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echo: movies
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from: Roger Nelson
date: 2016-09-06 07:17:00
subject: In memorium

Hugh O'Brian, Star of TV's `The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp,' Dies at 91
 
Hugh O'Brian, who starred in the long-running series "The Life and Legend of
Wyatt Earp," died Monday. He was 91.
 
The actor died peacefully in his Beverly Hills home, according to a statement
from Hugh O'Brian Youth Leadership.
 
ABC Western "The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp," in which the exceedingly
handsome, muscular O'Brian starred as the title character, ran for 221 episodes
 from 1955-61. At the time he was one of television's great male sex symbols.
 
In 1957 he was nominated for an Emmy for best continuing performance by an
actor in a dramatic series for his work on "The Life and Legend of
Wyatt Earp."
 
So popular and so much a part of popular culture was O'Brian that he showed up
as Earp, uncredited, in the 1959 Bob Hope Western comedy "Alias Jesse
James,"
as well as in the 1960 TV movie "The Secret World of Eddie
Hodges"; when the
actor guested on "Make Room for Daddy" in 1956, the episode was
entitled "Wyatt
 Earp Visits the Williamses."
 
The actor had appeared in many feature Westerns by the time ABC cast him in its
 series as Wyatt Earp, a lawman who was one of the legends of the Old West.
 
Later he appeared in features including the 1963 comedy "Come Fly With
Me"; in
1965, he starred in the feature "Agatha Christie's Ten Little
Indians" along
with Shirley Eaton and Fabian and had an uncredited role in Otto Preminger's
World War II drama "In Harm's Way," starring John Wayne, Patricia
Neal and Kirk
 Douglas.
 
In 1972-73 he starred with Doug McClure, Anthony Franciosa and Burgess Meredith
 in the NBC series "Search."
 
O'Brian had a small role in John Wayne's last film, Don Siegel's "The
Shootist"
 (1976), as the last character ever killed by Wayne on screen - O'Brian, a good
 friend of Wayne's, considered a great honor.
 
The actor reprised the role of Wyatt Earp for two episodes of the CBS series
"Guns of Paradise" in 1989, and in the TV movies "The
Gambler Returns: The Luck
 of the Draw" (1991), starring Kenny Rogers, and CBS' "Wyatt
Earp: Return to
Tombstone" (1994).
 
O'Brian did plenty of work outside the Western genre, appearing in the Arnold
Schwarzenegger-Danny De Vito comedy "Twins" (1988) as one of
several men who
donated DNA that produced the "twins" and guesting on
"Charlie's Angels,"
"Fantasy Island," "Murder, She Wrote" and "L.A.
Law." He appeared in an Animal
Planet adaptation of Jack London's "Call of the Wild" in 2000.
 
Hugh Charles Krampe was born in Rochester, New York. Hugh lettered in a variety
 of sports.
 
He spent a semester at the University of Cincinnati but during World War II he
dropped out to enlist in the Marine Corps - where his father had been an
officer. At 17 he became the youngest Marine drill instructor, according to the
 TCM website.
 
After the war, O'Brian moved to Los Angeles to study at UCLA. He had started
doing stage work, and was discovered by Ida Lupino, who signed him to appear as
 the second male lead in the polio drama "Never Fear," which she had
co-scripted and was directing; for O'Brian that film led to a contract with
Universal Pictures.
 
He had a brief, uncredited role in the classic noir film "D.O.A.," starring
Edmond O'Brien, but he was soon - almost inevitably - doing Westerns, appearing
 in the Gene Autry vehicle "Beyond the Purple Hills" (1950);
"Vengeance
Valley," starring Burt Lancaster and Robert Walker; Budd Boetticher's "The
Cimarron Kid" (1952), starring Audie Murphy; Raoul Walsh's "The
Lawless Breed"
(1953), starring Rock Hudson and Julie Adams; Boetticher's "Seminole," also
starring Hudson; Boetticher's "The Man From the Alamo," starring
Glenn Ford;
"Back to God's Country," also starring Hudson; Raoul Walsh's
"Saskatchewan"
(1954), starring Alan Ladd and Shelley Winters; "Drums Across the River,"
starring Audie Murphy; Edward Dmytryk's excellent "Broken Lance," starring
Spencer Tracy, Robert Wagner and Richard Widmark; and "White
Feather," starring
 Robert Wagner and Debra Paget.
 
Occasionally he worked outside the Western genre, as in WWII actioner "Fighting
 Coast Guard" (1951); "On the Loose" (1951),  in which he
had a supporting role
 as a doctor; "Son of Ali Baba," starring Tony Curtis and Piper Laurie; the
Douglas Sirk-directed musical "Meet Me at the Fair" (1953); the
bizarre comedy
"Fireman Save My Child" (1954), originally intended for Abbott
and Costello;
and the Ethel Merman musical "There's No Business Like Show
Business," which
also starred Donald O'Connor and Marilyn Monroe.
 
O'Brian dedicated a great deal of his life to a charitable effort he created
himself in 1958, the Hugh O'Brian Youth Leadership Foundation, a nonprofit
youth leadership development program for high schoolers. The organization
sponsors 10,000 high school sophomores annually through leadership programs in
all 50 states and 20 countries.
 
The concept for the program was inspired by the nine days O'Brian spent
visiting with humanitarian Dr. Albert Schweitzer in Africa in 1958.
 
At the Golden Globes in 1954, O'Brian won for most promising newcomer - male
(tied with Steve Forrest and Richard Egan).
 
O'Brian won a Golden Boot Award in 1991 (the awards, sponsored and presented by
 the Motion Picture & Television Fund, are bestowed upon those who have made
significant contributions to the genre of Western television and movies).
 
He is survived by his wife, the former Virginia Barber, whom he married in 2006
 at the age of 81.
 
 
Regards,
 
Roger

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