John Kerr Movies
Sensitive stage and film leading man
John Kerr was able to pass as a teenager well into his 20s. Kerr made his Broadway debut in the high-school comedy
Bernardine (1953). Two years later, he scored a huge success in the role of emotionally overwrought, sexually ambivalent college freshman Tom Robinson Lee in
Robert Anderson's play
Tea and Sympathy; he brilliantly repeated this role in the watered-down 1956 film version. Kerr's only other film roles of note were the doomed Lieutenant Cable in
South Pacific (1958) and the imperiled victim of torture-prone
Vincent Price in
The Pit and the Pendulum (1961). After portraying district attorneys in two separate TV series, Arrest and Trial (1963) and
Peyton Place (1966), Kerr evidently decided he enjoyed the world of jurisprudence and became a full-time lawyer.
John Kerr remained available for the occasional cameo role into the 1980s, most recently in the 1985 TV movie
This Park is Mine (1935). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide