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Donald O'Brien (actor)

Donal "Donald" O'Brien (15 September 1930 – 23 April 2018)[1] was an Irish film and television actor. In his near 40-year career, O'Brien appeared in dozens of stage performances and in more than 60 film and television productions.

Donald O'Brien
Born(1930-09-15)15 September 1930
Died23 April 2018(2018-04-23) (aged 88)
NationalityIrish
Occupation(s)Stage, film and television actor
Years active1948–1994

O'Brien made his feature film debut in 1953 with Anatole Litvak's war drama Act of Love. He studied acting in Dublin and initially joined the Gate Theatre at age 19 before making the transition to film several years later. O'Brien's performance in The Train (1964), in which he played a Wehrmacht Feldwebel, led to his first break-out role in Grand Prix (1966) starring alongside James Garner and Eva Marie Saint.

He was particularly known for his performances in the Spaghetti Western genre of the late-1960s and '70s, with memorable roles in Run, Man, Run (1968), Four of the Apocalypse (1975), Keoma (1976), Mannaja (1977) and Silver Saddle (1978), as well as later appearances in Italian horror, post-apocalyptic, and zombie films. In 1980, O'Brien suffered a head injury which left him in a coma for three days and partially paralysed. Though eventually recovering from his injuries, his mobility was significantly limited for the rest of his life. In spite of this, O'Brien continued to work for another decade in the Italian film industry, almost exclusively for directors Lucio Fulci and Joe D'Amato. His last active years also included supporting roles in The Name of the Rose (1986) and The Devil's Daughter (1991).

Early life edit

O'Brien was born in Pau, Pyrénées-Atlantiques in France on 15 September 1930.[2] His Irish-born father had been a US Army cavalry officer and left the service after being wounded in the Spanish–American War. His father then returned to Ireland with the pension he received for his military service, sold the family farm and retired to the South of France where he eventually met and married an English governess. O'Brien's family moved around during the next few years before settling in the country's northern coast. During the Second World War, and the Nazi occupation of France, his family fled the country to Dublin, Ireland. It was during this period that one of O'Brien's brothers, among the dozen Irish volunteers serving in the Royal Air Force, was killed in action.[3]

Growing up, he was a great admirer of fellow Irishmen William Butler Yeats and Michael Collins, the French adventurer André Malraux, composer Maurice Ravel, the Italian artist Giorgio de Chirico, German boxer Max Schmeling, English actor Sir Laurence Olivier and especially handicapped Second World War ace Douglas Bader.[3]

Acting career edit

Early stage and film career edit

In the autumn of 1948, O'Brien attended grammar school in Dublin where he was studying for final exam. He sat for his matriculation, for "a first-class ticket" to university, but failed in mathematics. Instead of taking classes for another year, he decided instead to join a drama school. He received leading roles for several local stage performances and, after joining the Dublin Gate Theatre, was involved with productions headed by Irish dramatist Micheál Mac Liammóir. O'Brien's profile was significantly raised while with the Gate Theatre, however, he grew dissatisfied with continuously being cast in walk-on roles. He decided to move to France where found employment with the US Army in Paris as an office worker. O'Brien was part of a boxing club while in Dublin and later involved in a fight with a German all-in-wrestler at a café at Place Pigalle.[3]

In 1953, the 23-year-old O'Brien made his first appearance in a feature film, Anatole Litvak's war drama Act of Love, in which he had a brief speaking role. He spent the next few years in France and had minor roles in several other films including The Wretches (1960), Saint Tropez Blues (1961), Dynamite Jack (1961), Tales of Paris (1962) and, in an uncredited role, as an English priest in The Trial of Joan of Arc (1962); he also made his French television debut guest starring on L'inspecteur Leclerc enquête. The following year, he had another brief role as a Wehrmacht Feldwebel in The Train (1964),[2][4] which so impressed director John Frankenheimer that he cast O'Brien as a supporting character in Grand Prix (1966), his first break-out role, co-starring James Garner and Eva Marie Saint.[5][6] O'Brien credited Burt Lancaster with helping himself and other younger actors on the set of The Train.

Now that was a guy, terrific. I've worked with some Hollywood actors, but he was worth all of them. He used to be a circus acrobat. He had this marvellous physique, and while other actors would choose to act like primadonnas when it came to dangerous scenes, Lancaster would do most of the stuff himself. And he was a friendly guy, always helping us little-knowns when we had problems. This was one of my first more important parts and I was very unsure of myself. He was always telling us what we could do to improve our stuff. A great guy.[3]

His later Grand Prix co-star James Garner, however, struck him as,

..a very good-looking fellow, all the girls went crazy for him, and a good actor at that, but he, like others I used to work with, seemed to be self-conscious and nervous, for no discernible reason. I mean, these guys were famous and successful. But they often behaved like little girls when it came to things like, Why is he getting a longer close-up and I don't, stuff like that. I mean, this may be important when this one close-up is all the screen time you have, but they are the leading players, so why do they behave that way? I never understood that...[3]

In between the two projects, he played character roles in several action and war films, mostly French-Italian co-productions, including Weekend at Dunkirk, Passeport diplomatique agent K 8, La Métamorphose des cloportes, Three Rooms in Manhattan, Nick Carter and Red Club, La Vie de chateau and La Ligne de démarcation. O'Brien played an RAF pilot, much like his late brother, in the latter film. He also travelled to Yugoslavia to work on Jean Dréville's La Fayette.[3]

Leading man in Spaghetti Westerns edit

In 1967, O'Brien was brought to Italy to star in Sergio Sollima's cult Spaghetti Western Run, Man, Run! with Tomas Milian.[7] His portrayal of ex-American lawman turned soldier of fortune Nathaniel Cassidy led to future leading roles in the genre for a number of years.[8] Shortly after filming, he was interviewed in the 1968 television documentary Western, Italian Style. Sollima, according to O'Brien, was "considered to be the intellectual among the Western filmmakers. I enjoyed working with him. He was a very intelligent and gifted man." It was during his years working in Italy that he changed his given name from "Donal" to "Donald", given his film contracts and credits frequently misspelled his name, banks would refuse to cash his checks under his birth name. He ended up having to the embassy to have a new passport issued with "Donald" in parentheses.[3]

By the early 1970s, however, the genre was already starting its slow decline and saw O'Brien, usually a villain (or occasional anti-hero), in increasingly low-budget productions such as Giuseppe Vari's The Last Traitor (1971), with Maurice Poli and Dino Strano, Paid in Blood (1971) with Jeff Cameron and Sheriff of Rock Springs (1971) with Cosetta Greco and Richard Harrison. He made another picture with Jeff Cameron, God Is My Colt .45 (1972), two with William Berger, Kung Fu Brothers in the Wild West (1973)[9] and The Executioner of God (1973), and Six Bounty Killers for a Massacre (1973) with Attilio Dottesio and Robert Woods. He later recalled having a somewhat strained relationship with Berger, mostly due to his drug issues, and was given parts originally intended for the older actor when was either unable to perform or had been arrested. O'Brien also starred in one of his first non-western roles, in the Italian horror film Il sesso della strega, as the investigating police inspector.[3]

That same year, O'Brien was asked by Harrison to co-star in his own Spaghetti Western, Two Brothers in Trinity (1973), which was co-directed by Renzo Genta. In the film, O'Brien played devout Mormon missionary Lester O'Hara, half-brother of Harrison's womanising amoral character Jesse Smith. The next year, he had supporting role White Fang to the Rescue (1974) and Challenge to White Fang (1974), the latter being his first film with Lucio Fulci. He was again cast by Fulci in Four of the Apocalypse (1975). O'Brien had starring roles in the last few "twilight" Spaghetti Westerns, Keoma (1977), A Man Called Blade (1977) and Fulci's fourth and final western They Died with Their Boots On (1978).[8][10] O'Brien called Fulci one of his most favourite directors to work with and was deeply saddened when learning of his death in a 1996 interview calling him "a truly original human being with a great love for cinema".[3]

Foray into exploitation and horror films edit

While filming his last Spaghetti Westerns, O'Brien appeared in one of Joe D'Amato's entries of the Emanuelle series, Emanuelle and the Last Cannibals (1977), as white Safari hunter Donald McKenzie. In the film, he and his wife Maggie, played by another one-time Spaghetti Western star Susan Scott, encounter Emanuelle (Laura Gemser) in the Amazon and join her expedition to find a lost tribe of cannibals. He also played the villainous Nazi commandant in Marino Girolami's WWII farce Kakkientruppen (1977), police officer Sgt. Stricker in Gianfranco Parolini's Yeti: Giant of the 20th Century (1977), mercenary Major Hagerty in Joe D'Amato's Tough To Kill (1978) and as the SS Commander in Enzo G. Castellari's The Inglorious Bastards (1978). One of O'Brien's co-stars, Bo Svenson, taught him how to say several lines in German for the film. In 1979, O'Brien starred as an exorcist the nunsploitation film Images in a Convent, another D'Amato picture, which would be the first of many future religious-themed roles.[3] Over the next year, he appeared in two films by Marino Girolami. The first was a cameo appearance in the sex comedy Sesso profondo and the second, a much larger role, in Zombie Holocaust as the main villain Dr. Obrero.[2][11] His depiction of the "mad scientist" became very popular among horror fans and remains one of the most infamous characters in the genre.[3]

Later career in Italian cinema edit

O'Brian starred in his first American production, the television film The Day Christ Died, as a Roman soldier in 1980.[12] Later that year, while staying in Parisian hotel, he slipped in the bathroom and hit his head. He was in a coma for three days and discovered half of his body was paralysed shortly after waking up. It took him nearly four years to recover from his injuries though he would have limited mobility for the rest of his life. This would also reduce the range of roles he could play.[3]

He made his return to acting in the 1980s post-apocalyptic films The New Gladiators and 2020 Texas Gladiators directed by Lucio Fulci and Joe D'Amato respectively. In D'Amato's film, he played the main villain, the Dark One.[13] The death scene for his character featured an elaborate special effect scene for the time, in which his skull was "cracked open" by an axe, but the producers felt it was too over the top and cut it from the film. His handicap continued to trouble him over the years, being necessary to use a walking stick, and as a result his appearances became sporadic during the rest of the decade. In 1986, he played another "mad scientist" in Sergio Martino's science fiction film Vendetta dal futuro/ aka "Fists of Steel". He also played a supporting part, as Pietro d'Assisi, in The Name of the Rose directed by Jean-Jacques Annaud that same year. Two years later, he played the mad housekeeper Valkos in Ghosthouse produced by Joe D'Amato's company Filmirage.[3]

In 1990, O'Brien was cast as a Sicilian baron in Marco Modugno's Il Briganti, among the locations filmed included Hadrian's Villa, however the film was never released. He had roles in three other films; the historical drama Una vita scellerata, the post-apocalyptic film Flight from Paradise, and the fantasy film Quest for the Mighty Sword, the latter again directed by Joe D'Amato, in which he played Gunther, a mad villainous king suffering from a disease similar to smallpox. He was also supposed to appear in a somewhat risque cameo for Tinto Brass' erotic film Paprika but his scene was lost on the cutting room floor.[3]

Semi-retirement edit

His last regular film roles were in Return From Death (1991), The Devil's Daughter/ aka "The Sect" (1991)[3][13] and Sparrow (1993). As he became more active, however, it was around this time that O'Brien suffered another accident. While walking on a beach with two of his brothers, he attempted a short sprint but fell and was unable to get back up. His brothers were able to get him to a hospital where it was discovered that the hip bones on one side of his body were severely damaged due to being overly stressed. In March 1996, he gave a rare interview with Euro Trash Cinema, a popular European exploitation film magazine, in which he discussed his early life and career, former co-stars and his thoughts on the state of the Italian film industry.[3] His last film was Honey Sweet Love, in 1994.

He died in Andernos-les-Bains in France.

Filmography edit

Year Title Role Notes
1960 The Wretches
1961 Saint Tropez Blues Todd Anderson
Dynamite Jack
1962 Tales of Paris (segment "Ella")
The Trial of Joan of Arc English priest Uncredited
1963 Ballade pour un voyou
1964 The Train Sergeant Schwartz
Weekend at Dunkirk English officier
1965 Passeport diplomatique agent K 8 Dolbry
Hail, Mafia Mafia thug
Cloportes Gallery visitor
Three Rooms in Manhattan Cook at the diner
Nick Carter and Red Club
1966 A Matter of Resistance American Officer Uncredited
The Man from Interpol Polard
Martin Soldat Captain Carruthers
Grand Prix Wallace Bennett
1967 The Night of the Generals Plotting German Officer Uncredited
1968 Run, Man, Run! Nathaniel Cassidy
1971 The Last Traitor Captain Ned Carter
Finders Killers Jack Forest
Paid in Blood Lee Rast
Sheriff of Rock Springs Jones
1972 God Is My Colt .45 Collins
Two Brothers in Trinity Lester O'Hara
1973 Il Giustiziere di Dio Frank
Sex of the Witch Inspector
Six Bounty Killers for a Massacre Frank the Irishman
Kung Fu Brothers in the Wild West Outlaw
1974 Challenge to White Fang Liverpool
White Fang to the Rescue Harold
1975 Four of the Apocalypse Sheriff of Salt Flat
Giochi erotici di una famiglia per bene Professor Riccardo Rossi
1976 Keoma Caldwell
1977 A Man Called Blade Burt Craven
Emanuelle and the Last Cannibals Donald McKenzie
Yeti: Giant of the 20th Century Sgt. Stricker
Kakkientruppen Comandante
1978 The Inglorious Bastards SS Commander
They Died with Their Boots On (aka "Silver Saddle") Fletcher
Tough to Kill Major Hagerty
1980 Flying Sex Mr. Slider
Zombie Holocaust (aka "Dr. Butcher") Dr. Obrero
1981 Images in a Convent Exorcist
1982 2020 Texas Gladiators Black One
1984 Warriors of the Year 2072 Monk
Panther Squad General
1986 Vendetta dal futuro (aka "Fists of Steel", "Atomic Cyborg") Professor Olster
The Name of the Rose Pietro d'Assisi
1988 Ghosthouse (aka La Casa 3") Valkos
1989 Mortacci Archibald Williams
1990 Una vita scellerata Bernardino, l'ermita
Flight from Paradise
Quest for the Mighty Sword Prince Gunther
1991 Ritorno dalla morte (aka "Frankenstein 2000") Ric
The Devil's Daughter (aka "The Sect") Justice Jonathan Ford
1993 Sparrow
1994 Honey Sweet Love Officer
Il Briganti Sicilian baron (final film role)
Year Film Role Notes
1963 L'inspecteur Leclerc enquête Dalton Episode: "Voir Paris et mourir"
1980 The Day Christ Died Roman Soldier Television film

References edit

  1. ^ [https://deces.matchid.io/id/8fn39blz_O2R Fichier des décès ]
  2. ^ a b c Slater, Jay. Eaten Alive! Italian Cannibal and Zombie Movies. London: Plexus, 2002. (pg. 239) ISBN 0-85965-314-5
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Keßler, Christian (March 1996). Craig Ledbetter (ed.). . Euro Trash Cinema. Archived from the original on 13 October 2016. Retrieved 1 March 2011.
  4. ^ Cadden, Tom Scott. What a Bunch of Characters! An Entertaining Guide to Who Played What in the Movies. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall Publishers, 1984. (pg. 190) ISBN 0-13-951914-9
  5. ^ Aros, Andrew A. An Actor Guide to the Talkies, 1965 through 1974. Metuchen, New Jersey: Scarecrow Press, 1977. (pg. 180) ISBN 0-8108-1052-2
  6. ^ Emery, Robert J. "The Directors: In Their Own Words". Vol. I. New York: TV Books, 1999. (pg. 258) ISBN 1-57500-087-3
  7. ^ Frayling, Christopher. Spaghetti Westerns: Cowboys and Europeans from Karl May to Sergio Leone. London: Routledge & Keagan Paul, 1981. (pg. xvii) ISBN 0-7100-0503-2
  8. ^ a b Weisser, Thomas. Spaghetti Westerns: The Good, The Bad, and The Violent: A Comprehensive, Illustrated Filmography of 558 Eurowesterns and Their Personnel, 1961–1977. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland, 1992. (pg. 179, 270, 317) ISBN 0-89950-688-7
  9. ^ Eleftheriotis, Dimitris and Gary Needham, ed. Asian Cinemas: A Reader and Guide. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2006. (pg. 146) ISBN 0-8248-3085-7
  10. ^ Thrower, Stephen. Beyond Terror: The Films of Lucio Fulci. Guildford: FAB, 1999. (pg. 130) ISBN 0-9529260-6-7
  11. ^ Jones, Stephen. The Essential Monster Movie Guide: A Century of Creature Features on Film, TV and Video. New York: Billboard Books, 2000. (pg. 430) ISBN 0-8230-7936-8
  12. ^ Marill, Alvin H. Movies Made for Television: The Telefeature and the Mini-Series 1964–1986. New York: Zoetrope, 1987. (pg. 97) ISBN 0-918432-80-4
  13. ^ a b Lentz, Harris M. Science Fiction, Horror & Fantasy Film and Television Credits. 2nd ed. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland, 2001. (pg. 1033, 1162, 1358, 1443, 1506, 1627) ISBN 0-7864-0951-7

External links edit

donald, brien, actor, donal, donald, brien, september, 1930, april, 2018, irish, film, television, actor, near, year, career, brien, appeared, dozens, stage, performances, more, than, film, television, productions, donald, brienborn, 1930, september, 1930pau, . Donal Donald O Brien 15 September 1930 23 April 2018 1 was an Irish film and television actor In his near 40 year career O Brien appeared in dozens of stage performances and in more than 60 film and television productions Donald O BrienBorn 1930 09 15 15 September 1930Pau FranceDied23 April 2018 2018 04 23 aged 88 Andernos les Bains FranceNationalityIrishOccupation s Stage film and television actorYears active1948 1994O Brien made his feature film debut in 1953 with Anatole Litvak s war drama Act of Love He studied acting in Dublin and initially joined the Gate Theatre at age 19 before making the transition to film several years later O Brien s performance in The Train 1964 in which he played a Wehrmacht Feldwebel led to his first break out role in Grand Prix 1966 starring alongside James Garner and Eva Marie Saint He was particularly known for his performances in the Spaghetti Western genre of the late 1960s and 70s with memorable roles in Run Man Run 1968 Four of the Apocalypse 1975 Keoma 1976 Mannaja 1977 and Silver Saddle 1978 as well as later appearances in Italian horror post apocalyptic and zombie films In 1980 O Brien suffered a head injury which left him in a coma for three days and partially paralysed Though eventually recovering from his injuries his mobility was significantly limited for the rest of his life In spite of this O Brien continued to work for another decade in the Italian film industry almost exclusively for directors Lucio Fulci and Joe D Amato His last active years also included supporting roles in The Name of the Rose 1986 and The Devil s Daughter 1991 Contents 1 Early life 2 Acting career 2 1 Early stage and film career 2 2 Leading man in Spaghetti Westerns 2 3 Foray into exploitation and horror films 2 4 Later career in Italian cinema 3 Semi retirement 4 Filmography 5 References 6 External linksEarly life editO Brien was born in Pau Pyrenees Atlantiques in France on 15 September 1930 2 His Irish born father had been a US Army cavalry officer and left the service after being wounded in the Spanish American War His father then returned to Ireland with the pension he received for his military service sold the family farm and retired to the South of France where he eventually met and married an English governess O Brien s family moved around during the next few years before settling in the country s northern coast During the Second World War and the Nazi occupation of France his family fled the country to Dublin Ireland It was during this period that one of O Brien s brothers among the dozen Irish volunteers serving in the Royal Air Force was killed in action 3 Growing up he was a great admirer of fellow Irishmen William Butler Yeats and Michael Collins the French adventurer Andre Malraux composer Maurice Ravel the Italian artist Giorgio de Chirico German boxer Max Schmeling English actor Sir Laurence Olivier and especially handicapped Second World War ace Douglas Bader 3 Acting career editEarly stage and film career edit In the autumn of 1948 O Brien attended grammar school in Dublin where he was studying for final exam He sat for his matriculation for a first class ticket to university but failed in mathematics Instead of taking classes for another year he decided instead to join a drama school He received leading roles for several local stage performances and after joining the Dublin Gate Theatre was involved with productions headed by Irish dramatist Micheal Mac Liammoir O Brien s profile was significantly raised while with the Gate Theatre however he grew dissatisfied with continuously being cast in walk on roles He decided to move to France where found employment with the US Army in Paris as an office worker O Brien was part of a boxing club while in Dublin and later involved in a fight with a German all in wrestler at a cafe at Place Pigalle 3 In 1953 the 23 year old O Brien made his first appearance in a feature film Anatole Litvak s war drama Act of Love in which he had a brief speaking role He spent the next few years in France and had minor roles in several other films including The Wretches 1960 Saint Tropez Blues 1961 Dynamite Jack 1961 Tales of Paris 1962 and in an uncredited role as an English priest in The Trial of Joan of Arc 1962 he also made his French television debut guest starring on L inspecteur Leclerc enquete The following year he had another brief role as a Wehrmacht Feldwebel in The Train 1964 2 4 which so impressed director John Frankenheimer that he cast O Brien as a supporting character in Grand Prix 1966 his first break out role co starring James Garner and Eva Marie Saint 5 6 O Brien credited Burt Lancaster with helping himself and other younger actors on the set of The Train Now that was a guy terrific I ve worked with some Hollywood actors but he was worth all of them He used to be a circus acrobat He had this marvellous physique and while other actors would choose to act like primadonnas when it came to dangerous scenes Lancaster would do most of the stuff himself And he was a friendly guy always helping us little knowns when we had problems This was one of my first more important parts and I was very unsure of myself He was always telling us what we could do to improve our stuff A great guy 3 His later Grand Prix co star James Garner however struck him as a very good looking fellow all the girls went crazy for him and a good actor at that but he like others I used to work with seemed to be self conscious and nervous for no discernible reason I mean these guys were famous and successful But they often behaved like little girls when it came to things like Why is he getting a longer close up and I don t stuff like that I mean this may be important when this one close up is all the screen time you have but they are the leading players so why do they behave that way I never understood that 3 In between the two projects he played character roles in several action and war films mostly French Italian co productions including Weekend at Dunkirk Passeport diplomatique agent K 8 La Metamorphose des cloportes Three Rooms in Manhattan Nick Carter and Red Club La Vie de chateau and La Ligne de demarcation O Brien played an RAF pilot much like his late brother in the latter film He also travelled to Yugoslavia to work on Jean Dreville s La Fayette 3 Leading man in Spaghetti Westerns edit In 1967 O Brien was brought to Italy to star in Sergio Sollima s cult Spaghetti Western Run Man Run with Tomas Milian 7 His portrayal of ex American lawman turned soldier of fortune Nathaniel Cassidy led to future leading roles in the genre for a number of years 8 Shortly after filming he was interviewed in the 1968 television documentary Western Italian Style Sollima according to O Brien was considered to be the intellectual among the Western filmmakers I enjoyed working with him He was a very intelligent and gifted man It was during his years working in Italy that he changed his given name from Donal to Donald given his film contracts and credits frequently misspelled his name banks would refuse to cash his checks under his birth name He ended up having to the embassy to have a new passport issued with Donald in parentheses 3 By the early 1970s however the genre was already starting its slow decline and saw O Brien usually a villain or occasional anti hero in increasingly low budget productions such as Giuseppe Vari s The Last Traitor 1971 with Maurice Poli and Dino Strano Paid in Blood 1971 with Jeff Cameron and Sheriff of Rock Springs 1971 with Cosetta Greco and Richard Harrison He made another picture with Jeff Cameron God Is My Colt 45 1972 two with William Berger Kung Fu Brothers in the Wild West 1973 9 and The Executioner of God 1973 and Six Bounty Killers for a Massacre 1973 with Attilio Dottesio and Robert Woods He later recalled having a somewhat strained relationship with Berger mostly due to his drug issues and was given parts originally intended for the older actor when was either unable to perform or had been arrested O Brien also starred in one of his first non western roles in the Italian horror film Il sesso della strega as the investigating police inspector 3 That same year O Brien was asked by Harrison to co star in his own Spaghetti Western Two Brothers in Trinity 1973 which was co directed by Renzo Genta In the film O Brien played devout Mormon missionary Lester O Hara half brother of Harrison s womanising amoral character Jesse Smith The next year he had supporting role White Fang to the Rescue 1974 and Challenge to White Fang 1974 the latter being his first film with Lucio Fulci He was again cast by Fulci in Four of the Apocalypse 1975 O Brien had starring roles in the last few twilight Spaghetti Westerns Keoma 1977 A Man Called Blade 1977 and Fulci s fourth and final western They Died with Their Boots On 1978 8 10 O Brien called Fulci one of his most favourite directors to work with and was deeply saddened when learning of his death in a 1996 interview calling him a truly original human being with a great love for cinema 3 Foray into exploitation and horror films edit While filming his last Spaghetti Westerns O Brien appeared in one of Joe D Amato s entries of the Emanuelle series Emanuelle and the Last Cannibals 1977 as white Safari hunter Donald McKenzie In the film he and his wife Maggie played by another one time Spaghetti Western star Susan Scott encounter Emanuelle Laura Gemser in the Amazon and join her expedition to find a lost tribe of cannibals He also played the villainous Nazi commandant in Marino Girolami s WWII farce Kakkientruppen 1977 police officer Sgt Stricker in Gianfranco Parolini s Yeti Giant of the 20th Century 1977 mercenary Major Hagerty in Joe D Amato s Tough To Kill 1978 and as the SS Commander in Enzo G Castellari s The Inglorious Bastards 1978 One of O Brien s co stars Bo Svenson taught him how to say several lines in German for the film In 1979 O Brien starred as an exorcist the nunsploitation film Images in a Convent another D Amato picture which would be the first of many future religious themed roles 3 Over the next year he appeared in two films by Marino Girolami The first was a cameo appearance in the sex comedy Sesso profondo and the second a much larger role in Zombie Holocaust as the main villain Dr Obrero 2 11 His depiction of the mad scientist became very popular among horror fans and remains one of the most infamous characters in the genre 3 Later career in Italian cinema edit O Brian starred in his first American production the television film The Day Christ Died as a Roman soldier in 1980 12 Later that year while staying in Parisian hotel he slipped in the bathroom and hit his head He was in a coma for three days and discovered half of his body was paralysed shortly after waking up It took him nearly four years to recover from his injuries though he would have limited mobility for the rest of his life This would also reduce the range of roles he could play 3 He made his return to acting in the 1980s post apocalyptic films The New Gladiators and 2020 Texas Gladiators directed by Lucio Fulci and Joe D Amato respectively In D Amato s film he played the main villain the Dark One 13 The death scene for his character featured an elaborate special effect scene for the time in which his skull was cracked open by an axe but the producers felt it was too over the top and cut it from the film His handicap continued to trouble him over the years being necessary to use a walking stick and as a result his appearances became sporadic during the rest of the decade In 1986 he played another mad scientist in Sergio Martino s science fiction film Vendetta dal futuro aka Fists of Steel He also played a supporting part as Pietro d Assisi in The Name of the Rose directed by Jean Jacques Annaud that same year Two years later he played the mad housekeeper Valkos in Ghosthouse produced by Joe D Amato s company Filmirage 3 In 1990 O Brien was cast as a Sicilian baron in Marco Modugno s Il Briganti among the locations filmed included Hadrian s Villa however the film was never released He had roles in three other films the historical drama Una vita scellerata the post apocalyptic film Flight from Paradise and the fantasy film Quest for the Mighty Sword the latter again directed by Joe D Amato in which he played Gunther a mad villainous king suffering from a disease similar to smallpox He was also supposed to appear in a somewhat risque cameo for Tinto Brass erotic film Paprika but his scene was lost on the cutting room floor 3 Semi retirement editHis last regular film roles were in Return From Death 1991 The Devil s Daughter aka The Sect 1991 3 13 and Sparrow 1993 As he became more active however it was around this time that O Brien suffered another accident While walking on a beach with two of his brothers he attempted a short sprint but fell and was unable to get back up His brothers were able to get him to a hospital where it was discovered that the hip bones on one side of his body were severely damaged due to being overly stressed In March 1996 he gave a rare interview with Euro Trash Cinema a popular European exploitation film magazine in which he discussed his early life and career former co stars and his thoughts on the state of the Italian film industry 3 His last film was Honey Sweet Love in 1994 He died in Andernos les Bains in France Filmography editYear Title Role Notes1960 The Wretches1961 Saint Tropez Blues Todd AndersonDynamite Jack1962 Tales of Paris segment Ella The Trial of Joan of Arc English priest Uncredited1963 Ballade pour un voyou1964 The Train Sergeant SchwartzWeekend at Dunkirk English officier1965 Passeport diplomatique agent K 8 DolbryHail Mafia Mafia thugCloportes Gallery visitorThree Rooms in Manhattan Cook at the dinerNick Carter and Red Club1966 A Matter of Resistance American Officer UncreditedThe Man from Interpol PolardMartin Soldat Captain CarruthersGrand Prix Wallace Bennett1967 The Night of the Generals Plotting German Officer Uncredited1968 Run Man Run Nathaniel Cassidy1971 The Last Traitor Captain Ned CarterFinders Killers Jack ForestPaid in Blood Lee RastSheriff of Rock Springs Jones1972 God Is My Colt 45 CollinsTwo Brothers in Trinity Lester O Hara1973 Il Giustiziere di Dio FrankSex of the Witch InspectorSix Bounty Killers for a Massacre Frank the IrishmanKung Fu Brothers in the Wild West Outlaw1974 Challenge to White Fang LiverpoolWhite Fang to the Rescue Harold1975 Four of the Apocalypse Sheriff of Salt FlatGiochi erotici di una famiglia per bene Professor Riccardo Rossi1976 Keoma Caldwell1977 A Man Called Blade Burt CravenEmanuelle and the Last Cannibals Donald McKenzieYeti Giant of the 20th Century Sgt StrickerKakkientruppen Comandante1978 The Inglorious Bastards SS CommanderThey Died with Their Boots On aka Silver Saddle FletcherTough to Kill Major Hagerty1980 Flying Sex Mr SliderZombie Holocaust aka Dr Butcher Dr Obrero1981 Images in a Convent Exorcist1982 2020 Texas Gladiators Black One1984 Warriors of the Year 2072 MonkPanther Squad General1986 Vendetta dal futuro aka Fists of Steel Atomic Cyborg Professor OlsterThe Name of the Rose Pietro d Assisi1988 Ghosthouse aka La Casa 3 Valkos1989 Mortacci Archibald Williams1990 Una vita scellerata Bernardino l ermitaFlight from ParadiseQuest for the Mighty Sword Prince Gunther1991 Ritorno dalla morte aka Frankenstein 2000 RicThe Devil s Daughter aka The Sect Justice Jonathan Ford1993 Sparrow1994 Honey Sweet Love OfficerIl Briganti Sicilian baron final film role Year Film Role Notes1963 L inspecteur Leclerc enquete Dalton Episode Voir Paris et mourir 1980 The Day Christ Died Roman Soldier Television filmReferences edit https deces matchid io id 8fn39blz O2R Fichier des deces a b c Slater Jay Eaten Alive Italian Cannibal and Zombie Movies London Plexus 2002 pg 239 ISBN 0 85965 314 5 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Kessler Christian March 1996 Craig Ledbetter ed Gunslingers Cannibals and More An Interview with Donal O Brien Euro Trash Cinema Archived from the original on 13 October 2016 Retrieved 1 March 2011 Cadden Tom Scott What a Bunch of Characters An Entertaining Guide to Who Played What in the Movies Englewood Cliffs New Jersey Prentice Hall Publishers 1984 pg 190 ISBN 0 13 951914 9 Aros Andrew A An Actor Guide to the Talkies 1965 through 1974 Metuchen New Jersey Scarecrow Press 1977 pg 180 ISBN 0 8108 1052 2 Emery Robert J The Directors In Their Own Words Vol I New York TV Books 1999 pg 258 ISBN 1 57500 087 3 Frayling Christopher Spaghetti Westerns Cowboys and Europeans from Karl May to Sergio Leone London Routledge amp Keagan Paul 1981 pg xvii ISBN 0 7100 0503 2 a b Weisser Thomas Spaghetti Westerns The Good The Bad and The Violent A Comprehensive Illustrated Filmography of 558 Eurowesterns and Their Personnel 1961 1977 Jefferson North Carolina McFarland 1992 pg 179 270 317 ISBN 0 89950 688 7 Eleftheriotis Dimitris and Gary Needham ed Asian Cinemas A Reader and Guide Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2006 pg 146 ISBN 0 8248 3085 7 Thrower Stephen Beyond Terror The Films of Lucio Fulci Guildford FAB 1999 pg 130 ISBN 0 9529260 6 7 Jones Stephen The Essential Monster Movie Guide A Century of Creature Features on Film TV and Video New York Billboard Books 2000 pg 430 ISBN 0 8230 7936 8 Marill Alvin H Movies Made for Television The Telefeature and the Mini Series 1964 1986 New York Zoetrope 1987 pg 97 ISBN 0 918432 80 4 a b Lentz Harris M Science Fiction Horror amp Fantasy Film and Television Credits 2nd ed Jefferson North Carolina McFarland 2001 pg 1033 1162 1358 1443 1506 1627 ISBN 0 7864 0951 7External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Donald O Brien actor Remembering Donal O Brien Donald O Brien at IMDb Donald O Brien at TV Guide Donald O Brien at AllMovie Donald O Brien at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Donald O 27Brien actor amp oldid 1180008353, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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