William Redfield Movies
The son of a Manhattan orchestra conductor and a former Ziegfeld Follies girl, little
Billy Redfield made his Broadway bow at age 9 in Swing Your Lady. Billy launched his radio career around the same time, and made his earliest movie appearance in 1939. As adult actor
William Redfield, he was one of the original founders of the influential Actors Studio. While his film assignments of the 1950s and 1960s were unremarkable (as Captain Owens in 1966's
Fantastic Voyage, for example, he played third fiddle to the special effects and
Raquel Welch's diving suit), he remained a much-in-demand stage performer, and also proved a delightful raconteur on such TV chatfests as The Tonight Show. His reminiscences of the ups and downs of the acting profession were candid and perceptive without ever descending into maliciousness; many of his best anecdotes were self-deprecatory, notably his oft-repeated tale about being saddled in the 1956 film
The Proud and the Profane with some of the worst movie dialogue ever written. An ever-busy TV performer, Redfield played the title role in the 1953 DuMont Network series
Jimmy Hughes, Rookie Cop, and the following year was seen as Bobby Logan in The Marriage, the first live network series to be regularly broadcast in color. A talented writer, Redfield co-created the popular Wally Cox TV sitcom
Mister Peepers, penned the stage play A View with Alarm, and published the 1965 volume
Letters From an Actor, a candid memoir of his experiences while playing Guildenstern in the
John Gielgud-directed 1964 staging of Hamlet, which starred
Richard Burton. Not long after making his final film appearance as pensive mental patient Harding in the Oscar-winning
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, 49-year-old
William Redfield died of leukemia. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide