Guy Williams (actor)

Actor

Birthday January 14, 1924

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace New York, New York, United States

DEATH DATE 1989-4-30, Buenos Aires, Argentina (65 years old)

Nationality United States

#17357 Most Popular

1919

About this time, the Walt Disney Company was casting for Zorro, a television series based on the character created in 1919 by Johnston McCulley: the young nobleman Don Diego de la Vega and his masked alter ego Zorro.

To play the main character, the chosen actor would have to be handsome and have some experience with fencing.

Walt Disney interviewed Guy Williams, telling him to start growing a mustache "neither very long or thick."

The exclusive contract paid Williams the then very high wage of $2,500 per week, equal to $ today.

Williams resumed his professional training in fencing with the Belgian champion Fred Cavens (who also trained Douglas Fairbanks, Errol Flynn and Tyrone Power), since the show required sword fights in most episodes.

He also took guitar lessons with the famous Vicente Gomez.

Williams's first appearance as Zorro was on the Disney anthology television series The Fourth Anniversary Show, wherein he challenged the notion that Zorro was a fictional character.

1924

Armando Joseph Catalano (January 14, 1924 – April 30, 1989 ), better known as Guy Williams, was an American actor.

Guy Williams was born of Sicilian parentage on January 14, 1924, as Armando Joseph Catalano in the Washington Heights area of New York City.

His parents, insurance broker Attilio Catalano and Clara (Arcara) Catalano, were from Lercara Friddi, and were by then living in poverty.

Attilio was the son of a wealthy timber grower in Messina, who purchased land in New Jersey.

Williams grew up in the Little Italy neighborhood of The Bronx.

In Public School 189, Williams stood out in mathematics.

Later, he attended George Washington High School, while he occasionally worked at a soda fountain.

He then left to attend the Peekskill Military Academy, where he was an enthusiastic student.

His interests included American football and chess.

Williams wanted to be an actor, spurred by his good looks and 6'3" height. When he decided not to continue studying, his mother, who later became an executive of a foreign film company, was disappointed because it was expected that he would follow in his father's footsteps as an insurance broker.

After working as a welder, cost accountant and aircraft-parts inspector during World War II, Williams became a salesman in the luggage department at Wanamaker's.

While there, he decided to send his photos to a modeling agency.

He quickly found great success with assignments resulting in photographs in newspapers and magazines, including Harper's Bazaar as well as on billboards and book covers.

1940

He then adopted the name Guy Williams (1940s) on the advice of his agent Henry Willson after a director refused to cast him because of his on-screen moniker, Guido Armando, that sounded "too foreign".

1946

In 1946, Williams signed a one-year contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and moved to Hollywood.

1947

For his debut, he had a featured role as the Enola Gay bombardier in the MGM docudrama The Beginning or the End (1947), about the development of the atom bomb.

He appeared in only a few films afterwards and soon returned to New York.

1948

In 1948, to advertise cigarettes while skiing, Williams did an extensive filming trip accompanied by Janice Cooper, a John Robert Powers model.

During the long photographic sessions, they fell in love, marrying on December 8, just after they returned to New York City.

They had two children, Guy Steven Catalano (aka Guy Williams Jr.) and Antoinette Catalano (aka Toni Williams); both became actors.

1950

He played swashbuckling action heroes in the 1950s and 1960s.

Among his most notable achievements were two TV series: Zorro in the title role, and as the father of the Robinson family on the popular sci-fi series Lost in Space.

By 1950, Williams was filming some of the pioneering television commercials in the U.S. His father died in 1951, never to witness his son's rise to fame.

1952

In 1952, Williams obtained a new one-year contract with Universal-International and moved to Hollywood.

He also appeared in an episode of the Lone Ranger, playing town sheriff.

Guy Williams appeared in small supporting roles in films, including:

1953

In 1953, he suffered a serious accident when he fell from a horse and was dragged over 200 yards, resulting in a long scar on his left shoulder.

Because of this he returned to New York to continue acting and modeling there and temporarily abandoned his film career.

In 1953, he left Universal and became a freelancer for movies produced by Allied Artists and Warner Brothers.

1957

Early in 1957, Williams appeared twice in the role of Steve Clay in the television series Men of Annapolis, a military drama set at the United States Naval Academy.

He also appeared in the Rod Cameron drama State Trooper in the episode "No Fancy Cowboys" about the defrauding of guests at a dude ranch.

1970

During most of the 1970s, Guy Williams frequently visited and worked in television shows in Argentina, where he was most revered.

1980

He retired in the early 1980s in Buenos Aires, where he died of a brain aneurysm in 1989.