I have no idea, but I thought he was a fine actor, especially in
The Andromeda Strain.
A&E is remaking The Andromeda Strain right now as a mini-series.
It looks like about all they took was name of the book, and basic
premise
and one of the character's names. All the other character
names are different.
Swapping stories with John Saxon, Monte Markham and Anthony Zerbe?...
(What the heck became of Sian Barbara Allen?)...r
--
"You got Schadenfreude on my Weltanschauung!"
"You got Weltanschauung in my Schadenfreude!"
There was a fire.
--
_+_ From the catapult of |If anyone disagrees with any statement I make, I
_|70|___:)=}- J.D. Baldwin |am quite prepared not only to retract it, but also
\ / bal...@panix.com|to deny under oath that I ever made it. -T. Lehrer
***~~~~-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Wasn't she John Boy's girlfriend (both on and off-screen), and didn't
she team up once again with him recently on an episode of L&O: SVU?
--
Terry
_______________
"Those who flee temptation generally leave a forwarding address."
-Lane Olinghouse
I seem to recall that illness curtailed Olson's career. I asked someone who
knew him about his whereabouts once, and my faded memory suggests that the
answer was some sort of chronic illness. But I'm not positive I'm
remembering correctly.
I ran into Monte Markham (who directed me in a film twenty years ago) a year
or so ago. He was currently producing and directing shows for The History
Channel, etc. Nice man.
Jim Beaver
James Olson is in my favorite guilty pleasure, the Schwarzenegger movie
"Commando." That thing rocks.
Ironic. I was wondering about Sian Barbara Allen recently, too. She
did gain her notoriety for her work on a few episodes of "The Waltons"
and yes, I believe she and Richard "John-boy" Thomas were a pair for a
few years, then broke up. Possibly that was the reason for no further
appearances on "The Waltons" after about 1974. But she had quite a
prolific career as an actress in both feature films ("Billy Two Hats")
and TV guest spots. I recently watched a "Columbo" marathon -well,
some of it- and she portrayed a murder victim in an episode of the hit
sleuth series. Her last appearance on film seems to have been a 1989
guest part on "L.A. Law", acc. to the Imdb.
Another actress I miss seeing is Eleanor Parker ("Caged", "Madam X",
"The Sound of Music"). Definately still living, but has no screen
credits since 1991.
I don't see quite as much of Cliff Robertson or Dina Merrill these
days either. But it appears good film parts for actors and actresses
who are now senior citizens, as is the case with the latter three, are
far and few between compared to the memorable character-actor type
parts that were written with more consistency in the '40s-'80s. That
could be a factor, too. Then again, many greats do semi-retire -Van
Johnson, Esther Williams, James Arness, Phyllis Thaxter, John
Forsythe, Jane Wyman, among others. But the sure gave many great
performances back in the days.
Photos: http://www.mst3kinfo.com/daddyo/images/111RO.JPG
http://www.schwarzenegger.cz/filmy/komando/images/act8.jpg
http://homepages.tesco.net/d.sisson/articlepic3/mz2%2011.jpg
Scroll down:
http://homepages.tesco.net/d.sisson/mz2helmet.htm
http://homepages.tesco.net/d.sisson/moonzero2.htm
--
"It's not that I'm afraid to die. I just don't want to be there when it happens." - Woody Allen
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Wax-up and drop-in of Surfing's Golden Years: <http://www.surfwriter.net>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>James Olson is in my favorite guilty pleasure, the Schwarzenegger movie
>"Commando." That thing rocks.
Ah, now I know who he is. He *was* everywhere. I'm surprised he's 77
now, because in "Commando" he looked to be in his mid-40s. Gary Brumbugh,
the guy who writes half the bios on the IMDb (the other half are written
by Jim Beaver ;) doesn't mention what happened to him. That's
unfortunate, he really was a good actor, terrific in character roles.
Stacia
I remember as a young girl remarking to no one in particular about Monte
Markham: "He's on *every* t.v. show!" Anyway, I always thought he was
handsome "in an older man kind of way"
- nilita
Wow, that was horribly off topic. My apologies...
>I ran into Monte Markham (who directed me in a film twenty years ago) a year
>or so ago. He was currently producing and directing shows for The History
>Channel, etc. Nice man.
I've been catching up on "Dallas" reruns; Monte had a spin in the
recently aired episodes as Sue Ellen's college boyfriend who hooks up
with her again. He's definitely "one of those faces" you know you've
seen before!
Kathi
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I seem to remember that there was something significant either about the show it
replaced or the one that replaced it...Wikipedia says its time slot was taken
over by Peyton Place....r
His distinctive comb-over hair style would not have endured this long, I'm
sure.
--
Brian
"Fight like the Devil, die like a gentleman."
Then when was the fire sale?
:-)
Monte Markham played a double role in a weird little sitcom on ABC in
1967, "The Second Hundred Years." Markham's character had been trapped
in an Alaskan glacier in 1907 or so, and had been found and thawed out.
He wound up living with his now elderly son (played by Arthur
O'Connell) and O'Connell's son, played by Markham. The show deserved
more notice than it got, but it was on ABC forty years ago. (The joke
back then was that if you wanted the Vietnam War to end, just put it on
ABC for thirteen weeks and it'll be over.)
In 1967, O'Connell (who usually played older than he was) was 59, which
isn't looking so elderly these days. Monte Markham turned 72 last
month.
Where's my pills?
Besides being the new Perry Mason, I'll always remember Markham as
being the SEVEN Million Dollar Man.
>Monte Markham played a double role in a weird little sitcom on ABC in
>1967, "The Second Hundred Years." Markham's character had been trapped
>in an Alaskan glacier in 1907 or so, and had been found and thawed out.
>He wound up living with his now elderly son (played by Arthur
>O'Connell) and O'Connell's son, played by Markham. The show deserved
>more notice than it got, but it was on ABC forty years ago.
That sounds like something worth finding, if it exists at all.
Markham was, I believe, once featured on an email newsletter called "The
Washed-UpDate". This was back before blogging, and I've forgotten who
wrote the update. A running joke on the update was that there was a sort
of holy trifecta of TV shows for washed-up actors: Love Boat, Fantasy
Island, and Murder She Wrote. Markham had that in spades.
He always reminded me of a cross between Jimmy Dean (sausage singer guy)
and Cliff Robertson.
Stacia
Cliff Robertson appeared in all 3 "Spider-Man" films as the ill-fated
Uncle Ben.
> On Fri, 27 Jul 2007 02:29:10 -0500, Doc <terr...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> >We are perhaps the last two people left in America who remember that
> >short-lived TV series. God rest Arthur O'Connell!
>
> I don't even remember the series. I just remember a time when the
> networks didn't cut specific show promos for a series current episode,
> they would just endlessly run the same generic promos all season long.
> Long past the time I've forgotten how to feed myself, I will remember
> Monte Markham looking in a bathroom mirror and saying "Not bad for a
> hundred and one."
Now that you've reminded me, yes, I remember that. I'll probably say
the same thing to the mirror tomorrow morning.
I remember exactly one joke from the entire series. Luke, the father,
falls in with a group of hippies he meets at a nearby park. He sits
with them and teaches them some old songs, and generally has a good
time. At one point, one of the hippies says he and his friends want to
go sing in Russia. "Great idea!" says Luke. "I've always wanted to
meet the Czar."
> I'll also remember a guy in a white shirt getting shot in the generic
> promo for "Judd for the Defense".
"One black. One white. One blonde. The Mod Squad."
> On Fri, 27 Jul 2007 16:02:40 -0400, Brad Ferguson
> <thir...@frXOXed.net> wrote:
>
> >I remember exactly one joke from the entire series. Luke, the father,
> >falls in with a group of hippies he meets at a nearby park. He sits
> >with them and teaches them some old songs, and generally has a good
> >time. At one point, one of the hippies says he and his friends want to
> >go sing in Russia. "Great idea!" says Luke. "I've always wanted to
> >meet the Czar."
>
> Which reminds me that the other thing the networks used to do with
> their generic show promos is leave out the canned laugh track, making
> it appear as though the show didn't have one.
>
> 40 years later, I've seen promos for "Scrubs" sporting a laugh track,
> though the show itself doesn't have one (OK, there was that one...and
> allegedly that wasn't canned).
I remember Tony Randall fighting successfully to get the laugh track
removed from "The Odd Couple," and it seems to me that he was the first
actor to make a real issue of it.
I understand from addicts that the DVDs of the M*A*S*H series let you
turn the canned laughter on and off. Then there was the big "Sports
Night" fracas -- but I digress, or should.
>>We are perhaps the last two people left in America who remember that
>>short-lived TV series. God rest Arthur O'Connell!
<waving> Meee three!!!
> I understand from addicts that the DVDs of the M*A*S*H series let you
> turn the canned laughter on and off.
MASH ran in the UK without the laugh track on its first run.
Repeats USUALLY have the laugh track (which sounds SO false).
|
| "Brad Ferguson" <thir...@frXOXed.net> wrote in message
| news:270720072241065739%thir...@frXOXed.net...
|
| > I understand from addicts that the DVDs of the M*A*S*H series let you
| > turn the canned laughter on and off.
|
| MASH ran in the UK without the laugh track on its first run.
|
| Repeats USUALLY have the laugh track (which sounds SO false).
You'd be amazed at the number of people who need those laugh tracks so they know
when they're supposed to laugh.
Larc
§§§ - Change planet to earth to reply by email - §§§
Most sitcoms have laugh tracks because they aren't funny. They try to
guilt people into laughing by making them think something must be
funny.
> On Jul 26, 2:22 pm, Mark <weiss.sl...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> > I wondered that the other day when I saw him in an old Columbo
> > episode. During 1960s through the 1980s he was everywhere on TV. One
> > of those faces that showed up on every program. Always seeming to
> > be a little on the shifty side. Then he seemed to disappear. I
> > checked imdb.com and he would be 77 years old now but seems to have
> > done no work since 1990. Anyone know what happened to such an
> > ever-present actor?
>
> I have no idea, but I thought he was a fine actor, especially in
> The Andromeda Strain.
>
It couldn't figure out who James Olson was, until you mentioned The
Andromeda Strain, and then I knew who he was.
http://www.jinaweb.org/outreach/filmseries/pics/the_andromeda_strain_large_05.jpg
--
Never argue with an idiot; they'll drag you down to their level and
beat you with experience.
© The Wiz ®
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