Craig Stevens Movies
Craig Stevens abandoned all plans for a career in dentistry when he became involved in student productions at the University of Kansas. Trained at Pasadena Playhouse and Paramount's acting school, Stevens was signed to a stock Warner Bros. contract in 1941. He was well showcased as a soft-hearted gangster in At the Stroke of Twelve, a 1941 two-reel adaptation of Damon Runyon's The Old Doll's House, but his feature film roles were merely adequate at best. By 1950, Stevens was reduced to playing a standard mustachioed villain in the Bowery Boys epic
Blues Busters. His saving turnaround came about when Stevens was cast in the title role of the 1958 Blake Edwards-produced TV private eye series
Peter Gunn. Though obviously imitating Cary Grant in the early episodes of this three-season hit, Stevens eventually developed a hard-edged acting style all his own. He later re-created his TV role in the 1967 theatrical feature
Gunn. Subsequent TV-series assignments for Stevens included the British-filmed weekly
Man of the World (1962) and CBS'
Mr. Broadway (1964). Craig Stevens was married to actress
Alexis Smith (with whom he toured in such stage productions as Critic's Choice) from 1944 until her death in 1993. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide