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Strother Martin

Strother Douglas Martin Jr. (March 26, 1919 – August 1, 1980) was an American character actor who often appeared in support of John Wayne and Paul Newman and in Western films directed by John Ford and Sam Peckinpah. Among Martin's memorable performances is his portrayal of the warden or "captain" of a state prison camp in the 1967 film Cool Hand Luke, in which he utters the line, "What we've got here is failure to communicate."[1] The line is number 11 on the American Film Institute list of 100 Years...100 Movie Quotes.

Strother Martin
Martin in McLintock! (1963)
Born
Strother Douglas Martin Jr.

(1919-03-26)March 26, 1919
DiedAugust 1, 1980(1980-08-01) (aged 61)
Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park, Hollywood Hills
Alma materUniversity of Michigan
OccupationActor
Years active1950–1980
Spouse
Helen Meisels
(m. 1967)
Military career
Allegiance United States of America
Service/branch United States Navy
Years of service1942–1946
RankPetty officer third class
Battles/warsWorld War II

Early life

Martin was born in Kokomo, Indiana to Ethel (née Dunlap) and Strother Douglas Martin.[2] For a short time, the Martins lived in San Antonio, Texas, but soon returned to Indiana. As a child, he excelled at swimming and diving. He was nicknamed "T-Bone Martin" because of his diving expertise. At 17 he won the National Junior Springboard Diving Championship. He served as a swimming instructor in the United States Navy during World War II and was a member of the diving team at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan. He entered the adult National Springboard Diving competition in hopes of gaining a berth on the U.S. Olympic team, but finished third in the competition.[3]

Acting career

After the war, Martin moved to Los Angeles and worked as a swimming instructor and as a swimming extra in water scenes in films, including the 1950 crime drama The Damned Don't Cry.[3] He earned bit roles in a number of pictures and soon gained frequent character roles in films and television through the 1950s, having appeared in such programs as the Western anthology series Frontier on NBC and the syndicated American Civil War drama Gray Ghost. He was cast in 1955 as Landry Kersh in the episode "Shadow of God" on the ABC religion anthology series Crossroads. Martin also portrays a man with learning difficulties in "Cooter", an episode written by Sam Peckinpah in 1958 for the third season of the long-running Western series Gunsmoke. The next year on that series he played the character “Dillard” in “The Constable”.

Martin appeared in the first Brian Keith series, Crusader, a Cold War drama on CBS. He guest-starred, as a circus tightrope walker Dooley Delaware, in the 1957 episode "High Wire" in CBS' Have Gun - Will Travel. He portrayed a henpecked soldier in a 1958 episode of the syndicated Western series, Boots and Saddles and starred in a Trackdown episode "A Stone for Benny French". That same year, he played the lead in the episode "Pete Henke" of NBC's Western Jefferson Drum.

In 1959, Martin played Polk, with Denver Pyle as Houston, in the episode "No Place to Stop" of the CBS Western series, The Texan, starring Rory Calhoun as Bill Longley.[citation needed] In another 1959 Western series, Martin was cast as Deputy Jess in the episode "Johnny Yuma" of ABC's The Rebel, starring Nick Adams. In 1960, Martin guest-starred in James Whitmore's ABC crime drama, The Law and Mr. Jones.

In 1961, Martin portrayed Pete Gibson in the episode "The Case of the Brazen Bequest" on Perry Mason. In 1962, he was cast as Harold Horton in "The Chocolate Cake Caper" of the CBS sitcom, Pete and Gladys, starring Harry Morgan and Cara Williams. He guest-starred in Jack Lord's ABC adventure/drama series, Stoney Burke. In 1963, he was cast as Private Anton Copang in the episode "Walk Through the Badlands" of the ABC/Warner Brothers western series, The Dakotas. In 1966, Martin appeared twice as "Cousin Fletch" in the short-lived ABC comedy Western The Rounders, with Ron Hayes, Patrick Wayne, and Chill Wills.

In 1967, Martin played Arizona miner Ed Schieffelin in the episode "Silver Tombstone" of the syndicated television series Death Valley Days.[citation needed] Martin played villainous roles in many of the best-known Westerns of the 1950s and 1960s, including The Horse Soldiers and The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance. He played an Indian agent in the John Wayne film, McLintock! (1963) and a horse trader in the 1969 film, True Grit (1969).

By the late 1960s, Martin was almost as well-known a figure as many top-billed stars. In 1967, the same year as his role in Cool Hand Luke, he appeared in the episode "A Mighty Hunter Before the Lord" of NBC's The Road West series starring Barry Sullivan. In 1972, he appeared as James Garner's uncle in the "Zacharia" episode of NBC's Nichols. He also had a pronounced physical and vocal resemblance to playwright Tennessee Williams and occasionally parodied him, notably in the "Baby Fat" episode of The Dick Van Dyke Show.

The play The Time of Your Life was revived on March 17, 1972, at the Huntington Hartford Theater in Los Angeles with Martin, Henry Fonda, Richard Dreyfuss, Gloria Grahame, Lewis J. Stadlen, Ron Thompson,[4] Jane Alexander, Richard X. Slattery, and Pepper Martin among the cast with Edwin Sherin directing.[5][6]

Martin appeared in all three of the classic Westerns released in 1969: Sam Peckinpah's The Wild Bunch (as Coffer, a bloodthirsty bounty hunter), George Roy Hill's Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (as Percy Garris, the "colorful" Bolivian mine boss who hires the two title characters), and Henry Hathaway's True Grit (as Colonel Stonehill, a horse dealer). He frequently acted alongside L.Q. Jones, who in real life was one of his closest friends.

Though he usually appeared in supporting roles, he had major parts in Hannie Caulder (1971), The Brotherhood of Satan (1971),[7] Pocket Money (1972) with Paul Newman and Lee Marvin, and in the horror film SSSSSSS (1973). Martin later appeared in another George Roy Hill film, Slap Shot (1977), again with Paul Newman, as the cheap general manager of the Charlestown Chiefs hockey club. He appeared six times each with John Wayne and Paul Newman. In an interview originally published in Movietone News in 1981, Martin commented on his professional relationship with both Wayne and Newman:

[Paul] never says so, but he cast me in Butch Cassidy. I wasn’t told until during Slap Shot the director said...Back when they were getting ready to do Butch, George Roy Hill said, "I've got these three people for Percy Garris: Strother Martin..." and Paul said, "Don’t go any farther." But he never mentioned that to me, he never said "I got you this job." Now if it was John Wayne [chuckles] he would have said in front of 2,000 people [drawling emphatically] "I gotcha this job!"...[8]

Martin can also be seen in Cheech and Chong's Up in Smoke (1978) as Arnold Stoner, the father of Tommy Chong's character Anthony.

Martin made many guest appearances on Gunsmoke including the two-part episode "Island in the Desert", in which he portrayed a crazy desert hermit named Ben Snow. Previously, he guest-starred as Marv Rowley in the 1961 Gunsmoke episode "Tall Trapper" playing an angry man who murders his wife out of jealousy then tries to pin the killing on a quiet, respectful trapper who his wife fell for.

He also made many guest appearances on Perry Mason throughout the nine-year run from 1957 to 1966, including a horseman in the 1962 episode "The Case of the Fickle Filly", a college employee in "The Case of the Brazen Bequest", and the murderer in "The Case of the Drowsy Mosquito". In 1963, he appeared in Glynis Johns' short-lived comedy series Glynis in the episode "Ten Cents a Dance". In 1965, Martin appeared in the episode "Most Precious Gold" of the NBC comedy/drama series Kentucky Jones, starring Dennis Weaver. In 1965, he guest-starred as Meeker in the episode "Return to Lawrence" on the ABC Western The Legend of Jesse James. In 1966, he guest-starred in the Lost In Space episode "Blast Off Into Space" as a gritty mining engineer named Nerim. On a Gilligan's Island episode, Martin played a man living supposedly alone on the island for a radio show contest. In 1973–1974, he was a regular cast member of the James Stewart legal drama and murder mystery series Hawkins. He also starred in a two-part The Rockford Files 1977 episode as T.T. Flowers "The Trees, the Bees and T. T. Flowers", an episode that took on urban invasion and the environment.

One of his last acting jobs was as host of Saturday Night Live on April 19, 1980. In one of the skits, Martin played the strict owner of a French language camp for children, based on his role as the prison captain from Cool Hand Luke. He even paraphrased his most famous line from the film, "What we have here is failure to communicate BILINGUALLY!" In another, he played a terminally ill man who videotaped his last will and testament. During his monologue, he again did his Tennessee Williams impression. That episode was supposed to be rerun during the summer of 1980, but it was pulled and replaced with another episode due to Martin's death.

Death

Martin was married to Helen Meisels-Martin[9] from 1967 until his death; they had no children. In the last year of his life, Martin was under a doctor's care for cardiac problems[10]. He died at age 61 of a heart attack on August 1, 1980[11], at Los Robles Regional Medical Center in Thousand Oaks, California.

Filmography

Film

Television

Dangerous Assignment – episode – The Venetian Story – Riri (1952)

  • Gunsmoke – episode – Professor Lute Bone (1956)
  • Gunsmoke – episode – Cooter- Cooter (1956)
  • I Love Lucy – episode – Off To Florida – Coffee Shop Clerk (1956)
  • Zane Grey Theater – episode – The Necessary Breed – Telegraph Clerk, Joby (1957)
  • Have Gun - Will Travel – episode – A Matter of Ethics – Fred Coombs (1957)
  • Have Gun - Will Travel – episode – High Wire – Dooley Delaware (1957)
  • The Grey Ghost – episode – Reconnaissance Mission – Michael (1957)
  • The Walter Winchell File – Little Jules – "Exclusive Story" (1958)
  • Gunsmoke – episode – Dooley Surrenders – Emmett Dooley (1958)
  • Trackdown – episode – A Stone for Benny French – Benny French (1958)
  • The Rebel – episode – Johnny Yuma – Jess (1959)
  • Have Gun - Will Travel – episode – One Came Back – Carew (1959)
  • Whirlybirds – episode – Without a Net – The Great Herman (1959)
  • The Twilight Zone – episode – The Grave – Mothershed (1961)
  • Gunsmoke – episode – Tall Trapper – Marv Rowley (1961)
  • Gunsmoke – episode – The Trappers – Beaver skin trapper Billy (1962)
  • Have Gun - Will Travel – episode "Lazarus" – Boise Peabody (1962)
  • Perry Mason – episode – The case of the Fickle Filly – Joe Mead (1962)
  • Perry Mason – episode – The Case of the Brazen Bequest – Pete Gibson (1962)
  • Perry Mason – episode – The Case of the Drowsy Mosquito – Gerald Sommers (1963)
  • Perry Mason – episode – The Case of the Hasty Honeymooner – Roy Hutchison (1965)
  • The Fugitive – episode – Devil's Carnival – Deputy Shirky Saulter (1964)
  • Bonanza – episode – The Saga of Muley Jones – Yuri (1964)
  • Gunsmoke – episode – No Hands – Will Timble – S.9 E.19 (1964)
  • Rawhide – episode – The Gray Rock Hotel – Bates (1965)
  • Perry Mason – episode – The Case of the Hasty Honeymooner – Roy Hutchinson (1965)
  • The Dick Van Dyke Show – episode – Baby Fat – Harper Worthington Yates (1965)
  • Bonanza – episode – The Meredith Smith – Little Meredith Smith (1965)
  • Kentucky Jones – episode – Most Precious Gold – Boney Benton (1965)
  • The Virginian – episode – The Claim – Finley (1965)
  • Death Valley Days – episode The Four Dollar Law Suit – Alfred Hall (1966)
  • Lost in Space – episode – Blast Off Into Space – Nerim (1966)
  • Death Valley Days – episode – Silver Tombstone – Ed Schieffelin (1967)
  • The Guns of Will Sonnet – episode – Message at Noon – Harvey Bains (1967)
  • Gilligan's Island – episode – Take A Dare – George Barkley (1967)
  • The Big Valley – episode – Brother Love – Fludd (1967)
  • The Invaders – episode – Moonshot – Charlie Coogan (1967)
  • Gentle Ben – episode – The Opportunist – Reed Olmstock (1967)
  • The Guns of Will Sonnet – episode – Joby – Joby (1968)
  • It Takes a Thief – episode – Birds of a Feather – Paul Rooney (1968)
  • Daniel Boone – episode – The Terrible Tarbots – Tarbot (1969)
  • Bonanza – episode – The Silence at Stillwater – Lonnie Stern (1969)
  • The Virginian – episode – You Can Lead A Horse To Water – Luther Watson (1970)
  • Marcus Welby, M.D. – episode – Nobody Wants a Fat Jockey – Terry Riggs (1970)
  • Bonanza – episode – The Imposters – Joad Bruder (1970)
  • Bonanza – episode – The Younger Brothers' Younger Brother – Cole Younger (1972)
  • Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color – episodes – The Boy and the Bronc Busters: Parts 1 and 2 (1973)
  • Hawkins – 8 episodes (series regular) – R. J. Hawkins (1973–1974)
  • Gunsmoke – episode – Island in the Desert: Part 1 and Part 2 – Hermit Ben Snow (1974)
  • Movin' On – episode – Long Way to Nowhere – Cabe Miller (1975)
  • The Rockford Files – episodes – The Trees, the Bees and T.T. Flowers – Thomas Tyler "T.T" Flowers (1977)
  • Vega$ – episode – Yes, My Darling Daughter – Hank Jenner (1978)
  • Saturday Night Live – episode – Strother Martin – host (1980)

References

  1. ^ . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2007. Archived from the original on December 8, 2007.
  2. ^ "Birth-Martin". The Kokomo Tribune. March 29, 1919. Retrieved April 18, 2018.
  3. ^ a b Strother Martin. Films in Review, November 1982
  4. ^ Maçek III, J.C. (August 2, 2012). "'American Pop'... Matters: Ron Thompson, the Illustrated Man Unsung". PopMatters.
  5. ^ "WorldCat". Worldcat.org. OCLC 611053954. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ "Hollywood Beat". The Afro American. April 8, 1972. Retrieved January 22, 2012.
  7. ^ NEA (Newspaper Enterprise Association) (October 4, 1971). "Actor's Uphill Climb Ends". The Gadsden Times. Retrieved February 26, 2020.
  8. ^ Jameson, Richard T. (2009). "'I don’t like those hard goodbyes' – Strother Martin", interview with Martin republished in Parallax View (Seattle, Washington) with new introduction by Jameson, September 12, 2009; interview originally published in Movietone News 66–6, March 1981. Retrieved August 25, 2022.
  9. ^ "All Marriage & Divorce results for Helen Meisels". Ancestry.com.
  10. ^ "Strother Martin Biography".
  11. ^ "Strother Martin, Actor In Western Movies And 'Luke' Warden". New York Times Obituaries. August 2, 1980.
  12. ^ "Hotwire (1980) Cast and Crew", Moviefone Media LLC., United States. Retrieved August 25, 2022.

Further reading

  • Beaver, Jim. Strother Martin. Films in Review, November 1982.

External links

strother, martin, strother, douglas, martin, march, 1919, august, 1980, american, character, actor, often, appeared, support, john, wayne, paul, newman, western, films, directed, john, ford, peckinpah, among, martin, memorable, performances, portrayal, warden,. Strother Douglas Martin Jr March 26 1919 August 1 1980 was an American character actor who often appeared in support of John Wayne and Paul Newman and in Western films directed by John Ford and Sam Peckinpah Among Martin s memorable performances is his portrayal of the warden or captain of a state prison camp in the 1967 film Cool Hand Luke in which he utters the line What we ve got here is failure to communicate 1 The line is number 11 on the American Film Institute list of 100 Years 100 Movie Quotes Strother MartinMartin in McLintock 1963 BornStrother Douglas Martin Jr 1919 03 26 March 26 1919Kokomo Indiana U S DiedAugust 1 1980 1980 08 01 aged 61 Thousand Oaks California U S Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park Hollywood HillsAlma materUniversity of MichiganOccupationActorYears active1950 1980SpouseHelen Meisels m 1967 wbr Military careerAllegiance United States of AmericaService wbr branch United States NavyYears of service1942 1946RankPetty officer third classBattles warsWorld War II Contents 1 Early life 2 Acting career 3 Death 4 Filmography 4 1 Film 4 2 Television 5 References 5 1 Further reading 6 External linksEarly life EditMartin was born in Kokomo Indiana to Ethel nee Dunlap and Strother Douglas Martin 2 For a short time the Martins lived in San Antonio Texas but soon returned to Indiana As a child he excelled at swimming and diving He was nicknamed T Bone Martin because of his diving expertise At 17 he won the National Junior Springboard Diving Championship He served as a swimming instructor in the United States Navy during World War II and was a member of the diving team at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor Michigan He entered the adult National Springboard Diving competition in hopes of gaining a berth on the U S Olympic team but finished third in the competition 3 Acting career EditAfter the war Martin moved to Los Angeles and worked as a swimming instructor and as a swimming extra in water scenes in films including the 1950 crime drama The Damned Don t Cry 3 He earned bit roles in a number of pictures and soon gained frequent character roles in films and television through the 1950s having appeared in such programs as the Western anthology series Frontier on NBC and the syndicated American Civil War drama Gray Ghost He was cast in 1955 as Landry Kersh in the episode Shadow of God on the ABC religion anthology series Crossroads Martin also portrays a man with learning difficulties in Cooter an episode written by Sam Peckinpah in 1958 for the third season of the long running Western series Gunsmoke The next year on that series he played the character Dillard in The Constable Martin appeared in the first Brian Keith series Crusader a Cold War drama on CBS He guest starred as a circus tightrope walker Dooley Delaware in the 1957 episode High Wire in CBS Have Gun Will Travel He portrayed a henpecked soldier in a 1958 episode of the syndicated Western series Boots and Saddles and starred in a Trackdown episode A Stone for Benny French That same year he played the lead in the episode Pete Henke of NBC s Western Jefferson Drum In 1959 Martin played Polk with Denver Pyle as Houston in the episode No Place to Stop of the CBS Western series The Texan starring Rory Calhoun as Bill Longley citation needed In another 1959 Western series Martin was cast as Deputy Jess in the episode Johnny Yuma of ABC s The Rebel starring Nick Adams In 1960 Martin guest starred in James Whitmore s ABC crime drama The Law and Mr Jones In 1961 Martin portrayed Pete Gibson in the episode The Case of the Brazen Bequest on Perry Mason In 1962 he was cast as Harold Horton in The Chocolate Cake Caper of the CBS sitcom Pete and Gladys starring Harry Morgan and Cara Williams He guest starred in Jack Lord s ABC adventure drama series Stoney Burke In 1963 he was cast as Private Anton Copang in the episode Walk Through the Badlands of the ABC Warner Brothers western series The Dakotas In 1966 Martin appeared twice as Cousin Fletch in the short lived ABC comedy Western The Rounders with Ron Hayes Patrick Wayne and Chill Wills In 1967 Martin played Arizona miner Ed Schieffelin in the episode Silver Tombstone of the syndicated television series Death Valley Days citation needed Martin played villainous roles in many of the best known Westerns of the 1950s and 1960s including The Horse Soldiers and The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance He played an Indian agent in the John Wayne film McLintock 1963 and a horse trader in the 1969 film True Grit 1969 By the late 1960s Martin was almost as well known a figure as many top billed stars In 1967 the same year as his role in Cool Hand Luke he appeared in the episode A Mighty Hunter Before the Lord of NBC s The Road West series starring Barry Sullivan In 1972 he appeared as James Garner s uncle in the Zacharia episode of NBC s Nichols He also had a pronounced physical and vocal resemblance to playwright Tennessee Williams and occasionally parodied him notably in the Baby Fat episode of The Dick Van Dyke Show The play The Time of Your Life was revived on March 17 1972 at the Huntington Hartford Theater in Los Angeles with Martin Henry Fonda Richard Dreyfuss Gloria Grahame Lewis J Stadlen Ron Thompson 4 Jane Alexander Richard X Slattery and Pepper Martin among the cast with Edwin Sherin directing 5 6 Martin appeared in all three of the classic Westerns released in 1969 Sam Peckinpah s The Wild Bunch as Coffer a bloodthirsty bounty hunter George Roy Hill s Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid as Percy Garris the colorful Bolivian mine boss who hires the two title characters and Henry Hathaway s True Grit as Colonel Stonehill a horse dealer He frequently acted alongside L Q Jones who in real life was one of his closest friends Though he usually appeared in supporting roles he had major parts in Hannie Caulder 1971 The Brotherhood of Satan 1971 7 Pocket Money 1972 with Paul Newman and Lee Marvin and in the horror film SSSSSSS 1973 Martin later appeared in another George Roy Hill film Slap Shot 1977 again with Paul Newman as the cheap general manager of the Charlestown Chiefs hockey club He appeared six times each with John Wayne and Paul Newman In an interview originally published in Movietone News in 1981 Martin commented on his professional relationship with both Wayne and Newman Paul never says so but he cast me in Butch Cassidy I wasn t told until during Slap Shot the director said Back when they were getting ready to do Butch George Roy Hill said I ve got these three people for Percy Garris Strother Martin and Paul said Don t go any farther But he never mentioned that to me he never said I got you this job Now if it was John Wayne chuckles he would have said in front of 2 000 people drawling emphatically I gotcha this job 8 Martin can also be seen in Cheech and Chong s Up in Smoke 1978 as Arnold Stoner the father of Tommy Chong s character Anthony Martin made many guest appearances on Gunsmoke including the two part episode Island in the Desert in which he portrayed a crazy desert hermit named Ben Snow Previously he guest starred as Marv Rowley in the 1961 Gunsmoke episode Tall Trapper playing an angry man who murders his wife out of jealousy then tries to pin the killing on a quiet respectful trapper who his wife fell for He also made many guest appearances on Perry Mason throughout the nine year run from 1957 to 1966 including a horseman in the 1962 episode The Case of the Fickle Filly a college employee in The Case of the Brazen Bequest and the murderer in The Case of the Drowsy Mosquito In 1963 he appeared in Glynis Johns short lived comedy series Glynis in the episode Ten Cents a Dance In 1965 Martin appeared in the episode Most Precious Gold of the NBC comedy drama series Kentucky Jones starring Dennis Weaver In 1965 he guest starred as Meeker in the episode Return to Lawrence on the ABC Western The Legend of Jesse James In 1966 he guest starred in the Lost In Space episode Blast Off Into Space as a gritty mining engineer named Nerim On a Gilligan s Island episode Martin played a man living supposedly alone on the island for a radio show contest In 1973 1974 he was a regular cast member of the James Stewart legal drama and murder mystery series Hawkins He also starred in a two part The Rockford Files 1977 episode as T T Flowers The Trees the Bees and T T Flowers an episode that took on urban invasion and the environment One of his last acting jobs was as host of Saturday Night Live on April 19 1980 In one of the skits Martin played the strict owner of a French language camp for children based on his role as the prison captain from Cool Hand Luke He even paraphrased his most famous line from the film What we have here is failure to communicate BILINGUALLY In another he played a terminally ill man who videotaped his last will and testament During his monologue he again did his Tennessee Williams impression That episode was supposed to be rerun during the summer of 1980 but it was pulled and replaced with another episode due to Martin s death Death EditMartin was married to Helen Meisels Martin 9 from 1967 until his death they had no children In the last year of his life Martin was under a doctor s care for cardiac problems 10 He died at age 61 of a heart attack on August 1 1980 11 at Los Robles Regional Medical Center in Thousand Oaks California Filmography EditFilm Edit The Damned Don t Cry 1950 as Springboard Diver uncredited The Asphalt Jungle 1950 as William Doldy uncredited Rhubarb 1951 as Michael Shorty McGirk uncredited The Red Badge of Courage 1951 as Corporal voice uncredited Scandal Sheet 1952 as Man on Crutches uncredited Storm Over Tibet 1952 as Co Pilot Androcles and the Lion 1952 as Soldier uncredited The Magnetic Monster 1953 as Co Pilot South Sea Woman 1953 as Marine in Audience at Court Martial uncredited World for Ransom 1954 as Corporal uncredited Prisoner of War 1954 as Man on Crutches uncredited A Star is Born 1954 as Delivery Boy uncredited Drum Beat 1954 as Scotty The Silver Chalice 1954 as Father uncredited Strategic Air Command 1955 as Airman uncredited Kiss Me Deadly 1955 as Harvey Wallace The Big Knife 1955 as Stillman uncredited Target Zero 1955 as Pvt Dan O Hirons uncredited World Without End 1956 as Nihka uncredited Johnny Concho 1956 as Townsman uncredited Attack 1956 as Sgt Ingersol The Black Whip 1956 as Thorney Copper Sky 1957 as Pokey Black Patch 1957 as Deputy Petey Walker Cowboy 1958 as Cowboy Bitten by Snake uncredited The Shaggy Dog 1959 as Thurm The Wild and the Innocent 1959 as Ben Stocker The Horse Soldiers 1959 as Virgil Sanctuary 1961 as Dog Boy The Deadly Companions 1961 as Parson The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance 1962 as Floyd Showdown 1963 as Charlie Reeder McLintock 1963 as Agard Indian Agent Invitation to a Gunfighter 1964 as Fiddler Brainstorm 1965 as Mr Clyde Shenandoah 1965 as Train Engineer The Sons of Katie Elder 1965 as Jeb Ross Harper 1966 as Claude Nevada Smith 1966 as Strother uncredited An Eye for an Eye 1966 as Trumbull The Flim Flam Man 1967 as Lovick Cool Hand Luke 1967 as The Captain True Grit 1969 as Colonel G Stonehill The Wild Bunch 1969 as Coffer Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid 1969 as Percy Garris The Ballad of Cable Hogue 1970 as Bowen Red Sky at Morning 1971 as John Cloyd The Brotherhood of Satan 1971 as Doc Duncan Fools Parade 1971 as Lee Cotrill Hannie Caulder 1971 as Rufus Clemens Pocket Money 1972 as Bill Garrett SSSSSSS 1973 as Dr Carl Stoner Hard Times 1975 as Poe Rooster Cogburn 1975 as Shanghai McCoy The Great Scout amp Cathouse Thursday 1976 as Billy Slap Shot 1977 as Joe McGrath The End 1978 as Dr Waldo Kling Up in Smoke 1978 as Arnold Stoner Love and Bullets 1979 as Louis Monk The Champ 1979 as Riley Nightwing 1979 as Selwyn The Villain 1979 as Parody Jones The Secret of Nikola Tesla 1980 as George Westinghouse Hotwire 1980 as The Weasel 12 final film role Biography portal Indiana portal California portal Film portal Television portal World War II portalTelevision EditDangerous Assignment episode The Venetian Story Riri 1952 Gunsmoke episode Professor Lute Bone 1956 Gunsmoke episode Cooter Cooter 1956 I Love Lucy episode Off To Florida Coffee Shop Clerk 1956 Zane Grey Theater episode The Necessary Breed Telegraph Clerk Joby 1957 Have Gun Will Travel episode A Matter of Ethics Fred Coombs 1957 Have Gun Will Travel episode High Wire Dooley Delaware 1957 The Grey Ghost episode Reconnaissance Mission Michael 1957 The Walter Winchell File Little Jules Exclusive Story 1958 Gunsmoke episode Dooley Surrenders Emmett Dooley 1958 Trackdown episode A Stone for Benny French Benny French 1958 The Rebel episode Johnny Yuma Jess 1959 Have Gun Will Travel episode One Came Back Carew 1959 Whirlybirds episode Without a Net The Great Herman 1959 The Twilight Zone episode The Grave Mothershed 1961 Gunsmoke episode Tall Trapper Marv Rowley 1961 Gunsmoke episode The Trappers Beaver skin trapper Billy 1962 Have Gun Will Travel episode Lazarus Boise Peabody 1962 Perry Mason episode The case of the Fickle Filly Joe Mead 1962 Perry Mason episode The Case of the Brazen Bequest Pete Gibson 1962 Perry Mason episode The Case of the Drowsy Mosquito Gerald Sommers 1963 Perry Mason episode The Case of the Hasty Honeymooner Roy Hutchison 1965 The Fugitive episode Devil s Carnival Deputy Shirky Saulter 1964 Bonanza episode The Saga of Muley Jones Yuri 1964 Gunsmoke episode No Hands Will Timble S 9 E 19 1964 Rawhide episode The Gray Rock Hotel Bates 1965 Perry Mason episode The Case of the Hasty Honeymooner Roy Hutchinson 1965 The Dick Van Dyke Show episode Baby Fat Harper Worthington Yates 1965 Bonanza episode The Meredith Smith Little Meredith Smith 1965 Kentucky Jones episode Most Precious Gold Boney Benton 1965 The Virginian episode The Claim Finley 1965 Death Valley Days episode The Four Dollar Law Suit Alfred Hall 1966 Lost in Space episode Blast Off Into Space Nerim 1966 Death Valley Days episode Silver Tombstone Ed Schieffelin 1967 The Guns of Will Sonnet episode Message at Noon Harvey Bains 1967 Gilligan s Island episode Take A Dare George Barkley 1967 The Big Valley episode Brother Love Fludd 1967 The Invaders episode Moonshot Charlie Coogan 1967 Gentle Ben episode The Opportunist Reed Olmstock 1967 The Guns of Will Sonnet episode Joby Joby 1968 It Takes a Thief episode Birds of a Feather Paul Rooney 1968 Daniel Boone episode The Terrible Tarbots Tarbot 1969 Bonanza episode The Silence at Stillwater Lonnie Stern 1969 The Virginian episode You Can Lead A Horse To Water Luther Watson 1970 Marcus Welby M D episode Nobody Wants a Fat Jockey Terry Riggs 1970 Bonanza episode The Imposters Joad Bruder 1970 Bonanza episode The Younger Brothers Younger Brother Cole Younger 1972 Walt Disney s Wonderful World of Color episodes The Boy and the Bronc Busters Parts 1 and 2 1973 Hawkins 8 episodes series regular R J Hawkins 1973 1974 Gunsmoke episode Island in the Desert Part 1 and Part 2 Hermit Ben Snow 1974 Movin On episode Long Way to Nowhere Cabe Miller 1975 The Rockford Files episodes The Trees the Bees and T T Flowers Thomas Tyler T T Flowers 1977 Vega episode Yes My Darling Daughter Hank Jenner 1978 Saturday Night Live episode Strother Martin host 1980 References Edit Strother Martin Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times 2007 Archived from the original on December 8 2007 Birth Martin The Kokomo Tribune March 29 1919 Retrieved April 18 2018 a b Strother Martin Films in Review November 1982 Macek III J C August 2 2012 American Pop Matters Ron Thompson the Illustrated Man Unsung PopMatters WorldCat Worldcat org OCLC 611053954 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Hollywood Beat The Afro American April 8 1972 Retrieved January 22 2012 NEA Newspaper Enterprise Association October 4 1971 Actor s Uphill Climb Ends The Gadsden Times Retrieved February 26 2020 Jameson Richard T 2009 I don t like those hard goodbyes Strother Martin interview with Martin republished in Parallax View Seattle Washington with new introduction by Jameson September 12 2009 interview originally published in Movietone News 66 6 March 1981 Retrieved August 25 2022 All Marriage amp Divorce results for Helen Meisels Ancestry com Strother Martin Biography Strother Martin Actor In Western Movies And Luke Warden New York Times Obituaries August 2 1980 Hotwire 1980 Cast and Crew Moviefone Media LLC United States Retrieved August 25 2022 Further reading Edit Beaver Jim Strother Martin Films in Review November 1982 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Strother Martin Strother Martin at IMDb Strother Martin at AllMovie Strother Martin at the TCM Movie Database Strother Martin at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Strother Martin amp oldid 1138866352, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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