Pat Corley (June 1, 1930 – September 11, 2006) was an American character actor renowned for his portrayal of Phil, the affable bartender who dispensed wisdom alongside drinks on the CBS sitcom Murphy Brown from 1988 to 1996.[1][2] Born Cleo Pat Corley in Dallas, Texas, he built a multifaceted career in entertainment that included theater, dance, film, and television over five decades.[3]Corley's early life featured training as a dancer with the Stockton Symphony Ballet in California from ages 15 to 21, followed by a return to dance at age 24 after his military service.[4] He served in the U.S. Army during the Korean War, where he entertained troops and military leaders in France.[4] Transitioning to acting, he gained experience in summer stock productions and made his mark in New York theater, appearing in the Off-Broadway play The Peace Creeps alongside James Earl Jones and Al Pacino, as well as Broadway shows with Jones and Christopher Walken.[4][1]In film, Corley delivered memorable supporting roles in notable 1970s and 1980s movies such as Coming Home (1978), True Confessions (1981), and Against All Odds (1984), often playing authoritative or quirky figures.[1] His television work extended beyond Murphy Brown, where his character became a beloved fixture, to series like Hill Street Blues as coroner Wally Nydorf and Bay City Blues as a baseball team owner.[1] For his ensemble work on Murphy Brown, he earned a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination in 1995 for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series.[4] Corley was married to actress Iris Carter until her death in 2005; he was survived by two sons, Jerry and Kevin, two daughters, Troy and Christina, and 12 grandchildren, though predeceased by another daughter, Michelle.[1] He died in Los Angeles from congestive heart failure following coronary stent surgery.[1]
Early life
Family background
Pat Corley was born Cleo Pat Corley on June 1, 1930, in Dallas, Texas.[3][5] He was the son of R.L. Corley and Ada Lee Corley (née Martin).[3][5] Corley grew up in a Texas family that included at least one brother, whose friendship with actor Jack Warden later aided his entry into television, and one sister.[6][7]
Childhood and initial pursuits
Pat Corley, born Cleo Pat Corley on June 1, 1930, in Dallas, Texas, spent his early childhood there before his family relocated to Stockton, California, when he was a teenager.[8][9] This move marked a pivotal shift, exposing him to new opportunities in the performing arts amid the cultural landscape of mid-20th-century California.[4]In Stockton, Corley developed an early interest in dance, beginning with ballet lessons that honed his physical expressiveness and stage presence.[5] He soon joined the Stockton Ballet as a teenage performer, dancing professionally from age 15 to 21 across three or four seasons, which provided his initial immersion in the discipline of live performance.[4][10] This period laid the groundwork for his multifaceted artistic pursuits, blending movement with emerging vocal and dramatic skills.Corley's involvement extended to local summer stock productions in Stockton, where he actively participated in acting, singing, and dancing roles, gaining practical experience in ensemble theater and the demands of repertory work.[9] These formative engagements, often outdoors and community-driven, allowed him to explore the collaborative nature of stagecraft before pursuing more structured training, fostering a versatile foundation that would influence his later career.[1]
Education and early training
Following his high school years in Stockton, California, where his family had relocated during his teenage period, Pat Corley moved to New York City to pursue a career in acting.[9] There, he supported himself as a waiter while immersing himself in formal training, attending the American Theatre Wing and studying under renowned acting coach Uta Hagen.[11] These programs provided him with foundational techniques in character development, voice, and improvisation, equipping him for the demands of professional theater.[5]Corley's early exposure to ballet, beginning at age 15 as a dancer with the Stockton Ballet, significantly shaped his performance abilities before and after his relocation. He continued ballet training until age 21, then served in the U.S. Army during the Korean War, stationed in France where he entertained troops and military leaders.[4] He briefly resumed dance training at age 24, honing his physical discipline, grace, and expressive movement—skills that later enhanced his stage presence and versatility in dramatic roles. This background in dance complemented his acting studies, allowing him to integrate bodily awareness into his craft.[12]Prior to his formal education in New York, Corley's involvement in summer stock productions in Stockton served as an initial foray into live performance, blending acting, singing, and dancing in local theater.[9]
Career
Stage career
Pat Corley began his professional acting career in the 1950s after relocating to New York City, where he performed in off-Broadway productions and regional theater throughout the decade and into the 1960s.[9] One of his early notable off-Broadway roles was in the 1966 New Theater Workshop production of The Peace Creeps by John Wolfson, where he shared the stage with emerging talents Al Pacino and James Earl Jones.[13] His work during this period focused on building experience in ensemble casts, contributing to smaller venues that honed his skills in character-driven roles before transitioning to larger stages.Corley's Broadway debut occurred in 1964 with a supporting role in James Baldwin's Blues for Mr. Charley at the Longacre Theatre, marking his entry into major New York theater.[14] He continued with off-Broadway and regional appearances, including the 1972 production of Tennessee Williams' Small Craft Warnings at the Truck and Warehouse Theatre, where he portrayed a bar patron in the ensemble.[15] That same year, he returned to Broadway in The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild by Paul Zindel at the Ambassador Theatre, playing Louis Garibaldi.[16]In 1974, Corley joined the Broadway revival of John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men at the Music Box Theatre, taking on the role of Carlson while also understudying George Milton and Candy. The following year, he appeared in the pre-Broadway tryout of Tennessee Williams' Red Devil Battery Sign at the Shubert Theatre in Boston, cast as a man at the bar in the ensemble led by Anthony Quinn and Claire Bloom.[17] Later in 1975, Corley earned a Joseph Jefferson Award nomination for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for his portrayal of Boss Finley in a Chicago production of Williams' Sweet Bird of Youth at the Academy Festival Theatre.[18] He reprised the role on Broadway at the Martin Beck Theatre, where the revival ran from December 1975 to February 1976.These stage roles in the 1970s solidified Corley's reputation in theater, providing a foundation that paved the way for his subsequent work in television by the late decade.[1]
Television career
Corley's television career began in the late 1960s with a minor role in the short-lived police drama N.Y.P.D. and subsequent commercials. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, he built a steady presence through guest appearances on popular series, including roles as a bartender on The Waltons (1979), Mr. Miller on Kojak (1974), and various characters on Starsky and Hutch, Barnaby Jones, Get Christie Love!, and Roots: The Next Generations.[19] His first significant recurring television role came as Chief Coroner Wally Nydorf on the acclaimed NBC drama Hill Street Blues from 1981 to 1987, where he portrayed the overworked and often exasperated medical examiner in 36 episodes, contributing to the show's ensemble dynamic.[20] He also had a recurring role as team owner Ray Holtz on the short-lived NBC series Bay City Blues (1983).Corley's breakthrough arrived with the CBS sitcom Murphy Brown (1988–1996, 1998), where he played Phil, the wise and well-connected bartender at Phil's Bar, a central hangout for the newsroom staff. Appearing in 147 episodes, his character dispensed sage advice and wry humor, becoming a fan favorite and integral to the series' success over eight seasons, with a guest return in the tenth.[21] The ensemble cast, including Corley, received a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination in 1995 for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series.In the years following Murphy Brown, Corley continued to take on guest and supporting roles across genres, appearing on shows such as L.A. Law, Murder, She Wrote, Night Court, and Moonlighting in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Into the 2000s, he made guest spots on procedurals like JAG (2002), ER (2002), and The District (2003), maintaining his reputation as a versatile character actor until his final television work in 2004.[9]
Film career
Corley's entry into feature films came in the early 1970s with supporting roles in two crime-themed productions. In Gordon Parks' "The Super Cops" (1974), a biographical action film based on the exploits of New York City police officers, he portrayed Captain Bush, a no-nonsense superior officer overseeing the protagonists' unconventional methods.[22] That same year, he appeared in Ivan Passer's satirical comedy "Law and Disorder" (1974), playing the character Ken, a neighbor entangled in the film's exploration of vigilantism and urban decay amid a cast including Carroll O'Connor and Ernest Borgnine.Throughout the 1980s, Corley continued to take on character parts in a variety of genres, often embodying authoritative or gruff figures. A notable early example was his role as the Sheriff in Oliver Stone's psychological horror film "The Hand" (1981), where he investigated bizarre events surrounding a severed hand terrorizing its former owner, Michael Caine. He followed this with appearances in Ron Howard's ensemble comedy "Night Shift" (1982), as the hotel security chief Harry, contributing to the film's chaotic humor amid a group of night-shift workers turning to pimping. Later in the decade, Corley played Ed Phillips, a shady associate, in Taylor Hackford's neo-noir thriller "Against All Odds" (1984), a story of betrayal and romance starring Jeff Bridges and Rachel Ward.Corley's film work in the 1990s highlighted his versatility in supporting capacities within mainstream releases. In the fantasy comedy "Mr. Destiny" (1990), directed by James Orr, he depicted Harry Burrows, the beleaguered father of protagonist Larry Burrows (James Belushi), whose life is altered by a mysterious intervention allowing him to revisit a pivotal moment from his past. This period also saw him in hybrid projects blending film-style narratives with television production, such as the made-for-TV drama "The Killing of Randy Webster" (1981), where he supported the story of a family's fight for justice following their son's police shooting, though much of his career bridged episodic TV and standalone features.[23]
Personal life
Marriage and family
Corley was married twice. His first marriage was to Rose Louise Valentine from May 29, 1949, to September 20, 1954, ending in divorce.[11] He married actress Iris June Carter in 1957, a union that lasted nearly 48 years until her death on April 7, 2005.[3][24] The couple, who met while performing in theater, built their life together in Northridge, California, where they raised their large family amid Corley's demanding acting commitments in nearby Los Angeles.[2]He was the father of five children with Iris, with several following paths in entertainment; his son Jerry Corley became a comedian and actor.[11] Corley often emphasized the importance of family values in his professional advice to his children, teaching them to prioritize quality work over blind loyalty to employers while balancing career demands with home life in their suburban Northridge residence.[2]
Later years and death
Following the conclusion of his iconic role as Phil the bartender on Murphy Brown in 1998, Corley largely retired from major acting roles, making only sporadic appearances in smaller projects. His post-2000 credits included voicing Sheriff McGee in the animated film Tom Sawyer (2000), a guest voice role as Mr. Camacho on the Nickelodeon series Hey Arnold! (2002), and supporting parts in the independent films Purgatory Flats (2003) as Roy and Come Early Morning (2006) as Papa, marking his final on-screen performance shortly before his death.[25][26]Corley died on September 11, 2006, at the age of 76, from congestive heart failure following recent coronary stent surgery at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles.[1][20] His son, actor-comedian Jerry Corley, confirmed the cause of death and noted that Corley had been in declining health.[9]Details on Corley's funeral arrangements were not publicly disclosed, but his family issued brief statements expressing grief over the loss of the Dallas native, who was survived by sons Jerry and Kevin Corley, daughters Troy Corley and Christina Pratt, and 12 grandchildren.[1] He was predeceased by daughter Michelle Corley, who died in 1996.[11] Jerry Corley remembered his father as a dedicated performer whose gravelly voice and warm presence endeared him to audiences over five decades.[27]
Filmography
Film roles
Pat Corley's film career spanned several decades, with supporting roles in both feature films and made-for-television movies. Below is a chronological list of his credited roles in feature films, followed by notable TV movies treated as film-like productions.
Corley's television work encompassed a wide range of guest appearances, recurring roles in acclaimed series, and leading parts in TV movies and miniseries, often portraying gruff yet affable authority figures or everyday working men. His credits spanned from the early 1970s until the early 2000s, with a focus on dramatic and comedic ensemble casts.Early guest spots included a 1969 appearance in the police drama N.Y.P.D. and the role of Mr. Miller in the Kojak episode "Cross Your Heart and Hope to Die" (1974).[3] He later guest-starred as the Bartender in The Waltons episode "The Idol" (1980), Ben Meadows in Starsky and Hutch (1978), and an organizer in Lou Grant (1980).[19] Other notable episodic roles featured him as Colonel/sheriff in Darkroom (1981), Monty in Hart to Hart (1981), Sheriff Baker in The Fall Guy (1983), Frankie Tate/Farley Wrye in Moonlighting (1985), Frank Kelso in Murder, She Wrote (1986), Dennis MacKenzie in Magnum, P.I. (1986), Uncle Willard Sabrett in L.A. Law (1987), Otis Edwards in Night Court (1988), Marvin Siegalstein in Murder One (1995), and Jeb in Coach (1997).[3]In recurring and series roles, Corley played Chief Coroner Wally Nydorf on Hill Street Blues from 1982 to 1986, appearing in multiple episodes as the sardonic medical examiner.[3] He starred as Ray Holtz in the short-lived Bay City Blues (1983–1984) and as Chief Walter Padget in He's the Mayor (1986).[3] His most iconic television role was as Phil, the wise-cracking bartender and confidant to the FYI news team, on Murphy Brown from 1988 to 1996, spanning 184 episodes, with a return appearance in the 1998 episode "Never Can Say Goodbye: Part 1."[21] He also had guest roles in later series such as NYPD Blue (1995).[19]Corley's television series credits also included one-episode or pilot appearances in shows like Nasty Boys (1989, as Wayne Trilling), J.J. Starbuck (1988), Simon & Simon (multiple episodes across 1984–1987), and The Equalizer (1980s).[36] Specials featured him in Stand-Up Comics Take a Stand! (1991), Carol Leifer: Gaudy, Bawdy & Blue (1992), and The 61st Annual Hollywood Christmas Parade (1992).[3]Beyond series, Corley starred in over 30 TV movies, often in supporting roles that highlighted his gravelly voice and sturdy presence. Notable examples include The Executioner's Song (1982, as Val Conlan), based on Norman Mailer's novel about Gary Gilmore; Starflight: The Plane That Couldn't Land (1983, as Joe Pedowski), a disaster thriller; Scorned and Swindled (1984, as Ty Jenkins), a true-crime drama; Poker Alice (1987, as Paul McCarthy), a Western; and Saved by the Bell: Wedding in Las Vegas (1994, as Sheriff Myron Thorpe).[3] He also appeared in miniseries such as Robert Kennedy and His Times (1985, as Andy McLaughlin), Fresno (1986, as Earl Duke), and A Year in the Life (1986, as George Bilzerian).[3]