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Leo Gordon

Leo Gordon

Age
78 (passed away Dec. 26th, 2000)
Birthday
Dec. 2nd, 1922
Born in
New York City, New York, USA
Height
6' 2"

Leo Gordon's Main TV Roles

Show Character(s)
Man Without a Gun TV Show
Man Without a Gun
 

Main Movie Roles

1994 - Maverick
1988 - Saturday the 14th Strikes Back
1988 - Big Top Pee-wee
1987 - The Garbage Pail Kids Movie
1983 - Fire and Ice
1976 - The Shootist
1967 - Tobruk
1967 - The St. Valentine's Day Massacre
1966 - The Night of the Grizzly
1964 - Kitten with a Whip
1963 - McLintock!
1963 - The Haunted Palace
1959 - The Jayhawkers!
1957 - Baby Face Nelson
1956 - The Man Who Knew Too Much
1956 - The Conqueror
1956 - 7th Cavalry
1955 - Tennessee's Partner
1955 - Man with the Gun
1955 - Soldier of Fortune
1954 - The Egyptian
1954 - Riot in Cell Block 11
1953 - Hondo
1953 - Gun Fury

Guest TV Roles

Show Name
Characters Played
Ep Count
Big Mike McComb
5
Ken Quinnlan
5
Badger
5
George MacDonald
4
Clark Streeter
4
Fargo Taylor
3
Jack Scratch
3
Adam Kemper
3
[Complete List]



BIOGRAPHY:

Big, burly, character actor, one of the toughest of screen heavies, Leo Gordon's powerful physique, combined with his deep, menacing voice, was guaranteed to strike fear into the heart of even the bravest screen hero. Director Don Siegel, who used Gordon in his prison film Riot in Cell Block 11 (1954), once said that "Leo Gordon was the scariest man I have ever met" - this coming from a man who had directed John Wayne (I), Clint Eastwood and Bette Midler! Siegel wasn't talking about just Gordon's screen presence. Before becoming an actor (he studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts), Gordon served a stretch in San Quentin prison for armed robbery. "Riot in Cell Block 11" was filmed at San Quentin, and many of the guards remembered Gordon from his time there, when he was regarded as a troublemaker. Prison officials would not let Gordon enter and leave the institution with the other cast and crew members; he was only allowed to enter and exit by himself, and was thoroughly searched each time. Contrary to his image, though, Gordon was not just a one-note villain. He did play sympathetic parts on occasion, notably in the western Black Patch (1957) and in Roger Corman's civil rights drama The Intruder (1962), and turned in first-rate performances, especially in the latter film. Gordon was also a screenwriter, turning out several screenplays for Corman. He wasn't just limited to writing low-budget sci-fi films, either; he penned the screenplay for the WW2 epic Tobruk (1967), writing in a good part for himself as Kruger, a tough sergeant in a platoon of German Jews masquerading as Nazi soldiers to help blow up a German oil storage facility.


TRIVIA:
  • He has one daughter.


Related sites for this celeb
» IMDB