RIP Barry Nelson

This is for General chit chat and such.
If it doesn't fit in any of the other forums, it goes here. Knock yerself out.

Post Reply
User avatar
Xjmt
Tv Watcher
Tv Watcher
Posts:13815
Joined:Tue Sep 02, 2003 6:13 am
Location:Ohio
RIP Barry Nelson

Post by Xjmt » Wed Apr 18, 2007 1:59 pm

From The New York Times:
April 14, 2007
Barry Nelson, Broadway and Film Actor, Dies at 86
By STUART LAVIETES
Barry Nelson, an actor who had a long career in film and television, starred in some of the more durable Broadway comedies of the 1950s and ’60s, and achieved a permanent place in the minds of trivia buffs as the first actor to portray James Bond, died last Saturday, his wife said yesterday. He was 86.

The cause was not immediately known. His wife, Nansi Nelson, said he died while traveling in Bucks County, Pa., The Associated Press reported.

Mr. Nelson became familiar to many moviegoers in his middle years, appearing in films like “Airport” and “The Shining.” But it was onstage more than half a century ago that he made perhaps a more enduring mark. Though not a matinee idol, he was blond and handsome and excelled in light romantic comedies, often playing the somewhat overmatched partner of an irrepressible leading lady.

He was a likable young architect who picked up a chirpy Barbara Bel Geddes in one of the most popular Broadway shows of the early 1950s, “The Moon Is Blue.”

He and Ms. Bel Geddes teamed again from 1961 through 1964, this time as a divorcing couple in Jean Kerr’s “Mary, Mary.” Soon after that show closed, he embarked on another long run opposite Lauren Bacall in “Cactus Flower.”

Mr. Nelson maintained his popularity in the 1970s, even as Broadway comedies began to take a darker view of relationships and marriage.

He starred with Deborah Kerr in Edward Albee’s “Seascape” and played a leading role in Alan Ayckbourn’s trilogy, “The Norman Conquests.”

He continued to perform in pure entertainments as well, earning a Tony nomination in 1978 for best actor in a musical for his role in the Liza Minnelli showcase “The Act.”

Born Robert Haakon Nielsen in San Francisco on April 16, 1920, he graduated from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1941. Spotted by a talent scout, he was soon signed to an MGM contract and appeared in studio films like “Shadow of the Thin Man” (1941) and “Johnny Eager” and “Dr. Kildare’s Victory,” both in 1942. He landed a lead role the same year in “A Yank on the Burma Road,” playing a cabdriver who winds up leading a convoy of trucks for the Chinese government.

Joining the Army and assigned to an entertainment unit, he made his Broadway debut in 1943, billed as Pvt. Barry Nelson, in Moss Hart’s wartime morale builder, “Winged Victory.” He also appeared in the 1944 film version of the play.

Mr. Nelson starred in a number of television series in the 1950s, including a cold war spy adventure, “The Hunter”; a domestic comedy, “My Favorite Husband”; and a Canadian fur-trapping saga, “Hudson’s Bay.”

But it was in an unremarkable one-hour television production in 1954 that he left a lasting mark, or asterisk. That was when he played Jimmy Bond, an Americanized version of Ian Fleming’s ladykilling international spy, in an adaptation of “Casino Royale” for the CBS anthology series “Climax!”

Sean Connery’s Bond followed Mr. Nelson’s eight years later, in “Dr. No.”

In 1964 he starred in one of the most memorable episodes of “The Twilight Zone,” “Stopover in a Quiet Town,” in which a stranded couple wake up in a typical small town to find that it is completely deserted and deathly quiet except for the sound of a child’s laughter.

He appeared in another creepy classic, Stanley Kubrick’s 1980 horror film, “The Shining,” playing the manager of the haunted and virtually empty hotel.

Mr. Nelson’s movie credits also include the 1963 adaptation of “Mary, Mary,” with Debbie Reynolds in the Barbara Bel Geddes role, and the 1970 disaster film “Airport,” in which he played an airline captain. He was a familiar face to television viewers throughout the 1970s and 1980s, appearing in cameo roles on many popular shows, including “Cannon,” “Taxi,” “Dallas” and “The Love Boat.”

Mr. Nelson’s first marriage, to the actress Teresa Celli, ended in divorce in 1951. He and his wife, Nansi, were married in 1992. He had no children from either marriage.

User avatar
Xjmt
Tv Watcher
Tv Watcher
Posts:13815
Joined:Tue Sep 02, 2003 6:13 am
Location:Ohio

Post by Xjmt » Thu May 10, 2007 8:10 am

I'm really surprised that no one reacted to Barry Nelson playing the first ever version of James "Jimmy" Bond. To bad I couldn't have posted a picture of him here. I'm sure most of you would recognize him.

User avatar
trucker2000
Site Admin
Site Admin
Posts:2170
Joined:Tue Jan 07, 2003 3:24 am
Location:California, USA
Contact:

Post by trucker2000 » Thu May 10, 2007 8:35 am

I googled this one.--> Here are some pics<-- but I don't recognise him at all.
You can teach an old dog new tricks. :D
Sometimes.
Forum Host

User avatar
lswot
Tv Watcher
Tv Watcher
Posts:13710
Joined:Sun Aug 31, 2003 11:53 am
Location:California

Post by lswot » Thu May 10, 2007 10:47 am

Uh......Mario Lanza. One photo is with Barry Nelson.
I do remember him. Not well.....but, he is familiar.
:beamup: lswot
eccl 2:13

"A Government big enough to give you every thing you want, is big enough to take away every thing you have."
......Thomas Jefferson......

User avatar
Xjmt
Tv Watcher
Tv Watcher
Posts:13815
Joined:Tue Sep 02, 2003 6:13 am
Location:Ohio

Post by Xjmt » Thu May 10, 2007 3:32 pm

OMG I practically grew up watching this guy, Barry Nelson, on TV. The very first sitcom we ever watched was "My Favorite Husband" staged like a play and they got away (early 50s) with the very first use of the word a$$ on TV. :rotfl:

Then there was a show in which he played a spy the title of which may have been "The Whistler". The reason for that title was no one knew what he looked like (except the audience) as he only got his instructions and passed along information from a public phone. Sound familiar? He would identify himself on the phone by whistling a French song known in English as; "Are You Sleeping, Are You Sleeping, Brother John, Brother John".

I even saw him on Bdwy in a play and I didn't realize he was in the play before going. :bdsmile:

OK, so at least we can now answer the Trivia question, "Who was the first actor ever to portrayed the character James Bond"?

User avatar
brian
Site Admin
Site Admin
Posts:8328
Joined:Tue Sep 02, 2003 8:07 am
Location:Orlando, Florida
Contact:

Post by brian » Fri May 11, 2007 5:45 am

Image
"The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams."-- Eleanor Roosevelt

User avatar
Xjmt
Tv Watcher
Tv Watcher
Posts:13815
Joined:Tue Sep 02, 2003 6:13 am
Location:Ohio

Post by Xjmt » Fri May 11, 2007 8:23 am

I don't think I've ever seen that poster before. I didn't remember Peter Lorre was in it either. Too bad there's no names on the poster. I wonder who the female lead was?

Great job finding that, Brian. Thanks. :biggthumbup:

User avatar
brian
Site Admin
Site Admin
Posts:8328
Joined:Tue Sep 02, 2003 8:07 am
Location:Orlando, Florida
Contact:

Post by brian » Fri May 11, 2007 9:00 am

It was an episode of Climax Mystery Theater. TV, apparently, not film.

Episode Cast (in credits order)
Barry Nelson ... James Bond/Jimmy Bond
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Eugene Borden ... Chef DePartre/Chef De Partie
Linda Christian ... Valerie Mathis
Jean Del Val ... Croupier (as Jean DeVal)
Kurt Katch ... Zoltan
Peter Lorre ... Le Chiffre
William Lundigan ... Host
Michael Pate ... Clarence Leiter
Gene Roth ... Basil
"The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams."-- Eleanor Roosevelt

User avatar
lswot
Tv Watcher
Tv Watcher
Posts:13710
Joined:Sun Aug 31, 2003 11:53 am
Location:California

Post by lswot » Fri May 11, 2007 9:39 am

Thanks, Brian.......you make a great investigative reporter. :smile:
:beamup: lswot
eccl 2:13

"A Government big enough to give you every thing you want, is big enough to take away every thing you have."
......Thomas Jefferson......

User avatar
Xjmt
Tv Watcher
Tv Watcher
Posts:13815
Joined:Tue Sep 02, 2003 6:13 am
Location:Ohio

Post by Xjmt » Fri May 11, 2007 11:44 am

lswot wrote:Thanks, Brian.......you make a great investigative reporter. :smile:
Or detective! :clap: :biggthumbup:

OMG! The show also included Linda Christian and William Lundigan. If memory serves Lundigan had his own detective show on TV for a while. All of them had also starred in movies.

Post Reply