Chuck Connors
Kevin Joseph Aloysius "Chuck" Connors (April 10, 1921 – November 10, 1992) was an American actor, professional baseball and basketball player, and United States Army veteran best known for his portrayal of widowed rancher Lucas McCain in the Western television series The Rifleman (1958–1963).[1][2][3] Standing at 6 feet 6 inches tall with a commanding physical presence honed from his athletic background, Connors transitioned from sports to entertainment after brief stints in Major League Baseball with the Brooklyn Dodgers (1949) and Chicago Cubs (1951), and in the Basketball Association of America with the Boston Celtics (1946–1948), becoming one of only 13 athletes in history to compete professionally in both MLB and what became the NBA.[1][4][5] His acting career spanned over four decades, encompassing more than 50 films and numerous television appearances, with The Rifleman establishing him as a television icon through its depiction of frontier justice and father-son dynamics, for which he performed many of his own stunts and marksmanship feats.[2][6][7] Connors received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1984 and was inducted into the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in 1991, recognizing his contributions to Western media, while his earlier minor league baseball exploits, including leading the Piedmont League in home runs in 1946, underscored his versatile athletic prowess before Hollywood stardom.[7][8][9]Early Life
Childhood and Family Background
Kevin Joseph Aloysius Connors was born on April 10, 1921, in Brooklyn, New York, to Marcella Connors (née Londrigan; 1894–1971), who worked as a domestic servant and custodian, and Alban Francis "Allan" Connors (died 1966), a watchman, both of whom were Irish immigrants who had arrived in the United States via Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.[10][3] As the elder of two siblings—with a younger sister, Gloria, born in 1923—Connors was raised in a devout Roman Catholic household, where he served as an altar boy at the Basilica of Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Brooklyn.[3][11] The family's working-class circumstances were exacerbated by the Great Depression, leading to frequent moves within Brooklyn, including residences in unheated apartments at 455 Sixty-first Street and later 358 Senator Street.[10] These economic hardships, rooted in the immigrant experience of limited opportunities and manual labor, fostered a environment of necessity-driven resilience, which Connors himself later attributed as the origin of his personal ambition and drive for self-improvement.[10] Such formative pressures in a tight-knit, faith-oriented family underscored causal pathways from socioeconomic constraints to individual determination, with early interests in physical activities emerging as a practical response to the era's challenges, though without formal resources beyond neighborhood outlets.[10] This background instilled core values of discipline and self-reliance, evident in Connors' reflections on overcoming adversity through persistent effort rather than external aid.[10]Education and Early Athletics
Connors received his early education in the public schools of Brooklyn, New York, where he first displayed athletic talent in local sandlot games and schoolyard competitions.[9] A standout multisport athlete, he secured an athletic scholarship to Adelphi Academy, a preparatory school in Brooklyn, enrolling there to focus on football, basketball, and baseball; he captained the basketball team and earned all-city honors in baseball as a first baseman and outfielder, graduating in 1939 amid offers from over 25 colleges.[6][10][12] Selecting Seton Hall University in South Orange, New Jersey, on another athletic scholarship, Connors played freshman baseball in 1941, serving as the Pirates' first baseman after summer semipro experience in New England, and participated in basketball, though his college tenure lasted only one year before transitioning to professional pursuits.[13][12][9] During his baseball play at Seton Hall, Connors adopted the nickname "Chuck"—discarding earlier monikers like "Lefty" and "Stretch"—stemming from his on-field calls to pitchers to "chuck it to me," a habit that stuck among teammates and foreshadowed his physical dominance at 6 feet 6 inches tall.[14]Military Service
Enlistment and Training Role
Connors enlisted voluntarily in the United States Army on October 20, 1942, at age 21, while actively pursuing a professional baseball career with the Brooklyn Dodgers' farm system.[9] [2] This decision occurred nearly ten months after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, which spurred widespread enlistments amid national calls for mobilization; as a skilled athlete, Connors qualified for occupational deferments under Selective Service policies that often exempted professional sports figures to maintain public morale, yet he chose immediate service reflecting personal patriotic commitment.[15] [9] Following basic training in the infantry at Fort Knox, Kentucky, Connors was reassigned to tank-warfare instruction based on his exceptional height of 6 feet 6 inches, athletic build, and aptitude for handling heavy machinery, roles that demanded physical robustness for demonstrating armored vehicle operations.[6] [5] He conducted training at Camp Campbell (later Fort Campbell) in Kentucky starting in late 1942, focusing on practical drills in tank maintenance, gunnery, and tactical maneuvers to prepare recruits for potential European and Pacific theaters.[6] In 1944, he transferred to the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, where he instructed cadets and officer candidates in advanced armored warfare techniques, contributing to the Army's expansion of mechanized units without personal overseas deployment.[5] [9] Military records confirm Connors attained the rank of sergeant and remained stateside throughout his approximately three-year tenure, with no assignments to combat zones; this placement underscored the efficacy of specialized domestic training programs in building a mechanized force capable of supporting Allied advances, as evidenced by the U.S. Army's production of over 49,000 tanks by war's end, many operated by personnel he helped prepare.[9] [16]Stateside Contributions During World War II
During World War II, Chuck Connors served exclusively in stateside training capacities after enlisting in the United States Army in October 1942, forgoing his collegiate athletic pursuits at Seton Hall University to contribute to national defense efforts.[9][5] Assigned as a tank-warfare instructor, Connors utilized his physical stature—standing at 6 feet 6 inches—and athletic background to train armored vehicle crews, emphasizing operational proficiency and tactical maneuvers essential for mechanized warfare.[17][15] His initial posting was at Camp Campbell (later Fort Campbell) in Kentucky, where he instructed recruits on tank gunnery, maintenance, and crew coordination, helping build the skills of personnel who would later deploy to Europe and the Pacific theaters.[9][3] Later transferred to the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, Connors continued his instructional duties, notably training prominent cadets such as Glenn Davis ("Mr. Outside") and Felix "Doc" Blanchard ("Mr. Inside"), future Heisman Trophy winners who exemplified the rigorous discipline he imparted.[15][6] This role underscored the importance of individual trainer dedication in scaling military readiness, as effective stateside instruction directly enhanced the combat effectiveness of U.S. armored divisions facing Axis mechanized threats. Connors' service, spanning from enlistment through the war's end, reflected a commitment to collective defense over personal advancement, with no overseas deployment despite opportunities in a volunteer-heavy force.[9][18] Connors received an honorable discharge in early 1946, having completed over three years of uninterrupted service focused on domestic training imperatives rather than frontline engagement.[2][18] His contributions, though one element among broader Army efforts, supported the rapid expansion of armored capabilities that proved decisive in Allied victories, such as the armored breakthroughs in Normandy and the Ardennes.[9][5]Sports Career
Minor and Major League Baseball
Connors began his professional baseball career in 1940, signing with the Brooklyn Dodgers organization and appearing in four games for the Newport News Dodgers of the Class D Northeast Arkansas League, where he batted .091.[19] His early play was interrupted by military service during World War II, but he resumed in 1946 with the Dodgers' Class B Piedmont League affiliate in Newport News, batting .293 with 17 home runs and 68 RBIs over 119 games.[19] In 1947, he advanced to the Double-A Southern Association with the Mobile Bears, posting a .255 average, 15 home runs, and 82 RBIs in 145 games.[19] By 1948, Connors reached Triple-A with the Montreal Royals of the International League, where he hit .307 with 17 home runs and 88 RBIs in 147 games, demonstrating emerging power as a first baseman.[19] He repeated at Montreal in 1949, improving to .319 with 20 home runs and a league-leading 108 RBIs in 133 games, which earned him a brief major league call-up to the Dodgers on May 1, 1949, for one game with one at-bat and no hits.[19][1] Returning to the Royals, he batted .290 with six home runs in 1950 before being traded to the Chicago Cubs organization.[19] In 1951, Connors debuted more substantially with the Cubs, playing 66 games primarily at first base with a .239 batting average, two home runs, and 18 RBIs in 214 at-bats.[1][20] Despite his size (6-foot-5) and left-handed power potential—evident in minor league totals exceeding 100 career home runs—post-war influx of experienced players and recurring injuries curtailed his major league tenure to just 67 games across both teams, with an overall .238 average.[9] He returned to Triple-A Los Angeles Angels of the Pacific Coast League in 1951 (.321, 22 HR) and 1952 (.259, 6 HR) before retiring from baseball after the 1952 season.[19]Professional Basketball in the BAA/NBA
Connors joined the Boston Celtics for the inaugural season of the Basketball Association of America (BAA) in 1946–47, the league that later evolved into the National Basketball Association (NBA).[21] Standing at 6 feet 5 inches, his height provided an advantage in an era when average player stature was shorter, allowing him to contribute through physical play and rebounding, though comprehensive rebound statistics were not systematically recorded at the time.[21] He appeared in 49 regular-season games that year, starting in limited minutes, and shot 24.7% from the field on 7.8 attempts per game while averaging 4.6 points, 0.8 free throws made, and 0.8 assists.[21] In the 1947–48 BAA season, Connors returned to the Celtics but played sparingly, appearing in only 4 games and averaging 3.0 points on improved 38.5% field goal shooting in reduced opportunities.[21] His overall BAA career spanned 53 games exclusively with Boston, yielding a 4.5 points per game average, 25.2% field goal percentage, and 46.4% free throw accuracy, reflecting his role as a reserve forward-center amid divided commitments between basketball and professional baseball.[21] Connors' tenure highlighted the challenges of dual-sport professionalism, as he balanced road trips and training schedules across leagues, ultimately prioritizing baseball after departing the Celtics early in 1948.[22] His career high of 15 points came during the 1946–47 season, underscoring occasional scoring bursts in a low-output offensive era.[21]Dual-Sport Achievements and Statistical Overview
Chuck Connors stands as one of only 13 athletes in professional sports history to appear in both Major League Baseball (MLB) and the Basketball Association of America (BAA)/National Basketball Association (NBA), a feat underscoring his rare physical versatility and athletic adaptability across demanding team sports.[23][24] This dual-league participation, verified through official records, highlights the exceptional rarity of succeeding at the professional level in two distinct disciplines requiring divergent skills—power hitting and fielding in baseball juxtaposed with rebounding and shooting in basketball—amid the era's limited opportunities for multi-sport careers.[1][21] His MLB tenure spanned parts of two seasons with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1949 and Chicago Cubs in 1951, totaling 67 games, while BAA stints with the Boston Celtics covered 53 games across 1946-47 and 1947-48. Despite marginal statistical outputs—often critiqued for brevity—reaching major professional rosters in both leagues demands elite baseline athleticism, as evidenced by the scant historical precedents; narratives downplaying such tenures overlook the probabilistic improbability, where fewer than 0.01% of athletes achieve even one pro contract, let alone dual-league exposure.[25][26]| League | Games Played | Key Batting/Scoring Stats | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| MLB | 67 | 202 AB, .238 AVG, 2 HR, 18 RBI | [1] |
| BAA/NBA | 53 | 4.5 PPG, 25.2% FG% | [21][26] |
Transition to Entertainment
Post-Sports Challenges and Initial Roles
After retiring from professional baseball in February 1953, following shoulder injuries and a .259 batting average in his final season with the Triple-A Los Angeles Angels, Connors recognized the diminishing prospects of a sustained athletic career at age 31.[9][27] This shift left him navigating job instability, prompting him to take on odd jobs including insurance sales, water softener demonstrations, and pregame show hosting to support himself while entering the competitive Hollywood scene.[27] Connors' entry into acting began modestly in 1952, prior to full retirement, with a bit part as a state police captain in the film Pat and Mike, starring Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn, for which he received $500 after being spotted by industry contacts during his Angels tenure.[9][5] He followed this with small roles in Trouble Along the Way (1953) and South Sea Woman (1953), supplementing film work with television extras and commercials to build experience amid the era's saturated market for newcomers lacking formal training.[9][28] His 6-foot-6 frame and robust physique from years of professional sports facilitated suitability for physically imposing character parts, providing a causal edge in casting decisions that favored his natural screen presence over acting novices without such attributes.[9][27] These early efforts, though sporadic, laid the groundwork for persistence in an industry where transitions from athletics often hinged on leveraging tangible physical advantages amid broader economic uncertainties for former players.[28]Acting Career
Breakthrough Television Success with The Rifleman
Chuck Connors portrayed Lucas McCain, a widowed Civil War Union veteran and rancher raising his son Mark in the fictional town of North Fork, New Mexico Territory, during the post-Civil War era. The series depicted McCain as a principled figure who enforced justice and protected his community primarily through moral suasion but resorted to his customized rifle when necessary to defend against clear threats. Spanning 168 half-hour episodes broadcast on ABC from September 30, 1958, to April 8, 1963, the show highlighted themes of paternal guidance, ethical decision-making, and the responsible use of force strictly for self-defense and protection of the innocent.[29][30] Produced by Four Star Television, The Rifleman was developed by Arnold Laven, who emphasized McCain's rifle as a signature tool distinct from typical Western six-shooters, symbolizing deliberate preparedness rather than impulsivity. The rifle, a modified Winchester Model 1892 with a shortened lever action enabling rapid successive shots, served as a plot device in the opening sequence and episodes, underscoring the realism of quick defensive responses in frontier confrontations. Sam Peckinpah directed approximately 28 episodes, contributing to the series' gritty yet morally straightforward storytelling focused on family integrity over ambiguity.[31] The program achieved strong viewership ratings, with Season 1 averaging household ratings around 21.5 in the competitive Western genre landscape, reflecting audience affinity for narratives prioritizing clear heroism and familial bonds amid 1950s cultural shifts. Its enduring syndication success, continuing into later decades, evidenced sustained demand for depictions of self-reliant characters upholding unambiguous ethical standards against lawlessness, contrasting with more relativistic portrayals in contemporary media.[32][33]Film Roles and Character Acting
Connors appeared in approximately 49 feature films between the early 1950s and the late 1980s, frequently portraying authoritative or antagonistic figures leveraging his 6-foot-6 stature and athletic background for action-oriented scenes.[34] His cinematic output extended beyond Western television, encompassing genres such as drama, comedy, and science fiction, though critics noted that formulaic scripts in B-movies sometimes limited depth, offset by his convincing physical intensity and screen presence derived from real-life sports experience.[35] A notable early supporting role came in the 1957 family drama Old Yeller, where Connors depicted Burn Sanderson, the drifter who trades ownership of the stray dog to young Arliss Coates, contributing to the film's emotional arc amid its post-Civil War Texas setting.[36] This Disney production highlighted his ability to convey rugged benevolence without overpowering the leads, Fess Parker and Tommy Kirk. In contrast, Connors took the lead as the Apache leader Geronimo in the 1962 Western of the same name, portraying a warrior navigating U.S. government duplicity and reservation life; the film, directed by Arnold Laven, emphasized his commanding physicality in action sequences despite the casting of a non-Native actor in the titular role.[37] Later films demonstrated further range, including the villainous Tab Fielding in the 1973 dystopian thriller Soylent Green, where he menaced investigator Charlton Heston's pursuit of corporate secrets amid overpopulation and scarcity.[38] Connors also featured in the 1963 screwball comedy Move Over, Darling, playing a shipwreck survivor entangled in Doris Day and James Garner's remarriage farce; the film achieved commercial success, earning an estimated $17.4 million domestically.[39] These roles underscored his versatility in tough-guy archetypes, from frontier enforcers to futuristic heavies, with authentic grit praised in performances like his key antagonist in The Big Country (1958), though lesser productions often confined him to typecast intensity over nuanced character work.[35]Typecasting, Later Television, and Career Longevity
Following the conclusion of The Rifleman in 1963, Connors encountered typecasting that confined him primarily to portrayals of tough, authoritative characters in Western and crime genres. He took the lead role of defense attorney John Egan in the ABC anthology series Arrest and Trial (1963–1964), which featured 90-minute episodes split between police investigations led by Sgt. Nick Anderson (Ben Gazzara) and courtroom defenses, marking an early format blending procedural and legal drama elements.[40] This role emphasized Connors' commanding presence but echoed the moral rectitude of his prior Western persona.[41] Connors reinforced this image in Branded (1965–1966), an NBC Western where he played Jason McCord, a West Point graduate and cavalry captain falsely accused of cowardice during a massacre, stripped of his uniform, and left to wander the frontier in search of redemption.[42] The series, airing for 48 half-hour episodes, drew on Connors' physical stature and stoic demeanor to depict a hero enduring public disgrace and personal trials, though it lasted only one season amid shifting viewer preferences away from traditional oaters.[43] Into the 1970s and 1980s, Connors sustained his career through diverse television guest roles and recurring parts, countering one-dimensional critiques with appearances across genres including anthology horror (Night Gallery), adventure (Thrill Seekers), and modern drama (Spenser: For Hire).[3] A notable shift came in 1987 when he portrayed the grizzled vampire hunter Janos Skorzeny in the Fox horror series Werewolf, showcasing his adaptability in supernatural narratives amid an industry increasingly favoring younger leads.[3] Connors' professional output persisted until 1991, encompassing over four decades of credited work that demonstrated resilience against age-related biases in casting.[3]Political Views and Public Engagement
Republican Affiliation and Endorsements
Chuck Connors identified as a lifelong Republican, actively supporting the party's candidates through campaigning and fundraising efforts. He attended several fundraisers for U.S. President Richard Nixon's presidential campaigns, demonstrating his commitment to the party's leadership during the late 1960s and early 1970s.[44] [15] Connors also campaigned vigorously for Senator Barry Goldwater's 1964 Republican presidential bid, aligning himself with the party's conservative wing amid the Cold War.[15] Connors extended his partisan support to Ronald Reagan, joining him on the campaign trail for California's 1966 gubernatorial race, where photographs document their joint appearances in events such as one in San Diego.[45] As a friend of Reagan, Connors continued advocating for Republican causes, reflecting a consistent preference for candidates emphasizing strong national defense and anti-communist policies. His political actions paralleled his public statements and participation in pro-Vietnam War demonstrations, including marching in a New York City parade on May 13, 1967, to bolster support for U.S. military involvement.[46]Advocacy for Traditional Values and Conservatism
Connors actively supported Republican candidates and conservative initiatives throughout the 1960s and 1970s, including campaigning with Ronald Reagan during his 1966 bid for California governor.[45] He also backed Richard Nixon's presidential campaigns, reflecting alignment with platforms emphasizing limited government and anti-communism.[9] In May 1967, Connors participated in a New York City parade organized to rally support for U.S. troops in Vietnam, marching alongside veterans and carrying an American flag to counter anti-war protests and affirm commitment to national defense and order.[47][46] This public stand positioned him against prevailing countercultural narratives, prioritizing empirical resolve in foreign policy over domestic relativism. Through cultural channels like The Rifleman, Connors advanced themes of paternal guidance, moral accountability, and responsible self-defense, portraying a widowed father instilling ethical individualism in his son amid frontier challenges—values he endorsed as countering 1960s moral drift in interviews.[48][49] His character's adept rifle use symbolized principled gun ownership for protection and justice, influencing viewers toward self-reliant conservatism over collectivist dependency.[50]Personal Life
Marriages, Family, and Relationships
Chuck Connors married Elizabeth Jane Riddell on October 1, 1948, after meeting her during his minor league baseball days in Montreal.[11] The couple had four sons: Michael (born 1950, died 2017), Jeffrey (born 1952, died 2014), Stephen (born 1953), and Kevin (born 1956, died 2005).[2] Their marriage ended in divorce in 1961, amid the strains of Connors' demanding professional sports and emerging entertainment career, which involved extensive travel.[51] Connors' second marriage was to actress Kamala Devi on April 10, 1963, following their collaboration in the film Geronimo.[52] The union produced no children and dissolved in divorce on February 9, 1972.[2] Connors spoke in interviews about the challenges of balancing his acting commitments with family life, often crediting his portrayal of a devoted father in The Rifleman as reflective of his own paternal values despite the logistical difficulties posed by location shooting and tours.[3] His third marriage to actress Faith Quabius occurred on September 7, 1977, and ended in divorce on April 15, 1980; this relationship also yielded no surviving children.[2] Connors maintained close ties with his sons throughout his life, with no documented major personal scandals, though biographical accounts attribute relational stresses primarily to career-induced absences rather than infidelity or conflict.[53] In later years, he was accompanied by Rose Mary Grumley, his longtime personal assistant, until his death.[54]Philanthropy and Community Involvement
Connors established the Chuck Connors Charitable Foundation to support causes benefiting disabled children, organizing the annual Chuck Connors Charitable Invitational Golf Tournament, which featured celebrity participants including Frank Sinatra and raised over $400,000 in proceeds directed to the Angel View Crippled Children's Foundation in Desert Hot Springs, California.[44][55] These events leveraged his fame from The Rifleman to generate funds for pediatric care and rehabilitation services, with Connors personally contributing through hosting and promotion efforts spanning the late 1970s into the 1980s.[15][56] Beyond the golf tournaments, Connors advocated for underprivileged youth by backing programs tied to sports and community development, drawing from his own early involvement in organizations like the Bay Ridge Boys' Club, though specific adult-era donations to such groups remain less documented.[56] His philanthropy emphasized direct aid to children's health initiatives, reflecting a commitment to tangible support rather than broad political advocacy, with the Angel View efforts providing verifiable assistance to families facing physical disabilities.[16][57]Health, Death, and Legacy
Battle with Illness
Connors, a longtime cigarette smoker who had reportedly consumed up to three packs daily for decades before attempting to quit in the mid-1970s, developed pneumonia that necessitated hospitalization in early November 1992.[58][14] During treatment at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center for this lingering respiratory infection, physicians diagnosed him with advanced lung cancer just days prior to his death.[58][59] Admitted on November 3, Connors received aggressive medical intervention, yet his condition deteriorated rapidly over the ensuing week, succumbing to pneumonia compounded by the malignancy on November 10, 1992, at age 71.[60][59] Long-term tobacco exposure, as in Connors' history, imposes substantial oncogenic risk via inhaled carcinogens that induce DNA mutations and chronic lung inflammation, with cohort studies demonstrating relative risks exceeding 20-fold for heavy users relative to nonsmokers.[58] This causal pathway underscores empirical data linking prolonged smoking to the majority of lung cancer incidences, independent of confounding factors in observational designs.[61]Enduring Cultural Impact and Recognition
The Rifleman remains in syndication on channels including MeTV, Grit, and INSP as of January 2025, with weekly airings that underscore its sustained viewership more than 60 years after its 1958 premiere.[62] The series' portrayal of Lucas McCain as a widowed father enforcing justice through personal resolve and marksmanship has preserved its appeal, evidenced by ongoing reruns that outlast many contemporaries from the Western genre.[63] This endurance reflects measurable cultural persistence, with the show's moral framework—emphasizing self-reliance and familial duty—contrasting dilutions in modern depictions of heroism. Connors' athletic achievements, as one of only 13 individuals to compete professionally in both Major League Baseball and the National Basketball Association, contribute to retrospective evaluations of his legacy, though he received no formal induction into sport-specific halls of fame.[13] His 1984 Emmy nomination for portraying slave owner Tom Moore in Roots, a role diverging from his heroic archetype, highlighted his range beyond typecasting.[64] That year, on July 18, he was honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6838 Hollywood Boulevard, attended by over 200 associates, affirming his television contributions.[7] Fan engagement persists through merchandise sales on platforms like Etsy and eBay, including apparel and posters featuring Connors' Rifleman likeness, indicating commercial viability of his image decades post-mortem.[65] Efforts to reboot The Rifleman, such as development deals explored by CBS in 2011 and subsequent concepts involving director Chris Columbus, demonstrate industry recognition of its foundational themes, though no production has materialized by 2025.[66] Connors' embodiment of 1950s-1960s ideals—individual agency amid frontier challenges—positions him as a benchmark against which later media's abstracted narratives are often critiqued for lacking causal grounding in personal accountability.[67]Filmography
Feature Films
Connors appeared in over two dozen feature films from the early 1950s through the 1980s, frequently cast in supporting roles as rugged antagonists or authoritative figures in westerns, family dramas, and later genre films including science fiction and horror.[3] His early work often featured uncredited or minor parts in sports comedies and war dramas, transitioning to lead roles in mid-career westerns before diversifying into character parts in cult classics.[68]- Pat and Mike (1952), as a police captain in this Spencer Tracy-Katharine Hepburn sports comedy.[69]
- South Sea Woman (1953), as Private Davey White in a World War II action film.[7]
- Trouble Along the Way (1953), supporting role in a John Wayne football drama.[69]
- Designing Woman (1957), as Johnnie "O" in a romantic comedy with Gregory Peck and Lauren Bacall.[68]
- Old Yeller (1957), as Burn Sanderson in the Disney family adventure western.[68]
- The Big Country (1958), as Buck Hannassey, a key villainous role in the epic western directed by William Wyler.[68]
- Geronimo (1962), starring as the titular Apache leader in this historical western.[37]
- Flipper (1963), as Porter Ricks in the family adventure about a dolphin.[3]
- Move Over, Darling (1963), supporting role in the Doris Day screwball comedy remake.[69]
- Support Your Local Gunfighter (1971), as a bandit in the James Garner western parody.[3]
- Soylent Green (1973), as Tab Fielding in the dystopian science fiction thriller.
- Tourist Trap (1979), as Mr. Slausen in the horror film.[68]
- Airplane II: The Sequel (1982), as The Sarge in the sci-fi comedy spoof.[68]