Robert Lansing (actor)

Actor

Birthday June 5, 1928

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace San Diego, California, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1994-10-23, New York City, U.S. (66 years old)

Nationality United States

#22891 Most Popular

1928

Robert Lansing (born Robert Howell Brown, June 5, 1928 – October 23, 1994) was an American stage, film, and television actor.

1940

During the late 1940s and early 1950s, he worked under his real name Bob Brown as a radio announcer at WANE in Fort Wayne, Indiana.

He also was active as an actor in a Fort Wayne theater group.

1951

Lansing first appeared on Broadway in the play Stalag 17 (1951) directed by José Ferrer, replacing Mark Roberts in the role of Dunbar at the 48th Street Theater.

He gained early acting experience at the Actors Studio.

1956

Lansing first appeared on TV on Kraft Television Theatre in 1956.

1959

On film, Lansing starred in the 1959 science-fiction film 4D Man.

1961

His other notable television roles included 87th Precinct (1961–62), Automan (1983–1984), and The Equalizer (1985–1989).

While living in Los Angeles, California, he attended University High School.

As a young actor in New York City, he was hired to join a stock company in Michigan, but was told he would first have to join the Actors' Equity Association.

Equity would not allow him to join as "Robert Brown" because another actor was using that name.

Because the stock company was based in Lansing, this became the actor's new surname.

Lansing served two years in the U.S. Army and was stationed in Osaka, Japan, where he worked at Armed Forces Radio.

In the 1961–1962 television season, Lansing was cast as Detective Steve Carella on NBC's 87th Precinct series, based on the Ed McBain detective novels.

His costars were Gena Rowlands, Ron Harper, Gregory Walcott, and Norman Fell.

Also in 1961, he played Jed Trask, a troubled shooter, in the Bonanza episode, "Cutthroat Junction".

1963

His other television roles include portrayals of an alcoholic college professor in ABC's drama Channing, as Gil Green in the 1963 episode "Fear Begins at Forty" on the NBC medical drama The Eleventh Hour, as a bounty hunter on Gunsmoke, and as a parole officer in a 1968 episode ("A Time to Love — A Time to Cry") of The Mod Squad.

1964

Lansing is probably best remembered as the authoritarian Brigadier General Frank Savage in 12 O'Clock High (1964), the television drama series about American bomber pilots during World War II.

During his career, which spanned five decades, Lansing appeared in 245 episodes of 73 television series, 11 TV movies, and 19 motion pictures.

Robert Lansing is probably best known for his role as Brigadier General Frank Savage in the first season of the Quinn Martin production, 12 O'Clock High, which aired on the ABC Television Network from 1964 to 1967.

1965

Lansing starred alongside Clu Gulager again in a 1965 episode of NBC's The Virginian TV series titled "The Brothers".

1966

He also starred as marine biologist Hank Donner in the 1966 nature drama film Namu, the Killer Whale.

His other films included Under the Yum Yum Tree, A Gathering of Eagles, The Grissom Gang, Bittersweet Love, Scalpel (or False Face), Empire of the Ants, and The Nest.

Again on NBC, in 1966, Lansing guest-starred as General Custer in a three-episode segment of Branded called "Call to Glory".

1968

He was the interstellar secret agent Gary Seven in a Star Trek episode ("Assignment: Earth", 1968), which also featured Teri Garr, and was originally intended as a backdoor pilot for an unsold new series.

Lansing played an international secret agent in The Man Who Never Was, and Lt. Jack Curtis on Automan.

1970

He guest-starred in two other episodes of the NBC's Western series: "Danger Road" (1970) as Gunny O'Riley and "Heritage of Anger" (1972) as John Dundee.

He played Doc Holliday in an episode of NBC's The Tall Man, with Barry Sullivan and Clu Gulager.

1973

He played the lead in the 1973 Roundabout Theater production of August Strindberg's The Father, staged by Gene Feist.

New York Times critic Clive Barnes praised Lansing's "mannered, tortured, and racked portrait of the Captain" as "superlative," comparing it favorably with a Michael Redgrave performance years earlier.

Also that year he starred with Barbara Bel Geddes in the Broadway production of Jean Kerr's comedy Finishing Touches.

1977

In 1977, Lansing appeared in a one-man show as coal miner union leader John L. Lewis.

Lansing appeared in Tennessee Williams' Suddenly, Last Summer and Eugene O'Neill's The Great God Brown in the title role.

His other stage performances included roles in Charley's Aunt, Elmer Rice's Cue for Passion, The Lovers, and The Cut of the Axe.

Off-Broadway, his work included The Father, the "Sea Plays" of Eugene O'Neill, and two one-man shows, Damien and The Disciple of Discontent.

1989

In 1989, Lansing appeared at the Williamstown Theatre Festival in a dramatization of John Brown's Body.

The three-person cast also included Christopher Reeve and Laurie Kennedy.

He also played a recurring role, known only as "Control", on 29 episodes of The Equalizer between 1985 and 1989, which then was spun-off into the TV movie Memories of Manon, which aired on 13 February 1989.

He guest-starred in The Twilight Zone episode "The Long Morrow" and in the Thriller episode "Fatal Impulse".

1991

His rugged good looks, commanding stage presence, and stentorian voice earned him continuing stage work and throughout his film career, he periodically returned to the New York stage, making his last such appearance in 1991.