Roland Winters (born Roland Winternitz; November 22, 1904 – October 22, 1989) was an American actor recognized primarily for his portrayal of the fictional Chinese detective Charlie Chan in six low-budget films produced by Monogram Pictures between 1947 and 1948.[1][2] Born in Boston, Massachusetts, Winters began his career in radio, announcing Boston Braves and Red Sox baseball games on WNAC starting in 1931, a role he held until transitioning to film in 1947.[3] His Charlie Chan series, which included titles such as The Chinese Ring (1947) and Charlie Chan and the Sky Dragon (1948), marked the final entries in the Hollywood Charlie Chan film franchise, succeeding actors like Sidney Toler and Warner Oland.[4] Beyond this signature role, Winters appeared in over 50 films and numerous television programs, often in supporting character parts, including uncredited appearances in Blue Hawaii (1961) alongside Elvis Presley and guest spots in series like Bewitched.[5] He also contributed as a writer to some productions but garnered no major awards or widespread acclaim outside his brief tenure as Chan.[1]
Early Life
Birth and Family Background
Roland Winters was born Roland Winternitz on November 22, 1904, in Boston, Massachusetts.[5][3][2]He was the son of Felix Winternitz (1872–1948), an Austrian immigrant violinist and composer who arrived in the United States in 1889, performed as a soloist with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and later worked as a teacher and composer of concert works.[6][7][8] Felix Winternitz's obituary explicitly identified him as the father of Roland Winters, then known for his radio announcing and emerging film roles.[6]The Winternitz family maintained connections to Boston's musical establishment, reflecting an environment of professional artistry rather than widespread public fame.[4] Some biographical accounts describe the household as one of relative wealth and cultural position, though primary records emphasize the father's orchestral and pedagogical contributions over broader familial details.[9]
Initial Education and Upbringing
Roland Winters was born Roland Winternitz on November 22, 1904, in Boston, Massachusetts, to parents immersed in the performing arts.[3] His father, Felix Winternitz, was an Austrian-born violinist and composer who emigrated to the United States in 1889, achieved success through international tours, and later taught at the New England Conservatory of Music.[4][10] His mother, Antoinette Iverson, was an opera singer, and the family enjoyed relative wealth and social standing in Boston's cultural circles.[9]Raised in this artistic environment, Winters displayed early restlessness, forgoing extended formal education in favor of practical experiences. In his mid-teens, around 1918–1920, he worked aboard a cargo ship sailing between Boston and Europe, an adventure that reflected his independent streak amid a privileged upbringing.[3] This period preceded his entry into acting, influenced by his family's musical and performative heritage, though no records detail specific schooling beyond standard Boston-area instruction.[11] By age 20 in 1924, he had transitioned to professional theater, suggesting limited emphasis on academic pursuits in his formative years.[12]
Entry into Entertainment
Broadway Beginnings
Roland Winters entered the Broadway stage in 1924, at age 19, with a minor role in Edwin Justus Mayer's comedy The Firebrand, which dramatized the life of Renaissance artist Benvenuto Cellini.[13] He played dual parts as a Gentleman of the Court and a Soldier, marking his professional debut in New York theater amid a production backed by a friend of his older brother, who facilitated the opportunity.[3] The play, starring Joseph Schildkraut in the lead, opened at the Morosco Theatre on October 15, 1924, and enjoyed a successful run of 200 performances, providing Winters an early exposure to high-profile stage work during the vibrant post-World War I theater scene.[4]This initial foray represented a modest start rather than an extensive early tenure, as Winters' Broadway appearances remained sparse in the ensuing years, with his energies soon diverting to regional stock companies in New England and emerging radio broadcasting.[14] The limited scope of his 1920s stage credits underscores a transitional phase, where familial connections opened doors but sustained leading roles eluded him amid competition from established performers.[4] Nonetheless, the experience in The Firebrand honed his acting fundamentals, laying groundwork for later returns to Broadway in the mid-20th century, including roles in productions like Calculated Risk (1962) and Minnie's Boys (1970).[15]
Radio Career
Winters entered radio broadcasting in 1931 as a sports announcer for Boston Braves and Red Sox baseball games on station WNAC in Boston, Massachusetts.[3] He had previously worked on New England's Colonial Network via WAAB before transitioning to larger outlets, including WJZ.[14] This role marked his primary involvement in radio, where he provided play-by-play commentary during the network era of sports broadcasting, contributing to local coverage of Major League Baseball teams until around 1947.[10]Beyond sports announcing, Winters served as the announcer for The Goodwill Hour, a call-in advice program hosted by John J. Anthony, which aired nationally and focused on listener-submitted personal dilemmas.[5] He also made guest appearances on dramatic anthology series, including episodes of Cavalcade of America such as "Junior Angel" on February 28, 1944, and "The First Commando" in April 1944, portraying characters in historical and wartime narratives produced by the DuPont company for CBS.[16]In the 1970s, after his film career had waned, Winters lent his voice to promotional radio advertisements for Manhattan's House of Chan restaurant, where he discussed Chinese cuisine in character-inspired spots drawing on his prior portrayal of Charlie Chan.[1] These later endeavors represented a return to audio work rather than scripted drama, leveraging his established voice for commercial purposes amid reduced acting opportunities.[3]
Charlie Chan Films
Casting and Production Context
Following the death of Sidney Toler from intestinal cancer on February 12, 1947, Monogram Pictures selected character actor Roland Winters to continue portraying Charlie Chan in the film series.[17] Winters, aged 44 at the time and known primarily for Broadway roles and radio performances rather than extensive screen credits, debuted in the role with The Chinese Ring, released on December 6, 1947, and directed by William Beaudine.[18] The studio's choice reflected a pattern of recasting the lead with established but not star-level performers to sustain the low-cost franchise without significant disruption, as Toler had similarly replaced Warner Oland a decade earlier.Monogram Pictures, a Poverty Row studio specializing in B-movies, produced Winters' six Charlie Chan entries between 1947 and 1949 under producer James S. Burkett, maintaining the series' formula of concise mystery plots resolved through deduction and aphorisms. Budgets for these films averaged around $75,000 each—less than half the $200,000 typical of 20th Century Fox's earlier Chan productions—enabling rapid production timelines, often 10-15 days of shooting with reused sets and stock footage to minimize costs.[19] Supporting casts frequently included Mantan Moreland as taxi driver Birmingham Brown, providing comic relief through his interplay with Chan, while Keye Luke reprised Number One Son Jimmy Chan in select entries like The Chinese Ring and Docks of New Orleans.The Winters era marked the franchise's decline amid shifting audience tastes and postwar sensitivities toward ethnic portrayals, though Monogram prioritized profitability over innovation, concluding the series with Charlie Chan and the Sky Dragon in January 1949 after grossing modestly at the box office. These films deviated little from Monogram's output of quick-turnaround programmers, emphasizing economical storytelling over elaborate effects or location shooting.
Key Films and Performances
Winters assumed the role of Charlie Chan in The Chinese Ring (1947), directed by William Beaudine for Monogram Pictures, marking his debut in the series following Sidney Toler's death. In the film, Chan probes the stabbing death of a mysterious Chinese woman who arrives at his home holding a priceless jade ring, aided by his eager son Jimmy (Victor Sen Yung) and the comic relief of taxi driver Birmingham Brown (Mantan Moreland). Winters portrayed a leaner, more angular Chan with deliberate speech patterns and proverbial wisdom, diverging from the rotund, effusive depictions by predecessors.[18]The subsequent five films, all released in 1948 except the final one in 1949, maintained low-budget production values typical of Monogram's output, emphasizing quick resolutions to murders amid slapstick elements from Moreland's Birmingham and occasional appearances by Keye Luke as Lee Chan. Docks of New Orleans (1948, dir. Wallace Fox) centered on a waterfront killing tied to stolen radium shipments, while The Shanghai Chest (1948, dir. Beaudine) incorporated a haunted house motif with ghostly apparitions complicating a family murder. The Golden Eye (1948, dir. Beaudine) involved a gem theft and assassination attempt in a casino setting, The Feathered Serpent (1948, dir. Beaudine) featured Aztec artifacts and a poisoned victim, and Sky Dragon (1949, dir. Lesley Selander) unfolded aboard an airplane with a mid-flight homicide.[20][21]Critics and viewers have noted Winters' performance as comparatively lethargic and detached, with a monotone delivery of Chan's aphorisms that lacked the charismatic warmth of earlier iterations, potentially reflecting efforts to inject youthful humor via supporting antics rather than Chan's centrality. This approach aligned with the series' decline in production quality and audience appeal by the late 1940s, though Winters delivered consistent, professional turns in the role across the six entries.[3][14]
Acting Approach
Roland Winters interpreted Charlie Chan as a more subdued and deliberate figure, employing a lethargic demeanor that emphasized quiet observation over overt dynamism. This style, marked by slower pacing and minimal physical exertion, diverged from the sharper, more animated portrayals by Warner Oland and Sidney Toler, and has been attributed by analysts to the constraints of Monogram Pictures' low-budget productions, which prioritized efficiency over elaborate character flourishes.[3]In dialogue delivery, Winters adhered to the series' established convention of stilted, aphoristic speech patterns, drawing on proverbial expressions and pseudo-Confucian wisdom to convey the detective's philosophical insight. Such phrasing, including lines laden with metaphors like "hasty man drinks tea with fork," preserved the character's intellectual archetype while adapting it to Winters' more naturalistic vocal timbre, which lacked the heavy accents of prior actors.[22]Visually, Winters minimized traditional "yellowface" makeup, presenting a leaner, less caricatured Chan that aligned with his own Caucasian features and youthful age of 43 at the start of filming in 1947; to compensate, production added gray streaks to his dyed black hair, simulating the venerable appearance of Toler's iteration.[3] This restrained approach extended to interactions with supporting characters like Birmingham Brown (Mantan Moreland) and Lee Chan (Keye Luke), where Chan's authority emerged through understated commands rather than theatrical gestures.[3]
Reception and Controversies
Contemporary Popularity
In the 21st century, Roland Winters' portrayal of Charlie Chan in the six Monogram Pictures films from 1947 to 1948 has garnered limited mainstream appeal, primarily attracting niche audiences interested in classic B-mystery genres or historical film preservation. These entries, such as The Feathered Serpent (1948) and The Sky Dragon (1949), are frequently critiqued for Winters' subdued delivery and perceived lack of charisma compared to predecessors Warner Oland and Sidney Toler, with enthusiasts noting his "lethargic" style as a departure from the character's traditionally affable demeanor.[14][3] Despite this, dedicated fan communities, including online forums and groups, continue to discuss and rank Winters' films, often viewing them as campy artifacts of post-war Hollywood rather than high artistry.[23]The series' availability in the public domain has facilitated free streaming on platforms like YouTube and archival sites, sustaining a modest cult following among mystery buffs and nostalgia seekers, though Winters' installments receive fewer views and endorsements than earlier Fox productions.[24] Mainstream streaming services occasionally feature select Charlie Chan titles, but Winters' era is underrepresented, with platforms prioritizing Oland or Toler vehicles for their perceived cultural cachet.[25] This digital accessibility has not translated to broad revival; instead, contemporary reception emphasizes the films' anachronistic elements, including yellowface casting and pidgin English dialogue, which have eroded popularity amid heightened sensitivity to racial portrayals.[26]Efforts to reappraise the franchise, such as fan drafts of top films or hypothetical remakes, typically sideline Winters' contributions, underscoring his marginal status even within retro appreciation circles.[27] While some defenders argue the Chan archetype offered a "positive" counter to villainous Orientalist tropes like Fu Manchu, this perspective has not spurred renewed interest in Winters specifically, as broader critiques of the series' ethnic caricatures dominate modern discourse.[28] Overall, Winters' Chan remains a footnote in film history, with popularity confined to specialized viewership rather than cultural resurgence.[29]
Criticisms of Portrayal and Series
Criticisms of Roland Winters' portrayal of Charlie Chan centered on its perceived lack of vitality and originality, with observers noting a lethargic demeanor and minimal deviation from established tropes despite the actor's awareness of prior interpretations.[3] Winters himself acknowledged not introducing new nuances, aiming instead to meet audience expectations, which resulted in a characterization lacking the energy or distinctive detecting prowess seen in earlier entries.[23] Film reviewers from the era and later assessments described the performance as devoid of personality, charm, or effective mystery-solving, contributing to a sense of stagnation in the role.[14]The Monogram Pictures series featuring Winters, produced between 1947 and 1949, faced reproach for its diminished production values and formulaic storytelling following Sidney Toler's death in 1947, marking a shift to B-movie status with rushed scripts and uninspired plots across the six films.[30] Contemporary reviews often rated these entries poorly, such as assigning The Chinese Ring (1947) a score of 4 out of 10, highlighting haphazard casting and a further decline from Fox and prior Monogram efforts.[14] Critics argued the series perpetuated a repetitive structure without advancing the character's intellectual depth, emphasizing gadgets and sidekicks over Chan's deductive skills.[22]Broader condemnations of the Winters-era films invoked yellowface practices, as the white American actor embodied an Asian detective in an industry standard of the time but one increasingly scrutinized for cultural misrepresentation.[31] This approach, consistent with predecessors like Warner Oland and Toler, drew later ire for forgoing Asian leads despite opportunities, such as early silent film trials with Japanese actors, thereby reinforcing non-authentic depictions amid evolving views on racial casting.[30] Detractors, particularly from post-1960s perspectives, highlighted stereotypical elements like Chan's halting speech and deferential mannerisms as condescending, even if intended to portray a clever figure countering era-specific biases against Chinese immigrants.[32] Such portrayals were seen as embedding subservience unnecessary to the narrative, complicating the character's legacy as a positive archetype in historical context.[29]
Defenses and Alternative Viewpoints
Some critics and historians contend that the Charlie Chan films, including those featuring Roland Winters, provided one of the few positive representations of an Asian protagonist in mid-20th-century American cinema, depicting Chan as a wise, resourceful detective who outsmarted adversaries through intellect and moral fortitude rather than physical prowess, thereby challenging the era's dominant portrayals of Asians as threats or inferiors.[28][30] This viewpoint emphasizes creator Earl Derr Biggers' intent to craft a heroic figure inspired by real-life Hawaiian-Chinese detective Chang Apana, positioning the series as a counter to villains like Fu Manchu and offering audiences a model of cultural assimilation through family values and detective success.[28]Regarding Winters' specific tenure from 1944 to 1947, defenders highlight the production constraints of the Monogram Pictures era, a low-budget "Poverty Row" studio that inherited a fatigued franchise after Sidney Toler's death, arguing that his measured, less energetic delivery reflected the series' decline rather than personal shortcomings and still maintained Chan's authoritative presence in six films solving espionage and murder plots.[3] Enthusiasts among film preservationists praise individual Winters entries, such as The Shanghai Cobra (1945), for effective suspense, tight scripting, and Chan's portrayal as an unequivocal force for justice, suggesting the movies retained entertainment value and formulaic competence despite budgetary limitations.[33][34]Alternative analyses, such as those in Yunte Huang's 2010 book Charlie Chan: The Untold Number One Son Story, propose that the character's stylized traits—like aphoristic wisdom and accented speech—functioned as artistic devices underscoring cultural strengths in problem-solving, not mere mockery, and that dismissing the series overlooks its role in fostering early sympathy for Asian-American agency amid widespread immigration restrictions like the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882.[35][36] These perspectives frame the portrayals as products of their time, blending racial conventions with aspirational elements that influenced global perceptions of Asian competence, even as they acknowledge yellowface casting as a Hollywood norm reflective of broader industry exclusion of non-white actors until the post-World War II period.[30]
Later Career
Post-Chan Film Roles
After concluding his tenure as Charlie Chan with Sky Dragon in June 1949, Winters shifted to supporting parts in crime dramas and adventure films. His immediate post-Chan role came in December 1949's A Dangerous Profession, where he portrayed Jerry McKay, an insurance company executive entangled in a web of murder and extortion alongside detective George Raft. The film, directed by Ted Tetzlaff, emphasized Winters' ability to play authoritative figures in tense, noir-inflected narratives.In 1950, Winters appeared as Jeffrey White, a hotel manager, in the B-movie Killer Shark, a Florida-set thriller involving scientific experiments and predatory sea creatures, co-starring Roddy McDowall as a troubled youth. Produced by Monogram Pictures—his former Chan studio—the low-budget production highlighted man-versus-nature perils but received limited critical attention.Throughout the 1950s, Winters sustained a steady but modest film presence in secondary roles, including uncredited work in epics like Cecil B. DeMille's The Ten Commandments (1956) and supporting parts in dramas such as Bigger Than Life (1956), where he contributed to the ensemble exploring suburban psychosis. He also featured in The Underworld Story (1950) as a newspaper editor amid a corruption scandal and Inside Straight (1951), a gambling-themed Western.[5]The 1960s brought Winters into mainstream musicals and literary adaptations, notably as Fred Gates, a family associate, in Elvis Presley's Blue Hawaii (1961), a lighthearted romantic comedy that grossed over $5 million domestically.[37] Later credits included the James Franciscus-led Youngblood Hawke (1964), adapting Mark Harris's novel on a writer's rise, and the space disaster filmMarooned (1969), featuring Gregory Peck, where he played a minor NASA official. These roles underscored Winters' versatility as a reliable character actor, though none recaptured the lead visibility of his Chan era.[5]
Television Work
Winters made recurring appearances as J.R. Boone Sr., the employer of the titular character, in the CBS sitcom Meet Millie, which aired from 1953 to 1955.[38] His role contributed to the show's depiction of office dynamics in a New York advertising firm.[39]In the ABC fantasy sitcomMy Brother the Angel (1965–1966), Winters portrayed Leonard J. Costello, the advertising agency boss overseeing the human characters played by Dick and Tom Smothers, whose plot involved supernatural interventions by an apprentice angel.[40] The series, which ran for one season of 32 episodes, marked one of his more prominent television supporting roles during the mid-1960s.[41]He guest-starred in dramatic anthology and procedural series, including the role of murderer Archer Bryant in the Perry Mason episode "The Case of the Telltale Tap," broadcast on February 13, 1965.[42] Additional guest appearances encompassed the Hazel episode "Scheherazade and Her Frying Pan" (1964) and the Red Skelton Show installment "Freddie and the Happy Helpers" (May 7, 1957).[43][44]Winters also featured in television adaptations of plays and films, such as Piet Wetjoen (the General) in the Hallmark Hall of Fame production of The Iceman Cometh (November 20, 1960), and Mr. Gimbel in the ABC remake of Miracle on 34th Street (December 20, 1973).[45][46] He appeared in variety formats, including an episode of The Carol Burnett Show featuring Mickey Rooney and Nancy Wilson (1968).[47] His television work extended into the early 1980s, with credits in series like The Dain Curse (1978) as Hubert Collinson.[48]
Personal Life
Marriages
Winters was first married to actress Ada Carver Howe in 1930; the union lasted until Howe's death on an unspecified date in 1959 and produced no children.[9][1] He remarried stage actress Helen Lewis on June 22, 1960, with no further details on the duration or offspring available from records.[1][49] No other marriages are documented in reliable biographical accounts.
Daily Life and Interests
Winters, born into a family immersed in the performing arts, grew up in an affluent household where his mother, Antoinette Iverson, pursued a career as an opera singer and his father, Felix Winternitz, performed as a concert violinist.[9] This environment likely fostered an early appreciation for music and theater, aligning with his subsequent entry into stage acting in Boston during his youth. As a teenager, he gained practical experience by working aboard a cargo ship traveling to Central America and the West Indies, an endeavor that exposed him to international locales beyond his Boston roots.[3]In his pre-Hollywood years, Winters demonstrated versatility beyond the stage by serving as a radio announcer for Boston's Braves and Red Sox baseball games on station WNAC from 1931 to 1947, reflecting a sustained interest in sports commentary and live broadcasting.[3] He and his wife had no children, maintaining a relatively private family life.[9]Following his retirement from acting in 1982, Winters directed his energies toward philanthropy and community service, participating in efforts with the American Red Cross and Habitat for Humanity.[9] His membership in Temple Israel of Hollywood underscored ongoing religious engagement, contributing to a post-career routine centered on charitable and spiritual pursuits rather than public performance.[9]
Death and Legacy
Circumstances of Death
Roland Winters died on October 22, 1989, at the age of 84, from complications of a stroke while residing at the Actors' Fund of America Nursing Home in Englewood, New Jersey.[50][51][9] He had retired from acting in 1982 and spent his final years engaging in charitable work and religious activities prior to the onset of health issues leading to his death.[9] No further details on preceding medical conditions or the exact timeline of the stroke were publicly reported in contemporary accounts.[50][51]
Career Retrospective and Cultural Impact
Roland Winters' career, spanning nearly six decades from his Broadway debut in 1924 to his final television role in 1982, exemplified the life of a prolific character actor who navigated the transition from stage to screen amid Hollywood's evolving landscape. After early stage work, including a minor role in The Firebrand (1924), Winters entered films in the mid-1940s, achieving prominence through his casting as Charlie Chan in six low-budget Monogram Pictures productions from 1947 to 1948: The Chinese Ring (1947), Docks of New Orleans (1948), The Golden Eye (1948), The Shanghai Cobra (1948), The Shanghai Chest (1948), and The Feathered Serpent (1948). At age 44 during his first Chan film, Winters portrayed a younger, more physically active iteration of the detective compared to predecessors Warner Oland and Sidney Toler, emphasizing brisk pacing in these final "Golden Era" entries.[14][52]Post-Chan, Winters sustained a steady output as a supporting player in over 50 films and television episodes, demonstrating versatility across genres including film noir (A Dangerous Profession, 1949), adventure (Killer Shark, 1950), and musicals (Blue Hawaii, 1961, opposite Elvis Presley). His television work included recurring roles like the boss in Meet Millie (1950s) and guest appearances on series such as Perry Mason, Bewitched (1965 episode "Anywhere I Hang My Hat Is Home"), and The Cara Williams Show, often cast as authoritative figures like judges or executives. This phase underscored his reliability in bit parts, contributing to the archetype of the urbane, middle-aged everyman in mid-century American media, though rarely leading roles eluded him after the Chan series concluded amid declining box-office returns for the franchise.[4]Culturally, Winters' tenure as Charlie Chan encapsulated the character's dual legacy as a pioneering positive Asian sleuth—modeled after real Honolulu detective Chang Apana and created by Earl Derr Biggers in 1925—while embodying era-specific representational shortcomings through yellowface casting. The films popularized Chan's aphoristic wisdom and deductive style, influencing mystery fiction and embedding phrases like "number one son" in vernacular culture during their peak popularity from the 1930s to 1940s. However, retrospective critiques, often from academic sources viewing pre-1960s media through modern racial lenses, decry the white actor's portrayal as reinforcing stereotypes of obsequiousness and inauthenticity, contributing to the series' withdrawal from syndication by the 1970s amid advocacy against perceived ethnic caricatures.[53][14] Such evaluations privilege contemporary sensitivities over historical context, where Chan films grossed millions and offered a cerebral Asian hero contrasting typical villainous depictions, though empirical data on audience reception remains anecdotal and era-bound. Winters' contribution thus persists in niche appreciation among film historians for preserving the franchise's formulaic charm, even as broader cultural reevaluations prioritize authenticity in representation.[54][55]
Filmography
Feature Films
Winters portrayed the detective Charlie Chan in six low-budget Monogram Pictures mystery films produced between 1947 and 1949, succeeding Sidney Toler in the role following Toler's death in 1947; these were the final entries in the theatrical Charlie Chan series.[20] His depiction emphasized Chan's traditional aphorisms and deductive methods, though critics noted the series' declining production values and repetitive plotting by this stage.[3] Beyond the Chan films, Winters took on supporting roles in several Hollywood features, often as authority figures in comedies and adventures, including appearances in Elvis Presley vehicles during the early 1960s.[56]The following table lists Winters' credited appearances in feature films, arranged chronologically:
These later roles were typically brief, capitalizing on Winters' established screen presence as a composed, middle-aged professional.[5] No major leading roles followed the Chan series, reflecting a shift toward television and stage work.[56]
Television Appearances
Winters appeared regularly on television from the early 1950s onward, following his film roles as Charlie Chan, often portraying authoritative figures such as bosses, judges, and executives. His most prominent television work was a recurring role as J.R. Boone Sr., the employer of the titular character, in the CBS sitcom Meet Millie, spanning 27 episodes from 1952 to 1955.[59]In addition to sitcoms, Winters made guest appearances in dramatic and mystery series. He portrayed Archer Bryant in the Perry Mason episode "The Case of the Telltale Tap," which aired on March 11, 1965.[42] He played Howard McMann, the reclusive chairman of the McMann & Tate advertising agency, in the Bewitched episode "Man of the Year," broadcast on May 2, 1968.[60] Other guest roles included Mr. Gerber in the Green Acres episode "Where There's a Will" (February 12, 1969) and appearances in The Alfred Hitchcock Hour and The Lucy Show during the early 1960s.[61]Winters also featured in television adaptations and movies, such as The General (Piet Wetjoen) in the 1960 Playhouse 90 production of The Iceman Cometh.[45] Later credits encompassed Watkins in the 1969 TV movie Doc and Hubert Collinson in the 1978 miniseries The Dain Curse.[62]