First Name
William
Last Name
Redfield
Date of Birth
26 January 1927
Height
69.75
Build
Average
Hair Color
Brown - Dark
Place of Birth
NYC, USA
Star Sign
Aquarius
Date of Death
17 August 1976
Place of Death
NYC, USA
Cause of Death
(leukemia & respiratory ailment)
Ethnicity
White
Gender
Male
Nationality
American
Claim to Fame
One Flew Over the Cuckoo`s Nest
Couple Profile
Manhattan-born thespian William Redfield was influenced early on into an acting career as the son of an orchestra conductor and a former Ziegfeld Follies girl. As young "Billy Redfield," he made his Broadway debut in "Swing Your Lady" in 1936 at the age of 9. Within a few years the young boy was also heard on radio and appeared in his first movie, the crime drama Back Door to Heaven (1939). As a juvenile he continued on Broadway with such productions as "Our Town" (1938) and "Junior Miss" (1941). In subsequent years Redfield would become one of the original founders of the famed Actor`s Studio.
Gainfully employed on stage and TV throughout the 50s, he starred in a short-lived series as "Jimmy Hughes, Rookie Cop" (1953) (which appeared on the early Dumont Network) in 1953 and followed it up the next year with the one-season show "The Marriage" (1954), which has the distinction of being the first live network series to be regularly broadcast in color. An exceptionally talented writer and speaker, he co-created the _"Mr. Peepers" (1952)_ sitcom in the 50s, wrote the theater play "A View with Alarm" and later published his memoir, "Letters From an Actor," which recalled his experiences playing Guildenstern in the 1964 theater production of "Hamlet" starring Richard Burton and directed by John Gielgud. Other Broadway fare included "Misalliance" (1953), "Midgie Purvis" (1961) which starred Tallulah Bankhead, and "A Man for All Seasons" (1961) with Paul Scofield. In 1968 he replaced George Grizzard in the popular "You Know I Can`t Hear You When the Water`s Running."
Redfield also stretched his visibility with audiences as a highly candid, warmly-received raconteur on the talk show circuit. He certainly didn`t mix words as he described the ups and downs of the acting profession. It wasn`t until the late 60s that Redfield started making a dent in film with roles in such popular screen fare as Morituri (1965), Fantastic Voyage (1966), A New Leaf (1971), Such Good Friends (1971), The Hot Rock (1972), and For Pete`s Sake (1974), usually playing intense, unsympathetic parts.
He finally hit the big time in the third-billed role of Harding, the tense, logical, but high-strung mental patient opposite Jack Nicholson`s Randall McMurphy in the Oscar-winning One Flew Over the Cuckoo`s Nest (1975). What should have been the start of an enviable film support career and making a name for himself turned out to be nearly his swan song. Redfield died of leukemia the following year at the age of 49. His son, Adam Redfield, who was born in 1960, also became an actor on stage and TV.
Couple Profile Source
www.imdb.com/name/nm0714835/bio
Wikipedia Text
William Redfield (January 26, 1927 – August 17, 1976) was an American actor and author who appeared in numerous theatrical, film, radio, and television roles.
Age
49
Posted by Maya 8 minutes ago
U were so cute when u were young
Posted by Manon 1 hour ago
Miley ne doit pas changer parce qu on la traite de grosse se s t une fille ...
Posted by michele holub 1 hour ago
hi will i think u r a very good actor:)
Posted by Selena Jo Gomez 1 hour ago
Thanks Michael glad we like the pattern,wynn We were shopping.Love you a lo...
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