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词条 Denny Miller
释义

  1. Background

  2. Acting career

  3. Later years

  4. Death

  5. See also

  6. Notes

  7. External links

{{for|the soap opera character|Denny Miller (Home and Away)}}{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2014}}{{More citations needed|date=March 2013}}{{Infobox person
| image = Al Gordon and Denny Miller (2007).jpg |
| imagesize = 150px |
| name = Denny Miller
| birthname = Dennis Linn Miller
| birth_date = {{birth date|1934|4|25}}
| birth_place = Bloomington, Indiana, U.S.
| caption = Denny Miller (right) with a fan at the Super-Con convention.
| death_date = {{death date and age|2014|9|9|1934|4|25}}
| death_place = Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.
| occupation = Actor
| years_active = 1958–2014
| spouse = Kit Smythe (divorced)
Nancy Miller (at time of his death)
}}

Denny Scott Miller (born Dennis Linn Miller; April 25, 1934 – September 9, 2014) was an American actor, perhaps best known for his regular role as Duke Shannon on Wagon Train, his guest-starring appearances on Gilligan's Island, and his 1959 film role as Tarzan.

Background

Miller was a basketball player for the UCLA Bruins at the University of California, Los Angeles, where his father was a physical education instructor. In his senior year, while he was working as a furniture mover to pay for school, Miller was discovered on Sunset Boulevard by a Hollywood agent who signed him with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. His screen test was directed by George Cukor.[1]

He became the first blond Tarzan in Tarzan, the Ape Man (1959), a cheapie/quickie which lifted most of its footage from earlier Johnny Weissmuller movies. Miller had been recommended by someone else considered for the role, William Smith, later a star of the NBC Laredo western series.[1] MGM had Miller under contract for twenty months; in that time, he worked only eight weeks as Tarzan.

Acting career

Miller did guest spots on a number of television series, such as Northwest Passage and Overland Trail.

In 1960, the 26-year-old Miller appeared as Wilkie, the son of a powerful rancher, in the "License to Kill" episode of Laramie, starring John Smith and Robert Fuller.[2] He also appeared on Have Gun, Will Travel and an episode of The Rifleman as a dimwitted gunfighter named Reuben Miles.

From 1961 to 1964, Miller was a regular on Wagon Train in the role of the scout, Duke Shannon. His co-stars in addition to Robert Fuller were John McIntire, Robert Horton, Frank McGrath, Terry Wilson, and Michael Burns.

After the cancellation of Wagon Train in 1965, Miller starred as Mike McCluskey, the military-officer husband of Juliet Prowse on the NBC sitcom Mona McCluskey. In the story line, Mike insists that Mona live on his salary, rather than hers as an actress. About this time, Miller also guest starred on CBS's Gunsmoke, ABC's The Fugitive, and NBC's The High Chaparral.

Miller guest-starred twice on CBS's Gilligan's Island: in 1964 as lost surfer Duke Williams in the episode "Big Man on Little Stick", and in 1967 as a method actor playing Tongo the Ape Man in the episode "Our Vines Have Tender Apes". In 1970 he was "Moose" on Barbara Eden's I Dream of Jeannie (Episode #135 "Eternally Yours, Jeannie"). He appeared on The Brady Bunch in 1973 as Carol Brady's ego-maniacal high-school boyfriend Tank Gates in "Quarterback Sneak". In episode 1.2 of Alice, "Alice Gets a Pass", he played a gay football player.

Miller was cast as Gustaf Olaffson in the 1968 episode, "Britta Goes Home" on the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, hosted by Robert Taylor. In the story line, Gustaf awaits the arrival of his Swedish bride, Britta (Susanne Cramer). While headed to Gustaf's sod house, Britta becomes disillusioned about her future. Then a visit with other homesteaders help her to face her fear.[3]

He portrayed John Hays on CBS's Hawaii Five-O in the 1968 episode "Pray Love Remember, Pray Love Remember", as a man falsely accused of murder. He appeared in the Emergency! episode "Communication Gaffe" in 1974 as a father mistakenly believed to be abusing his young son when, in reality, the mother (Brooke Bundy) was abusing the son because of a brain imbalance that required surgery. He also appeared as a logging camp foreman involved in a plot to bring down a passing Presidential plane in a 1975 episode of The Six Million Dollar Man entitled "Target in the Sky" and in an earlier episode, entitled "The Pal-Mir Escort." In 1976, Miller played a murderer on Jack Klugman's Quincy M.E.. In 1978, he appeared in the Battlestar Galactica episode "The Gun on Ice Planet Zero". Miller appeared in the "Circus of Terror" episode of the second season of "Charlie's Angels" as Helmut Klaus, a European knife-thrower hiding out in the circus until he can obtain political asylum. He also appeared on Buck Rogers in the 25th Century in the episode "The Dorian Secret" and a couple of episodes of The Incredible Hulk.

Miller subsequently appeared as an alien invader in the miniseries V. He was cast in a 1983 Magnum, P.I. episode "A Sense of Debt" as Leon Platt, a bare-knuckles fighter.

Miller appeared in over two hundred television series and, for fourteen years, he played the Gorton's Fisherman in TV commercials.

His film career included roles in Love in a Goldfish Bowl (1961), and the part of "Wyoming" Bill Kelso in The Party (1968), which he remembered as the part he most enjoyed. His other film credits included Making It (1971), Doomsday Machine (1972), Buck and the Preacher (1972), The Gravy Train (1974), The Island at the Top of the World (1974), The Norseman (1978), Caboblanco (1980) and Circle of Power (1981).

Later years

Denny Miller wrote an autobiography titled Didn't You Used To Be...What's His Name? and a book about obesity in the United States called Toxic Waist?...Get To Know Sweat!.

Miller lived with his second wife, Nancy, in Las Vegas, Nevada, and taught classes in relaxation.

Death

Miller was diagnosed with Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ALS in January 2014. He died in Las Vegas on September 9, 2014, at the age of 80.[4]

See also

  • Mike Henry
  • Buster Crabbe
  • Lex Barker
  • Ron Ely
{{Portal|Biography|Indiana|Los Angeles|California|Las Vegas|Nevada|Television|Film}}

Notes

1. ^{{cite web|first=Marcel|last=Damen|url=http://www.galactica.tv/battlestar-galactica-1978-interviews/denny-miller-galactica.tv-interview.html|title=Denny Miller interview|publisher=GALACTICA.TV|date=February 21, 2007|accessdate=October 2, 2014}}
2. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0624737/|title=Laramie: "License to Kill", November 22, 1960|publisher=Internet Movie Database|accessdate=October 17, 2012}}
3. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0959045/?ref_=ttpl_pl_tt|title=Britta Goes Home on Death Valley Days|publisher=Internet Movie Database|accessdate=September 20, 2018}}
4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/denny-miller-dead-tarzan-wagon-732535|title=Denny Miller, Star of 'Tarzan' and 'Wagon Train,' Dies at 80|work=The Hollywood Reporter|accessdate=September 12, 2014}}

External links

  • {{IMDb name|id=0588225|name=Denny Miller}}
  • Entry for Denny Miller at Brian's Drive-In Theater
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20140327143457/http://www.denny-miller.com/ Official Denny Miller Website]
  • Erbzine
{{s-start}}{{s-hon}}{{succession box | before = Gordon Scott | title = Actors to portray Tarzan | years = 1959 | after = Jock Mahoney}}{{s-end}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Miller, Denny}}

16 : 1934 births|2014 deaths|People from Bloomington, Indiana|Male actors from Indiana|American male film actors|American male television actors|Male actors from Los Angeles|People from the Las Vegas Valley|University of California, Los Angeles alumni|UCLA Bruins men's basketball players|Writers from Indiana|Deaths from motor neuron disease|American autobiographers|American non-fiction writers|Western (genre) television actors|American men's basketball players

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