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On this day, in 2006, William Lyle Richardson passed away in Los Angeles, California from cardiovascular disease. Known professionally as Darren McGavin, he was born on May 7, 1922 in Spokane, Washington. When his parents divorced at the ripe old age of 11, Darren's father gained custody of him in spite of the fact he was a traveling salesman. As a result, Darren was boarded with a family on a farm near Tacoma, a circumstance he hated. He ran away to live with some Native Americans, until his father eventually caught up with him and sent him to boarding school. When he was 16, Darren ran away from the boarding school and temporarily lived under the docks in San Francisco on his way to his mother's ranch in Southern California. After finally graduating from high school, he enrolled at the University of the Pacific as an architecture student. But alas, the dream to design buildings didn't last very long.
To subsidize his collegiate pursuits, Darren took a job building sets for a local theater group. He liked it so much (or decided he didn't like architecture as much as he thought) that he dropped out of college and became a painter at Columbia Pictures. In 1945, he had the opportunity to audition for a bit part in
A Song to Remember, a Frederic Chopin biopic, and he managed to get cast as an uncredited Student. He never looked back. He moved to New York City, took classes under Sanford Meisner at the Actors Studio and was playing Happy Lohman in a national touring production of
Death of a Salesman by 1949.
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The Fifties saw Darren expanding his career on several fronts. In New York, he began appearing on Broadway stages, originating the title role in
The Rainmaker in 1954. In Hollywood, he starred in 1955's
Summertime with Katherine Hepburn and
The Man with the Golden Arm with Frank Sinatra. On television, he was cast regularly in live productions like
Kraft Television Hour and taped shows like
Alfred Hitchcock Presents. Starting in 1957, Darren spent two seasons as the lead on
Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer and immediately followed it with two seasons on the western
Riverboat playing opposite Burt Reynolds (the two famously, and publicly, did not get along).
The remainder of the Sixties kept Darren busy with various projects. He returned to Broadway twice, first as the King part of
The King and I, then in a revival of the George S. Kaufman comedy
Dinner at Eight. He starred in a couple of Westerns with the likes of Joseph Cotton and Audie Murphy. And he, of course, made the rounds of most of the major television series of the decade, doing guest spots on everything from
Gunsmoke to
The Man from U.N.C.L.E to being a semi-regular on
The Name of the Game.
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Image copyright Disney |
Darren took his place in Disneyana for the first time in 1968 playing various roles on the anthology show
Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color. He played an expert safecracker (who nonetheless never manages to actually steal anything) named Duke in the 1976 comedy
No Deposit, No Return with Don Knotts and David Niven. He paired with Knotts again two years later for
Hot Lead and Cold Feet as Mayor Ragsdale. He returned to Disney's anthology show when it returned in 1979 as
Disney's Wonderful World, appearing in a episode called
Donovan's World. And in 1995, he gave voice to Dominic Dracon on an episode of
Gargoyles.
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Image copyright MGM |
Darren's most famous role (and one you can see multiple times a week from Thanksgiving to New Year's) came in 1983 when he brilliantly portrayed the Old Man in the cult classic
A Christmas Story. Furnaces, the neighbors dogs and the word 'fragile' will never be quite the same once you've experienced the delight of the Parker family and its foul mouthed patriarch.
It wasn't until near the end of his career that Darren began receiving tangible recognition from his peers. For his portrayal of Murphy Brown's father on the hit television series of the same name, he received a Prime Time Emmy nomination in 1990. A year later, he won a CableACE Award for his part in
The General Motors Playwrights Theater premiere episode "Clara." His final performances in the late nineties included Adam Sandler's father in
Billy Madison and two episodes of
The X-Files. After a career spanning almost six decades, Darren took his final bow in a Los Angeles hospital in 2006. He was 83.
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