Dennis Weaver

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Billy Dennis Weaver (June 4, 1924 – February 24, 2006) was an American actor and president of the Screen Actors Guild, best known for his work in television and films from the early 1950s until just before his death in 2006. Weaver's two most famous roles were as Marshal Matt Dillon's deputy Chester Goode on the western Gunsmoke and as Deputy Marshal Sam McCloud on the police drama McCloud. He starred in the 1971 television film Duel, the first film of director Steven Spielberg. He is also remembered for his role as the twitchy motel attendant in Orson Welles's film Touch of Evil (1958). Weaver was born June 4, 1924, in Joplin, Missouri, the son of Walter Leon "Doc" Weaver and his wife Lenna Leora (née Prather). Weaver wanted to be an actor from childhood. He lived in Shreveport, Louisiana, for several years and for a short time in Manteca, California. He studied at Joplin Junior College, then transferred to the University of Oklahoma at Norman, where he studied drama and was a track star, setting records in several events. During World War II, he served as a pilot in the United States Navy, flying Grumman F4F Wildcat fighter aircraft. After the war, he married Gerry Stowell (his childhood sweetheart), with whom he had three children. Under the name Billy D. Weaver, he tried out for the 1948 U.S. Olympic team in the decathlon, finishing sixth behind 17-year-old high school track star Bob Mathias. However, only the top three finishers were selected. Weaver later commented, "I did so poorly [in the Olympic Trials], I decided to ... stay in New York and try acting. Career Weaver's first role on Broadway came as an understudy to Lonny Chapman as Turk Fisher in Come Back, Little Sheba. He eventually took over the role from Chapman in the national touring company. Solidifying his choice to become an actor, Weaver enrolled in the Actors Studio, where he met Shelley Winters. In the beginning of his acting career, he supported his family by doing odd jobs, including selling vacuum cleaners, tricycles, and women's hosiery. In 1952, Shelley Winters helped him get a contract from Universal Studios. He made his film debut that same year in the movie The Redhead from Wyoming. Over the next three years, he played in a series of movies, but still had to work odd jobs to support his family. In 1955 he appeared in an episode of The Lone Ranger "The Tell-Tale Bullet", which is viewable on YouTube. While delivering flowers, he heard he had landed the role of Chester Goode, the limping, loyal assistant of Marshal Matt Dillon (James Arness) on the new television series Gunsmoke. It was his big break; the show went on to become the highest-rated and longest-running live action series in United States television history (1955 to 1975), an honor now held by Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. In 1970, Weaver landed the title role in the NBC series McCloud, for which he received two Emmy Award nominations. The show, about a modern Western lawman who ends up in New York City, was loosely based on the Clint Eastwood film Coogan's Bluff. Weaver married Gerry Stowell after World War II, and they had three sons: Richard, Robert, and Rustin Weaver. Gerry died April 26, 2016, at 90. Death Weaver died from prostate cancer at his home in Ridgway, Colorado, on February 24, 2006, at age 81. CLR

Cast

Duel at Diablo
Willard Grange
Touch of Evil
Mirador Motel Night Manager
Duel
David Mann
The Golden Blade
Unknown
What's the Matter with Helen?
Lincoln Palmer
Horizons West
Dandy Taylor
Ten Wanted Men
Sheriff Clyde Gibbons
High Noon
Mart Howe
Cocaine: One Man's Seduction
Eddie Gant
A Man Called Sledge
Erwin Ward
Storm Fear
Hank
Don't Go to Sleep
Phillip
Submerged
Buck Stevens
Way... Way Out
Hoffman
The Lawless Breed
Jim Clements
Dangerous Mission
Ranger clerk
Ishi: The Last of His Tribe
Prof. Benjamin Fuller
Terror on the Beach
Neil Glynn
Column South
Menguito
The Mississippi Gambler
Julian Contant
Disaster at Silo 7
Sheriff Ben Harlen
A Winner Never Quits
Mr. Wyshner
The Virginian
Sam Balaam
The Forgotten Man
Lt. Joe Hardy
Female Artillery
Deke Chambers
Rolling Man
Lonnie McAfee
Swing Out, Sweet Land
Self
Going for the Gold: The Bill Johnson Story
Wally Johnson
Dragnet
Capt. R.A. Lohrman
Seduction in a Small Town
Sam Jenks
Amber Waves
Elroy 'Bud' Burkhardt
Law and Order
Frank Durling
The Ordeal of Dr. Mudd
Dr. Samuel A. Mudd
Stone
Daniel Ellis Stone
The Return of Sam McCloud
Sam McCloud
Gentle Giant
Tom Wedloe
War Arrow
Pino
The Islander
Gable McQueen
Two Bits & Pepper
Sheriff Pratt
The Gallant Hours
Andy Lowe
Intimate Strangers
Donald Halston
Walking After Midnight
Self
The Ordeal of Patty Hearst
Charles Bates
Dennis Weaver's Earthship
Unknown
Bluffing It
Jack Duggan
Stolen Women, Captured Hearts
Captain Farnsworth
A Cry For Justice
Sgt. Ted Bentley
The Dean Martin Christmas Show
Self
Seven Angry Men
John Brown Jr.
The Redhead from Wyoming
Matt Jessup
Mastergate
Vice President Dale Burden
Escape from Wildcat Canyon
Grandpa Flint
Chief Crazy Horse
Maj. Carlisle
Home on the Range
Abner (voice)
The Day the Loving Stopped
Aaron Danner
Greyhounds
Chance Wayne
Gallegher Goes West
George Tucker, the Sundown Kid
Earth and the American Dream
Reader (voice)
The Great Man's Whiskers
Abraham Lincoln
Mission Batangas
Chip Corbett
Great Adventurers & Their Quests: Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
Narrator
The Man from the Alamo
Tennessean (uncredited)
Amy Grant: Headin' Home for the Holidays
Tom Miller