Roy Barcroft
Roy Barcroft | |
---|---|
Born | Howard Harold Ravenscroft September 7, 1902 Crab Orchard, Johnson County Nebraska, U.S.[1] |
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Cause of death | Kidney cancer |
Resting place | Body donated to medical science |
Other names | Big Roy, Roy Bancroft, Howard Clifford Ravenscroft |
Occupation | Film, stage, television actor |
Years active | 1937–1969 |
Spouse(s) | Hortense Flanagan (1930) Vera Thompson (1932-1969) (his death) |
Roy Barcroft (September 7, 1902 – November 28, 1969) was an American character actor famous for playing villains in B-Westerns and other genres. Noted film critic Leonard Maltin acclaimed Barcroft as "Republic Pictures' number one bad guy".[2]
Contents
Background
Barcroft was born Howard Harold Ravenscroft[3] to a farming family in Johnson County in southeastern Nebraska in 1902. In 1917, at the age of fifteen, he joined the United States Army during World War I to fight in France, where he was wounded in action. After leaving the military, he drifted through several jobs (including ranch hand, roughneck, railroad worker and seaman) before reenlisting and being stationed in Hawaii.
Career
In 1929, he moved to California and worked as an extra and as a salesman. He was discovered while acting in an amateur theatre production (a hobby which he took up to improve his speaking voice as a salesman) and cast in the serial S.O.S. Coast Guard. He worked for many studios in the years that followed until 1943, when he signed an exclusive 10-year contract with Republic. Under this contract, he starred in almost 150 films and serials, becoming instantly recognized as the villain to the audiences of the day.
His career slowed with the decline of B-Westerns, but he found work in television and B-Movies during the 1950s and 1960s. Between 1955 and 1957, he became familiar to a new generation of youthful audiences, not as a villain but as "Col. Jim Logan", the kindly owner of the Triple-R Boys' Ranch in the hit television serials Spin and Marty, seen on Walt Disney's celebrated Mickey Mouse Club. A DVD version of the 1955 season, The Adventures of Spin & Marty, was released in 2005 as part of the Walt Disney Treasures series.
From 1954 to 1956, Barcroft appeared in different roles in eight episodes of the syndicated western series Annie Oakley, starring Gail Davis and Brad Johnson. He also played the bit role of the marshal in the 1955 film adaptation of Oklahoma!.[4]
On May 23, 1961, Barcroft played Doc Longley in the episode "Badge of the Outsider" on NBC's Laramie western series. Longley is an aging outlaw who wants to live his last years in peace in his hometown of Laramie, Wyoming. A gang member frames Longley for the murder of the deputy sheriff in Laramie. Longley claims most of the wanted posters seeking him are based on falsehood, and he asks series character Slim Sherman (John Smith) for help. Then he claims harm will come to Slim's partner, Jess Harper (Robert Fuller), if Slim refuses to comply. Longley surrenders to authorities, but a judge claims Longley must "prove his innocence" in the case. Longley's gang springs him from jail when the hearing goes against him, but the gang is interested in Longley's money, not Longley's own fate. Paul Fix also appears in this episode.[5]
Barcroft was cast in the 1967 episode "Halo for a Badman" of the syndicated western series, Death Valley Days, as the mayor of Las Animas, Colorado. He hires an ex-convict, Porter Stockman, played by series host Robert Taylor, to stand up to an outlaw gang which has robbed every gold shipment coming into town.[6]
The Internet Movie Data Base records 365 roles throughout his career, including the syndicated Sheriff of Cochise with John Bromfield, the CBS military sitcom/drama Hennesey, starring Jackie Cooper, and NBC's National Velvet, Riverboat, and Empire.
In marked contrast to his villainous movie persona, Barcroft off-screen "had a reputation as one of the nicest guys in Hollywood," said Leonard Maltin in 2005.[2] Barcroft died of kidney cancer at the Motion Picture Country Hospital in 1969. He was survived by his wife, Vera Thompson, and his three children. His remains were donated to medical science.
Selected filmography
- The Bandit Trail (1941)
- Sheriff of Sundown (1944)
- Call of the South Seas (1944)
- Girls of the Big House (1945)
- Along the Navajo Trail (1945)
- The Purple Monster Strikes (1945)
- Wyoming (1947)
- The Dakota Kid (1951)
- Down Laredo Way (1953)
- Man Without a Star (1955)
- Bandolero! (1968)
- Monte Walsh (1970)
References
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- ↑ Roy Barcroft Biography (1902-1969)
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Further reading
- Roy Barcroft, King of the Badmen by Bobby J. Copeland, Biography, ISBN 0-944019-32-3
External links
- Roy Barcroft at the Internet Movie Database
- Roy Barcroft at AllMovie
- Roy Barcroft at B-Westerns
- Roy Barcroft, Great Character Actor
- Roy Barcroft at Find a Grave
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- 20th-century American male actors
- American male film actors
- American military personnel of World War I
- American male stage actors
- American male television actors
- Male Western (genre) film actors
- Male film serial actors
- Deaths from kidney cancer
- Male actors from Nebraska
- People from Johnson County, Nebraska
- Male actors from Los Angeles, California
- Cancer deaths in California
- 1902 births
- 1969 deaths