Howard Duff

Howard Green Duff (November 24, 1913 – July 8, 1990) was an American actor of film, television, stage, and radio. Duff was born in Charleston, Washington, now a part of Bremerton. He graduated from Roosevelt High School in Seattle in 1932 where he began acting in school plays only after he was cut from the basketball team. His first film role was as an inmate in Brute Force. His other movies include The Naked City (1948), All My Sons (1948), Calamity Jane and Sam Bass (1949), Panic in the City (1968), In Search of America (1971), A Wedding (1978) and No Way Out (1987). He appeared in a number of films with his first wife, actress/director Ida Lupino. One of Duff's later performances was as Dustin Hoffman's attorney in the Academy Award-winning Kramer vs. Kramer (1979). On radio, Duff played Dashiell Hammett's private eye Sam Spade from 1946–1950, starring in The Adventures of Sam Spade on three different networks - ABC, CBS and NBC. In 1951 Steve Dunne took over the role of Sam Spade. Duff also appeared in an episode of Climax! entitled Escape From Fear in 1955. On television, Duff appeared with his then wife Ida Lupino in the CBS comedy Mr. Adams and Eve from January 1957 through September 1958, in which they played husband and wife film stars named Howard Adams and Eve Drake. He played the young Samuel Langhorne Clemens, in his early life in the West as a satirical and crusading journalist, in the TV series Bonanza ("Enter Mark Twain," season 1, episode 5, 1959). In 1960 he played the male main character in The Twilight Zone episode "A World of Difference" as Arthur Curtis/Jerry Raigan. From October 1960 through April 1961, Duff played Willie Dante, owner of the San Francisco nightclub, Dante's Inferno, in the NBC adventure/drama series Dante. In 1964, Duff guest starred as Harold Baker on the episode "Prodigy" of NBC's medical drama about psychiatry The Eleventh Hour, starring Jack Ging and Ralph Bellamy. In 1990, he guest starred on an episode of The Golden Girls (episode: The Mangiacavallo Curse Makes a Lousy Wedding Present). From September 1966 through January 1969, Duff portrayed Detective Sergeant Sam Stone in the ABC police drama Felony Squad with costar Dennis Cole. In the 1980s, he appeared on dramas such as NBC's Flamingo Road and Knots Landing, and Dallas, both on CBS.

Cast

No Way Out
Senator William 'Billy' Duvall
The Naked City
Frank Niles
The Heist
Lieutenant Nicholson
Actor
Winfield Sheehan
Kramer vs. Kramer
John Shaunessy
Women's Prison
Dr. Crane
Brute Force
Robert 'Soldier' Becker
Boys' Night Out
Doug Jackson
Private Hell 36
Police Sgt. Jack Farnham
The Late Show
Harry Regan
While the City Sleeps
Lt. Burt Kaufman
Woman in Hiding
Keith Ramsey
Illegal Entry
Bert Powers
All My Sons
George Deever
A Wedding
Dr. Jules Meecham
Jennifer
Jim Hollis
Monster in the Closet
Father Martin Finnegan
Johnny Stool Pigeon
George Morton
Too Much Sun
O.M.
Los Angeles Plays Itself
Dave Pomeroy in Panic in the City (archive footage)
Shakedown
Jack Early
Lily for President?
General
In Search of America
Ray Chandler
Spaceways
Dr. Stephen Mitchell
Calamity Jane and Sam Bass
Sam Bass
Models Inc.
Lennie Stone
The Lady from Texas
Dan Mason
Red Canyon
Lin Sloane
Flame of the Islands
Doug Duryea
The Yellow Mountain
Pete Menlo
A Little Game
Dunlap
Tanganyika
Dan Harder
Sierra Stranger
Jess Collins
The Broken Star
Deputy Marshal Frank Smeed
War Gods of Babylon
Sardanapolo
Blackjack Ketchum Desperado
Tom "Blackjack" Ketchum
Panic in the City
Dave Pomeroy
Roses Are for the Rich
Denton
Tight as a Drum
Hollister
Steel Town
Jim Denko
Love on the Run
Lionel Rockland
The D.A.: Murder One
Lynn D. Compton
Settle the Score
Cy Whately
Flamingo Road
Sheriff Titus Semple
Double Negative
Lester Harlen
Snatched
Duncan Wood
Ski Lift to Death
Ben Forbes
Young Maverick - Dead Man's Hand
Herman Rusk
Know Your Enemy: Japan
Narrator
In the Glitter Palace
Raymond Dawson Travers
Spy Hunt
Steve Quain
Valentine Magic on Love Island
A.J. Morgan
Calhoun
Sid Rayner
This Girl for Hire
Wolfe Macready
The Wild Women of Chastity Gulch
Col. Samuel Isaacs
Roar of the Crowd
Johnny Tracy
Battered
Bill Thompson