Rod Cameron (actor)

Film

Birthday December 7, 1910

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Calgary, Alberta, Canada

DEATH DATE 1983-12-21, Gainesville, Georgia, U.S. (73 years old)

Nationality Canada

#46456 Most Popular

1910

Rod Cameron (born Nathan Roderick Cox; December 7, 1910 – December 21, 1983) was a Canadian film and television actor whose career extended from the 1930s to the 1970s.

He appeared in horror, war, action and science fiction movies, but is best remembered for his many westerns.

Cameron was born in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, and grew up in New Jersey.

He played on his high school basketball team and on a semi-professional football team.

Despite those activities and others such as swimming and playing ice hockey, he couldn't join the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in Canada as a young man because he failed the physical examination.

Cameron moved to Hollywood as a young man and started out as a stuntman and bit player for Paramount Pictures as well as a stand-in for Fred MacMurray.

His early films include Heritage of the Desert with Donald Woods and Russell Hayden, Rangers of Fortune with Fred MacMurray, North West Mounted Police and Henry Aldrich for President with Jimmy Lydon.

He also played bit roles at Universal Pictures, including in If I Had My Way, starring Bing Crosby and Gloria Jean.

He appeared in a horror film The Monster and the Girl and played Jesse James in The Remarkable Andrew for Paramount.

1940

One of the bandits is played by Don "Red" Barry, best remembered from the 1940 film Adventures of Red Ryder.

1942

During World War II Cameron played in Commandos Strike at Dawn and played a US Marine in Wake Island (1942) and Gung Ho! (1943).

1943

In 1943, Cameron gained star status in action serials for Republic Pictures.

As crime-busting federal agent Rex Bennett, Cameron battled enemy terrorists in 15 weekly episodes of G-Men vs. the Black Dragon.

He was already working in another serial when audience reaction to Black Dragon made him a hit.

He appeared in another Rex Bennett adventure, Secret Service in Darkest Africa, with Cameron again battling against Axis agents.

When cowboy star Johnny Mack Brown left Universal Pictures for Monogram Pictures, Cameron replaced him as Universal's western series star.

Universal soon gave him straight character roles in feature films, including Salome, Where She Danced and River Lady both co-starring fellow Canadian Yvonne De Carlo.

1947

Universal reorganized as Universal-International and downsized its activities in 1947, leaving Cameron and other contract players unemployed.

He was hired by Monogram Pictures for a long string of outdoor action pictures.

Hal Erickson, in his book, Syndicated Television: The First Forty Years, 1947–1987, cited Cameron's business sense in confining his work in TV series to syndication: "A canny businessman, Cameron knew that his City Detective residuals wouldn't have been as fat had a major television network been claiming a percentage of the action, and as a result the actor vowed to remain in syndication for the rest of his TV career. By 1960, Cameron was drawing over $200,000 per annum in residuals [from his three syndicated programs]..."

Cameron himself guest starred in many westerns, including six appearances on NBC's Laramie, with John Smith and Robert Fuller.

1948

In 1948, he starred in Panhandle (a movie with a script co-written by Blake Edwards) for Allied Artists.

1949

In 1949, Cameron appeared with Bonita Granville in the comedy film Strike It Rich.

1950

In State Trooper, a 1950s-style western-themed crime drama, Cameron starred as Lieutenant Rod Blake of the Nevada State Police.

In Coronado 9, set in the San Diego area, Cameron appeared as Dan Adams, a private detective.

1953

Cameron starred in three syndicated television series: City Detective (1953–1955), State Trooper (1956–1959), and the Coronado 9 (1960–1961).

In City Detective, Cameron appeared as the tough New York City police Lieutenant Bart Grant.

1955

He then appeared in many westerns and other films for Republic Pictures including Santa Fe Passage (1955), and later The Gun Hawk (1963), Requiem for a Gunfighter (1965) and The Bounty Killer (1965).

1956

Cameron guest starred in such dramatic series as Crossroads, in which he portrayed Dr. Ervin Seale in the 1956 episode "Deadly Fear."

1960

In "Drifter's Gold" (November 29, 1960), Cameron plays Tom Bedloe, an outlaw who has started the rumor of a nearby gold strike.

When series lead Slim Sherman, played by John Smith, comes to Laramie to buy supplies, he finds the town nearly deserted and must pretend to be an outlaw to survive.

Meanwhile, Bedloe is looking for Marcie Benson, the daughter he has never seen, played by Judi Meredith.

Gregory Walcott plays Duke, Bedloe's partner in crime.

1963

In another Laramie episode, "Broken Honor" (April 9, 1963), Cameron and Peggy McCay portray Roy and Martha Halloran, a farm couple who stumbles upon $30,000 in money found inside a strong box on their property.

The loot had been seized in a stagecoach heist and hidden away for later retrieval.

Roy, who is reliant on a wheelchair, insists on keeping the money until Jess Harper arrives amid grave danger to all of their lives from the bandits searching about for the missing money.

1964

Cameron traveled to Europe in 1964 to play the lead in Spaghetti Westerns such as Bullets Don't Argue (1964) and Bullet in the Flesh (1965).

1966

Cameron also guest starred in the NBC's western Bonanza in 1966: he portrayed Curtis Wade in the two-part episode "Ride The Wind".

Cameron also guest starred in season 6 episode 18 of western TV series "The Tales of Wells Fargo".

1971

He later appeared in such films as The Last Movie (1971), Evel Knievel (1971) and Psychic Killer (1975).