Dane Clark
Dane Clark (born Bernard Elliot Zanville; February 26, 1912 – September 11, 1998) was an American character actor renowned for portraying relatable "Joe Average" roles in films and television, particularly during the 1940s and 1950s.[1][2][3] Born in Brooklyn, New York City, to Russian Jewish immigrant parents Rose Korostoff and Samuel Zanville, Clark grew up in a working-class environment and pursued higher education amid the Great Depression.[1] He earned a Bachelor of Arts from Cornell University and a law degree from St. John's University School of Law, but financial pressures led him to take on various manual jobs, including as a boxer, baseball player, construction worker, and model, while also writing for radio.[2][3] Encouraged by fellow actor John Garfield to channel his energies into performing, Clark made his Broadway debut in 1934 with the play Sailors of Catarro and soon joined the influential Group Theatre, appearing in notable productions such as Waiting for Lefty (1935) and the long-running Dead End (1935–1937).[4][3] Clark transitioned to Hollywood in 1941, initially appearing in U.S. Army training films before signing with Warner Bros., where Humphrey Bogart suggested his stage name.[4] He gained prominence in wartime dramas, debuting in feature films with roles in Destination Tokyo (1943) alongside Cary Grant and Garfield, and Action in the North Atlantic (1943) as the tough seaman Johnny Pulaski.[4][3] His career peaked in the mid-1940s with acclaimed performances in Pride of the Marines (1945), Deep Valley (1947) opposite Ida Lupino, and Moonrise (1948) directed by Frank Borzage, often embodying gritty, working-class protagonists in film noir and war genres.[4][3] By the 1950s, as Hollywood shifted, Clark adapted to television, starring in the syndicated series Wire Service (1956–1957) and Bold Venture (1959), while continuing guest roles on anthology shows and returning to Broadway in the 1960s with productions like A Thousand Clowns (1962).[3] In his personal life, Clark was married twice: first to Margot Yoder, who predeceased him, and later to Geraldine Frank in 1972.[3] He received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in the television category on February 8, 1960, located at 6906 Hollywood Boulevard, recognizing his versatile contributions to entertainment over five decades.[2] Clark continued acting sporadically into the 1980s, with his final credits including television appearances, before passing away from lung cancer in Santa Monica, California, at age 86.[1][3][5]Early life
Birth and family background
Dane Clark was born Bernard Elliot Zanville on February 18, 1912, in Brooklyn, New York City.[6] Some records also list his birth name as Bernhardt Zanvilevitz. His parents, Rose Korostoff and Samuel Zanville, were Russian Jewish immigrants who had settled in New York after arriving from Eastern Europe.[6][7] The Zanville family lived as part of Brooklyn's working-class immigrant community, with Samuel owning and operating a modest sporting goods store that supported the household.[8][2] Although specific details on siblings are not widely documented, the family's emphasis on hard work and community ties in Brooklyn's Jewish neighborhoods influenced Clark's early sense of identity.[9] Clark's childhood unfolded amid the bustling Jewish enclaves of Brooklyn, where cultural traditions, Yiddish influences, and communal solidarity were prominent features of daily life for families like his.[6] This environment, combined with the modest circumstances of his upbringing, later contributed to his authentic portrayal of everyman characters, earning him the self-applied nickname "Joe Average."[2][9]Education and early occupations
Clark attended Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree.[3][2] He subsequently pursued legal studies at St. John's University School of Law in Queens, New York, obtaining his law degree.[3][2] Amid the economic hardships of the Great Depression, Clark struggled to establish a legal practice, facing limited opportunities for young lawyers in the mid-to-late 1930s.[3][10] To support himself and fund further ambitions, he took on a series of diverse manual and service-oriented jobs, including working as an amateur prizefighter, a semiprofessional baseball player, a construction worker on highway projects, and a model.[5][10] These experiences highlighted Clark's resilience amid financial instability, as he balanced sporadic legal aspirations with the demands of survival during the era's widespread unemployment.[3] By the late 1930s, persistent economic pressures led him to abandon his law career entirely, redirecting his energies toward new opportunities.[10][5]Acting career
Theater beginnings
Born Bernard Elliot Zanville in Brooklyn, New York, to Russian Jewish immigrant parents, the aspiring law student turned to acting in the early 1930s on the advice of his friend John Garfield, who encouraged him to audition for stage roles to supplement his income from odd jobs like prizefighting, construction work, and lifeguarding.[11][5] This pivot marked the beginning of his professional theater career, initially under his birth name, as he sought opportunities in New York's vibrant stage scene to hone his skills amid the Great Depression.[12] Zanville's Broadway debut came in 1934 with Friedrich Wolf's Sailors of Catarro, a leftist drama produced by the Theatre Union that portrayed a mutiny among Austro-Hungarian sailors, where he played a supporting role that introduced his emerging intensity on stage.[3] He soon joined New York's influential Group Theatre, a collective known for socially conscious works rooted in method acting techniques influenced by Stanislavski, appearing in a small part in the original 1935 production of Clifford Odets' Waiting for Lefty, a one-act play about taxi drivers striking against exploitation that became a hallmark of proletarian theater.[5][12] This affiliation provided rigorous training through ensemble rehearsals and improvisational exercises, allowing him to develop a raw, streetwise tough-guy persona drawn from his Brooklyn roots, evident in subsequent minor roles that emphasized working-class grit.[5] Building on these experiences, Zanville secured more prominent Broadway parts in the mid-1930s, including a role in the short-lived Panic (1935), a satire on economic collapse, followed by an appearance in Sidney Kingsley's gritty crime drama Dead End (1935), which ran for over 600 performances and featured a cast of young toughs from New York's slums, further solidifying his image as a brooding everyman.[13][1] He continued with supporting work in George S. Kaufman's and Edna Ferber's Stage Door (1936), a comedy-drama about aspiring actresses, and later served as assistant stage manager for John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men (1937), a poignant tale of friendship and dreams deferred that showcased his involvement in major productions.[1] Through off-Broadway productions and stock theater engagements, including tours with Group Theatre revivals, he refined his craft in intimate venues, performing in experimental works that emphasized realistic portrayals of urban struggle and resilience.[12] These early stage efforts, performed exclusively as Bernard Zanville to reflect his authentic background, laid the foundation for his transition to larger audiences while establishing the combative, relatable archetype that would define his later career.[3]Film breakthrough and Warner Bros.
Clark's transition to film began with uncredited supporting roles in 1942, including a fraternity boy in the biographical sports drama The Pride of the Yankees, where he appeared alongside Gary Cooper as Lou Gehrig.[14] He quickly followed this with another uncredited bit part in the crime thriller The Glass Key, directed by Stuart Heisler and starring Brian Donlevy and Veronica Lake. These early appearances, building on his theater experience, caught the attention of major studios and led to Clark signing a long-term contract with Warner Bros. in 1943, marking his breakthrough into Hollywood's studio system.[11] Under his new stage name Dane Clark—adopted at the studio's suggestion to avoid confusion with other actors—Clark was immediately cast in high-profile wartime productions designed to boost morale and support the Allied effort.[15] In Destination Tokyo, directed by Delmer Daves, he played "Tin Can" Wiley, a wisecracking torpedoman aboard a submarine on a perilous mission to Tokyo Bay, opposite Cary Grant and John Garfield. That same year, he earned critical notice for his role as Johnny Pulaski, a resilient merchant mariner, in Action in the North Atlantic, Lloyd Bacon's tribute to the U.S. Merchant Marine, co-starring Humphrey Bogart and Raymond Massey. These films showcased Clark's ability to portray gritty, relatable servicemen in fast-paced action sequences. Warner Bros. further solidified Clark's position with a key role in Hollywood Canteen (1944), where he portrayed Sgt. Nowland, one of two soldiers enjoying a night out at the celebrity-staffed USO club, amid a star-studded ensemble including Bette Davis and Joan Crawford in cameos. The studio groomed Clark specifically for "everyman" supporting characters during the World War II propaganda era, emphasizing his Brooklyn roots and tough-yet-approachable demeanor to represent the average American fighting abroad, a persona he later described with pride as "Joe Average."[15]Leading roles and post-war films
Following his supporting roles during World War II, Dane Clark's Warner Bros. contract positioned him for elevation to leading and prominent supporting parts in the late 1940s, allowing him to showcase a tough, streetwise New Yorker persona rooted in his Brooklyn background.[10] In 1946, he supported Bette Davis and Glenn Ford in A Stolen Life, portraying a rugged proletarian artist who clashes with the sophisticated world of the leads, bringing a gritty authenticity to the melodrama.[16] That same year, Clark earned top billing in the film noir Her Kind of Man, a Roaring Twenties crime drama where he played a charismatic reporter entangled in a love triangle between a gangster and a singer, highlighting his ability to convey moral ambiguity and urban toughness.[17] Clark continued his ascent in 1947 with Deep Valley, a rural drama in which he starred as Barry Burnette, a chain-gang escapee who forms a desperate romance with a sheltered farm girl played by Ida Lupino, emphasizing themes of isolation and redemption amid the California redwoods.[18] Later that year, in the light comedy-noir hybrid That Way with Women, Clark led as Anthony Denning, a suave but reformed con artist hired by a matchmaking millionaire (Sydney Greenstreet) to woo his daughter, blending his tough-guy edge with unexpected charm.[19] He followed in 1948 with the romantic drama Embraceable You, opposite Geraldine Brooks, starring as Eddie Novac, a small-time crook who accidentally hits pedestrian Marie Willens with his car and falls in love with her while caring for her recovery.[20] By 1948, Clark's versatility extended to Whiplash, where he starred as Michael Gordon, an artist turned professional boxer after a romantic betrayal, delivering a dynamic performance that fused artistic sensitivity with physical intensity in this tale of jealousy and revenge.[21] These roles solidified his image as a relatable "Joe Average" from New York's streets—often snarling, street-smart, and unpolished—drawing comparisons to John Garfield while carving a niche in noir-inflected dramas and B-pictures.[11] However, typecasting as the brooding everyman limited his range, confining him to a brief peak as a B-movie leading man before he shifted back to character supporting roles by the early 1950s.[10] Earlier, in 1944, Clark had appeared in the Warner Bros. short I Won't Play alongside Janis Paige, portraying a Marine confronting a cowardly pianist during wartime; the film won the Academy Award for Best Short Subject (Two-Reel) at the 17th Academy Awards in 1945.[22]Television, radio, and international work
In the mid-1950s, amid post-war typecasting in Hollywood tough-guy roles, Dane Clark shifted focus to international opportunities, departing for European productions that offered fresh outlets for his rugged persona. He starred in the British noir thriller Blackout (1954, released as Murder by Proxy in the UK), directed by Terence Fisher for Hammer Films, portraying down-on-his-luck American Casey Morrow entangled in a deadly scheme.[23] That same year, Clark appeared in the American Western Thunder Pass, playing rancher Bart Ramsey who aids settlers through perilous territory.[24] He followed with another UK film, Paid to Kill (1954, also known as Five Days), as financier James Nevill, who hires a hitman in a desperate bid for insurance money before attempting to cancel the contract.[25] Clark's European phase continued into the late 1950s, culminating in the Western Outlaw's Son (1957), where he depicted reformed bandit Nate Blaine seeking redemption with his estranged family.[26] Clark also maintained a presence in radio during this period, frequently guesting on dramatic anthology series that showcased his everyman intensity. He appeared in multiple episodes of the CBS thriller Suspense across the 1940s and into the 1950s, including "The Singing Walls" (September 2, 1943) as a man haunted by eerie sounds tied to a murder, "Life Ends at Midnight" (February 17, 1944) as a condemned prisoner racing against time, and "This Will Kill You" (August 23, 1945) as a jealous factory worker plotting revenge.[27] These roles in high-tension scripts aligned with the show's reputation for psychological suspense, often casting Clark as ordinary individuals thrust into extraordinary peril.[28] Transitioning prominently to television in the 1950s, Clark secured leading roles that capitalized on the medium's demand for action-oriented characters. He headlined the ABC news drama Wire Service (1956–1957) as investigative reporter Dan Miller, navigating global conflicts and ethical dilemmas across 26 episodes.[29] In 1959, he starred in the syndicated adventure series Bold Venture as rugged detective Slate Shannon, reprising a Humphrey Bogart character from the radio original, alongside Joan Marshall in a 39-episode run of espionage and intrigue in exotic locales.[30] Later, Clark played Lt. Arthur Tragg, the shrewd police lieutenant, in the CBS revival The New Perry Mason (1973–1974), contributing to the show's modernized courtroom format over two seasons.[29] Throughout the 1950s to 1980s, Clark built a steady career in television guest spots, particularly on Western and crime anthologies that echoed his film roots. His TV debut came in 1957 on Zane Grey Theater, marking an entry into episodic drama with roles in frontier tales of justice and redemption. He later guested on iconic series like Gunsmoke and Bonanza, portraying tough frontiersmen in moral conflicts amid the Old West. In later decades, Clark appeared on Ironside (1970) as Ben Ames in "A Killing Will Occur," a tense cat-and-mouse episode involving a predicted murder, and on Police Woman (1976–1977) in episodes such as "Task Force: Cop Killer" as Sgt. Barnett and "Guns" as Grebbs, tackling urban crime and corruption.[31][32] His final screen role was a minor part as mafia figure Don Carlo in the thriller Last Rites (1988), closing a career that adapted seamlessly to broadcast and international shifts.[5]Personal life
Marriages and family
Dane Clark married artist Margot Yoder on April 24, 1941; she was a painter known for her works featuring clowns and other subjects.[33][34] The couple had no children, and their marriage lasted nearly three decades until Yoder's death on March 16, 1970, following a prolonged illness.[6][3] Following Yoder's passing, Clark married stockbroker Geraldine Frank in 1972, a union that endured until his death in 1998.[3] The couple resided together in Brentwood, California, where Clark displayed Yoder's paintings throughout their home as a tribute to his first wife.[13][6][11] Public records contain scant details on Clark's extended family or offspring, reflecting the private nature of his personal life away from the spotlight.[3]Later residences and interests
In his later years, Dane Clark resided in Brentwood, California, maintaining a longtime home there with his wife, Geraldine.[35] This Los Angeles neighborhood provided a stable base during his semiretirement, reflecting his preference for a quiet life away from the industry's spotlight.[11] Clark's interests were shaped by personal influences, particularly his first wife, Margot Yoder, a painter whose death in 1970 left a lasting impact; he and his family preserved and displayed her artwork throughout their home, underscoring his appreciation for artistic expression.[11] He cultivated a low-key lifestyle aligned with his self-described "Joe Average" persona, eschewing Hollywood's social scene in favor of a grounded, unpretentious routine.[15] Financial residuals from his extensive film and television career, supplemented by earlier international projects, afforded Clark a comfortable existence in semiretirement without the need for constant work.[36] His second marriage to Geraldine Frank in 1972 offered enduring companionship during these years.[3]Death and legacy
Final years and illness
Following his appearance in the 1988 crime film Last Rites, Dane Clark gradually retired from acting, limiting himself to sporadic guest roles on television during the late 1980s. Notable among these were episodes of Murder, She Wrote in 1984 and 1989, as well as Highway to Heaven in 1985.[37] In the late 1990s, Clark was diagnosed with lung cancer, a condition attributed to his lifelong heavy smoking habit, which he had quit only a few years earlier.[5] He underwent treatment at St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica, California, where he battled the disease in his final months. Clark died of lung cancer on September 11, 1998, at St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica, California, at the age of 86.[5] Throughout his illness, Clark received support from his second wife, Geraldine Frank, to whom he had been married since 1972.[3]Awards, honors, and cultural impact
Dane Clark received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in the television category on February 8, 1960, located at 6906 Hollywood Boulevard.[2] Clark contributed to the 1944 short film I Won't Play, in which he starred as Joe Fingers, a performer grappling with moral dilemmas during wartime; the film won the Academy Award for Best Short Subject (Two-Reel) at the 17th Academy Awards in 1945.[38] Throughout his career, Clark embodied the archetype of the "Joe Average" working-class hero, a persona he self-identified with, portraying relatable, tough-yet-approachable characters in World War II films like Destination Tokyo (1943) and post-war noir productions, which highlighted everyday Americans thrust into extraordinary circumstances.[2][11][15] Posthumously, Clark has been appreciated in film histories for bridging the eras of theater, Hollywood cinema, and early television, with his versatile performances underscoring the evolution of character acting across media; his WWII-era roles, in particular, continue to resonate in discussions of wartime propaganda and noir realism.[5][11]Filmography and credits
1940s
Dane Clark's early feature film career began with supporting roles in Warner Bros. productions during World War II, often portraying tough, working-class characters in war-themed films.[1]- 1942: Sunday Punch - Role: Phil Grogan (supporting); Director: Felix E. Feist; Notable co-stars: Linda Darnell, Edmund Lowe.
- 1942: The Pride of the Yankees - Role: uncredited; Director: Sam Wood; Notable co-stars: Gary Cooper, Teresa Wright.
- 1943: Action in the North Atlantic - Role: Johnny Pulaski (supporting); Director: Lloyd Bacon; Notable co-stars: Humphrey Bogart, Raymond Massey.[39]
- 1943: Destination Tokyo - Role: "Tin Can" Doyle (supporting); Director: Delmer Daves; Notable co-stars: Cary Grant, John Garfield.[40]
- 1944: The Very Thought of You - Role: Sgt. Chuck (supporting); Director: Delmer Daves; Notable co-stars: Dennis Morgan, Eleanor Parker.
- 1944: Hollywood Canteen - Role: Sgt. Nowland (supporting); Director: Delmer Daves; Notable co-stars: Bette Davis, John Garfield.[41]
- 1945: God Is My Co-Pilot - Role: Johnny Barstow (supporting); Director: Robert Florey; Notable co-stars: Dennis Morgan.
- 1945: Pride of the Marines - Role: Lee Diamond (lead); Director: Delmer Daves; Notable co-stars: John Garfield, Eleanor Parker.[42]
- 1946: A Stolen Life - Role: Karnock (supporting); Director: Curtis Bernhardt; Notable co-stars: Bette Davis, Glenn Ford.
- 1946: Her Kind of Man - Role: Steve Howard (lead); Director: Vincent Sherman; Notable co-stars: Zachary Scott, Faye Emerson.
- 1947: Deep Valley - Role: Barry Burnette (lead); Director: Jean Negulesco; Notable co-stars: Ida Lupino, Wayne Morris.
- 1947: That Way with Women - Role: David Brady (lead); Director: Frederick de Cordova; Notable co-stars: Joan Bennett, Sydney Greenstreet.
- 1947: Embraceable You - Role: Eddie Fulton (lead); Director: Felix E. Feist; Notable co-stars: Geraldine Brooks, S.Z. Sakall.
- 1948: Moonrise - Role: Danny Hawkins (lead); Director: Frank Borzage; Notable co-stars: Gail Russell, Allyn Joslyn.
- 1948: Whiplash - Role: Nick Palmer (lead); Director: Lewis Seiler; Notable co-stars: Alexis Smith, Zachary Scott.[43]
- 1948: The Woman and the Hunter - Role: uncredited (minor); Director: George P. Quinsa; Notable co-stars: Richard Denning, Fernand Gravey.
- 1949: The Groom Wore Spurs - Role: Alan Ford (supporting); Director: Raoul Walsh; Notable co-stars: Ginger Rogers, Jack Carson.
- 1949: Without Honor - Role: Paul Craig (lead); Director: Irving J. Pichel; Notable co-stars: Laraine Day, Dane Clark (self-lead).[44]
1950s
In the 1950s, Clark transitioned to independent productions and B-movies, taking on leading roles in noir and western genres while occasionally appearing in major studio films.[1]- 1950: Backfire - Role: Bob Waring (lead); Director: Vincent Sherman; Notable co-stars: Gordon MacRae, Virginia Mayo.
- 1950: Barricade - Role: Bob Peters (lead); Director: Peter Godfrey; Notable co-stars: Raymond Massey, Ruth Roman.
- 1950: Gunman in the Streets - Role: Eddy Roback (lead); Director: Frank Tuttle; Notable co-stars: Simone Signoret, Michel Bouquet.[45]
- 1950: Highly Dangerous - Role: Bill Casey (lead); Director: Roy Baker; Notable co-stars: Margaret Lockwood, Marius Goring.[46]
- 1951: Fort Defiance - Role: Johnny Tallon (lead); Director: John Rawlins; Notable co-stars: Ben Johnson, Peter Graves.[47]
- 1951: Never Trust a Gambler - Role: Jean Ballou (lead); Director: Ralph Murphy; Notable co-stars: Cathy O'Donnell, Wayne Morris.
- 1952: The Gambler and the Lady - Role: Jim Forster (lead); Director: Patrick Jenkins, Sam Newfield; Notable co-stars: Josephine Griffin, Anthony Forwood.
- 1952: The Man from the Alamo - Role: Dave Ripley (supporting); Director: Budd Boetticher; Notable co-stars: Glenn Ford, Victor Jory.
- 1953: Fort Vengeance - Role: John Butler (lead); Director: Lesley Selander; Notable co-stars: James Craig, Rita Moreno.
- 1954: Blackout (aka Murder by Proxy) - Role: Casey Morrow (lead); Director: Joseph Losey (as Joseph Hone); Notable co-stars: Alexis Smith, Anne Heywood.
- 1954: Go Man Go - Role: Abe Saperstein (lead); Director: James Wong Howe; Notable co-stars: Sidney Poitier, Ruby Dee.[48]
- 1955: The Outlaw's Daughter - Role: Paul Kraker (lead); Director: Albert C. Gannaway; Notable co-stars: Jim Davis, Lori Nelson.
- 1956: The Man Is Armed - Role: Babe McQuigg (lead); Director: Franklin Adreon; Notable co-stars: William Talman, Pamela Duncan.
- 1957: Massacre Canyon - Role: Lt. Richard Crane (supporting); Director: Joseph Kane; Notable co-stars: James Craig, Gregg Palmer.
1960s
Clark's 1960s output shifted toward international co-productions and supporting roles in action films.[1]- 1960: Murder, Inc. - Role: Joey Collins (supporting); Director: Burt Balaban, Stuart Rosenberg; Notable co-stars: Stuart Whitman, Mai Britt.
- 1961: Portrait of a Mobster - Role: Paul Regret (lead); Director: Michael Gordon; Notable co-stars: Vic Morrow, Leslie Nielsen.[49]
- 1962: Savage Guns (aka The Renegade) - Role: Steve Fallon (supporting); Director: Godfrey Grayson; Notable co-stars: Richard Basehart, Don Taylor.
- 1968: Arizona Bushwhackers - Role: Ben Thompson (supporting); Director: Lesley Selander; Notable co-stars: Howard Keel, Yvonne de Carlo.
- 1968: Madigan's Million - Role: Col. Harlan (supporting); Director: Stanley Prager; Notable co-stars: Dustin Hoffman, Cesar Romero.[50]
- 1968: The Daring Game - Role: Jim Taber (supporting); Director: Hugh R. Franklin; Notable co-stars: Lloyd Bridges, Joan Blackman.[51]
- 1968: Days in My Father's House (Dage i min fars hus) - Role: Eddie (supporting); Director: Henning Carlsen; Notable co-stars: Danish cast.[52]
1970s
During the 1970s, Clark appeared in fewer feature films, focusing more on television, but took on character roles in westerns and dramas.[1]- 1970: The McMasters - Role: Watson (supporting); Director: Alf Kjellin; Notable co-stars: Burl Ives, Brock Peters, David Carradine.
- 1975: The Black Bird - Role: John Mackey (supporting); Director: David Giler; Notable co-stars: Lee Marvin, Elaine Shore.
- 1979: Outlaw's Son - Role: Jeff Kendrick (supporting); Director: Peter Fonda; Notable co-stars: Earl Holliman, Donna Mills.[53]
1980s
Clark's final feature films were supporting roles in late-career projects, marking the end of his cinematic output.[1]- 1981: The Woman Inside - Role: Dr. Rossner (lead); Director: Joseph Van Winkle; Notable co-stars: Pamela Collins, Stella Kallis.[54]
- 1982: Blood Song - Role: Sheriff Gibbons (supporting); Director: Alan J. Levi; Notable co-stars: Frankie Avalon, William Smith.[55]
- 1988: Last Rites - Role: Don Carlo (supporting); Director: Donald P. Bellisario; Notable co-stars: Tom Berenger, Daphne Zuniga.
Television roles
Clark transitioned to television in the 1950s following his film career, appearing in series and anthology programs before taking on leading roles.[29] He starred as reporter Dan Miller in the ABC adventure drama Wire Service, which aired 39 episodes from October 1956 to April 1957.[56] In this series, Clark's character navigated international stories alongside colleagues played by George Brent and Mercedes McCambridge.[57] In 1959, Clark headlined the syndicated adventure series Bold Venture as Slate Shannon, a houseboat-dwelling operative in Trinidad solving crimes with his ward Sailor Duval; the show ran for 39 half-hour episodes.[58][30] Clark returned to a regular role in 1973 as Lieutenant Arthur Tragg, the persistent police investigator, in the CBS revival The New Perry Mason, appearing in all 15 episodes opposite Monte Markham's title character until the series ended in 1974.[59][60] Throughout the 1950s to 1980s, Clark made over 100 guest appearances on episodic television, often portraying tough, no-nonsense characters in crime, western, and drama genres.[61] His notable guest spots included:- The Twilight Zone (1961, episode "The Prime Mover") as Ace Larsen, a shady casino owner exploiting a telekinetic gambler.
- I Spy (1968, episode "The Spy Business") as Mike Woods, involved in a defection plot with international intrigue.[62]
- Ironside (1970, episode "A Killing Will Occur") as Ben Ames, a man entangled in a murder prediction scheme.[31]
- Ironside (1971, episode "But When She Was Bad") as a manipulative figure targeting the detective team.[63]
- Dan August (1971, episode "The Meal Ticket") as Sam, aiding in a homicide investigation.
- Mission: Impossible (1972, episode "The Hit") as a key player in a tense undercover operation.
- Police Woman (1977, episode "Guns") as Grebbs, leading a group in a firearms-related case.[64]
Radio appearances
Dane Clark made numerous guest appearances on Golden Age radio dramas during the 1940s and 1950s, often portraying tough, working-class characters that aligned with his film persona. While he did not lead any long-running radio series until later in the decade, his contributions were frequent during his peak film years, particularly in anthology programs emphasizing suspense and historical themes.[28] One of his most notable radio roles was as the lead in Crime and Peter Chambers, a 1954 NBC detective series adapted from Henry Kane's novels. Clark starred as the suave New York private eye Peter Chambers across 21 episodes, broadcast from April 6 to September 7, 1954, with Bill Zuckert as Lieutenant Louis Parker. Key episodes included "The Burke Murder Frame" (April 6, 1954), where Chambers investigates a framed killing; "Cemetery Attack" (April 20, 1954), involving a midnight payoff in a graveyard; and "Masquerade Party" (July 6, 1954). The series highlighted Clark's gravelly voice and no-nonsense delivery, drawing on his film noir experience.[66][67] Clark frequently appeared on Suspense, CBS's premier thriller anthology, delivering intense performances in psychological dramas. Notable episodes include "The Singing Walls" (September 2, 1943), where he played a man entangled in a murder mystery; "Life Ends at Midnight" (February 17, 1944), as Walter Bates facing execution; "A Guy Gets Lonely" (April 5, 1945), portraying a down-on-his-luck actor; and "This Will Kill You" (August 23, 1945), as Joe Jordan in a tale of betrayal and danger. These roles often featured him in supporting or lead parts amid wartime and postwar tensions.[9][27] On historical programs like Cavalcade of America, Clark contributed to patriotic and biographical sketches. He appeared in "The Case of Harold Thomas" (February 27, 1951), depicting a real-life labor dispute, and "Man of Action" (date approximate to early 1950s), focusing on an inventor's perseverance. These broadcasts underscored his versatility in dramatic narratives tied to American values.[9][68] Other significant appearances included "Home for the Fourth" on Columbia Presents Corwin (July 4, 1944), a wartime holiday special; "Love is New" on Theater of Romance (June 19, 1945), a romantic lead; "Doomsday" on The Fifth Horseman (1946), in an apocalyptic sci-fi scenario; and a guest spot on The Big Show (1951). Clark's radio work often overlapped briefly with film promotions, such as adaptations echoing his Warner Bros. roles, but remained focused on audio storytelling.[9][28]| Show | Episode Title | Date | Role |
|---|---|---|---|
| Crime and Peter Chambers | The Burke Murder Frame | April 6, 1954 | Peter Chambers |
| Suspense | The Singing Walls | September 2, 1943 | Lead (man in murder jam) |
| Cavalcade of America | The Case of Harold Thomas | February 27, 1951 | Supporting (labor figure) |
| Columbia Presents Corwin | Home for the Fourth | July 4, 1944 | Supporting |
| Suspense | This Will Kill You | August 23, 1945 | Joe Jordan |