many single-parent issues as: The Andy Griffith Show, My Three Sons, The Beverly Hillbillies, Petticoat Junction, Here's Lucy, Julia, The Courtship of Eddie's Father, The Brady Bunch, The Partridge Family, and Sanford And Son. During its first season in 1966, Family Affair was an immediate hit, ranking #15 in the Nielsen ratings.[5] By the end of its fifth season, in 1971, Family Affair still had high ratings but was canceled after 138 episodes.

Kathy Garver, who co-starred as Keith's teenaged niece, Cissy, on Family Affair, indicated that Keith said: "I'm a cultural Irishman, don't you know, I'm a cultural Irishman." Garver explained: "But he went through many manifestations and changes of character, during the five years that we shot. At first, he was up and then his second year, he was going through a divorce and then, the third year, he met somebody else; and he became more anecdotal and told stories that he loved kids, and he was very outspoken about those that he did not like. So, he was a very interesting character and it was Brian and Sebastian Cabot [who played Mr. French] had such a different style of acting and that's another reason I think that Family Affair was so popular and stayed as it did. Both excellent actors, both coming from very different methods and styles of acting with Sebastian was more from the classical style and he would take home his script and he would dutifully look at every single word and have it to perfection, and then Brian would come in and say, 'Oh what do we have today? Let me see the scene, uh-huh, uh-huh, let's go!' So he was very improvisational, motion of the moment. And those two different styles really worked out each other, very well."[6]

Other roles

Keith went on to star as the pediatrician Dr. Sean Jamison in the NBC sitcom The Brian Keith Show (also known as The Little People), filmed on an estate at the foot of Diamond Head, Hawaii. The series was canceled after two seasons, in 1974.

Keith also starred in the role of Steven "The Fox" Halliday in the six-part television miniseries, The Zoo Gang (1974), about a group of former underground French Resistance fighters from World War II. The show also starred Sir John Mills, Lilli Palmer, and Barry Morse.

In the film The Wind and the Lion (1975), Keith played President Theodore Roosevelt.

Keith spoke fluent Russian, which led to his casting as a Russian in two roles: as a Soviet scientist in the film Meteor (1979) with Natalie Wood, and as the Soviet Premier in the NBC miniseries World War III (1982) with Rock Hudson. Decades earlier, in the comedy film The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming (1966), he had played the unexcitable police chief of an island where a Soviet submarine runs aground. However, his character had to have Russian translated to him by Alan Arkin's character.

Keith once again returned to series television in 1983, with Hardcastle and McCormick, in the role of a cranky retired judge named Milton C. Hardcastle. Daniel Hugh Kelly costarred as ex-con Mark McCormick in this ABC crime drama with elements of comedy. The chemistry of Keith and Kelly was a hit, and the series lasted three years until its cancellation in 1986.[2]

Keith made a guest appearance in the Evening Shade, season 1 episode "Chip Off The Old Brick" (1991), as the loud-mouthed father of Herman Stiles (played by actor Michael Jeter).[7]

In his last film, Keith played President William McKinley in the film Rough Riders (1997). Director John Milius dedicated the film to "Brian Keith, Actor, Marine, Raconteur."[8]

Personal life

Keith married three times, first to Frances Helm; then, in 1954, to actress Judy Landon (who made a guest appearance on Family Affair);[9] and finally, in 1970, to Hawaiian actress Victoria Young (née Leialoha), who later appeared on The Brian Keith Show as Nurse Puni.[10]

Keith fathered two children with Landon (Michael and Mimi), and together they adopted three others (Barbra, Betty, and Rory). He fathered two children with Young (David and Daisy). Daisy became an actress and appeared with her father in the short-lived series Heartland, in 1989.[11]

Death

During the latter part of his life, Keith suffered from emphysema and lung cancer, despite having quit smoking 10 years earlier. (He had appeared in an endorsement campaign for Camel cigarettes in 1955). On June 24, 1997, he was found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound[12] in his home at 23449 Malibu Colony Road in Malibu, California, two months after his daughter Daisy committed suicide. It was also reported that he had financial problems and suffered from depression throughout his final days.[11]

Maureen O'Hara stated in an interview, not long after Keith died, that she emphatically believed he did not commit suicide. She stated that he had a large gun collection, and enjoyed cleaning them and showing them to people. She believed he might have been cleaning the gun or looking at it when it went off, and that his death was an accident and definitely not a suicide. She had just visited with him and said he was fine and in good spirits. Also, she stated he would not have committed suicide due to his Catholic beliefs.

Keith's family was joined by many mourners at a private funeral, including Family Affair co stars Kathy Garver and Johnny Whitaker, and Hardcastle and McCormick co star Daniel Hugh Kelly. Keith's ashes were interred next to those of his daughter Daisy at Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery in Los Angeles, California.

Legacy

On June 26, 2008, Brian Keith received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.[13]

Work

Film

Television

Stage

References

  1. 1 2 Keith, Victoria Y. (2014). "About Us". BrianKeith.com. Retrieved 2015-08-29.
  2. 1 2 Van Gelder, Lawrence (June 25, 1997). "Brian Keith, Hardy Actor, 75; Played Dads and Desperadoes". The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-08-29.
  3. Hays, Matthew. "It's a Family Affair". Montreal Mirror. Archived from the original on 2012-06-30. Retrieved 2015-08-29. I was surprised at Brian, who was Catholic, ...
  4. "Brian Keith Biography". TV Guide. Retrieved 2015-08-29.
  5. Mavis, Paul (December 1, 2007). "Family Affair-Season Four". DVD Talk. Retrieved 2015-08-29.
  6. "OSB Episode 120". On Screen & Beyond. July 11, 2010. Retrieved 2015-08-29.
  7. 1 2 Evening Shade: Chip Off the Old Brick (1991) at the Internet Movie Database
  8. "Brian Keith: Inducted to the Walk of Fame on June 26, 2008 with 1 star.". Hollywood Walk of Fame. June 26, 2008. Retrieved 2015-08-29.
  9. Family Affair: Ballerina Buffy (1967) at the Internet Movie Database
  10. Biography for Brian Keith at the Internet Movie Database
  11. 1 2 Simon, Stephanie (June 25, 1997). "Brian Keith - Hollywood Star Walk". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2015-08-29.
  12. Simon, Stephanie (June 25, 1997). "Actor Brian Keith Found Dead in Apparent Suicide". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2015-08-29.
  13. "Brian Keith Honored At The Hollywood Walk of Fame". Getty Images. June 28, 2008. Retrieved 2015-08-29.
  14. "Set Up for Death". Suspense. 1949.
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