Dan Duryea profile
Actor profile

Dan Duryea

23rd January 1907 White Plains, New York, USA Acting

​From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dan Duryea (January 23, 1907, in White Plains, New York – June 7, 1968, in Hollywood, California) was an American actor of film, stage and television. Duryea graduated from Cornell University in 1928. While at Cornell, Duryea was elected into the Sphinx Head Society. He made his name on Broadway in the play Dead End, followed by The Little Foxes, in which he played the dishonest and not particularly bright weakling Leo Hubbard. He moved to Hollywood in 1940 to appear in the film version in the same role. He established himself in films playing similar secondary roles as the foil, usually as a weak or annoyingly immature character, in movies such as The Pride of the Yankees. As his career progressed throughout the 1940s he began to carve a niche as a violent, yet sexy, bad guy in a number of film noirs. In so doing he established a significant female following and, over time, something of a cult status. His work in this era included Scarlet Street, The Woman in the Window, Criss Cross, Black Angel and Too Late for Tears. From the 1950s, Duryea was more often seen in Westerns, most notably his charismatic villain in Winchester '73 (1950). Other memorable work in the latter part of his career included Thunder Bay (1953), The Burglar (1957), The Flight of the Phoenix (1965), and the primetime soap opera Peyton Place. He also appeared in one of the first Twilight Zone episodes in 1959 as a drunken former gunfighter in "Mr. Denton on Doomsday," written by Rod Serling. He guest starred on NBC's anthology series The Barbara Stanwyck Show. In 1963, Duryea appeared as Dr. Ben Lorrigan in the episode "Why Am I Grown So Cold" on the NBC medical drama about psychiatry, The Eleventh Hour. Duryea was far removed from many of the characters he played in the course of his career. He was married for thirty-five years to his wife, Helen, who preceded him in death on January 21, 1967. The couple had two sons: Peter, who worked for a time as an actor, and Richard. Dan Duryea died of cancer at the age of sixty-one. His remains are interred in Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills Cemetery in Los Angeles, California. Description above from the Wikipedia article Dan Duryea, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

64 Movies 36 TV Shows 100 Credits
Filmography

Movies & TV Shows

Kathy O' poster
Kathy O' 24th September 1958 as Harry Johnson
36 Hours poster
36 Hours 4th December 1953 as Major Bill Rogers
Larceny poster
Larceny 3rd September 1948 as Silky Randall
Black Bart poster
Black Bart 17th February 1948 as Charles E. Boles / Black Bart
Sahara poster
Sahara 22nd September 1943 as Jimmy Doyle
Combat! poster
Combat! 2nd October 1962 as Bernie Wallace
Riverboat poster
Riverboat 13th September 1959 as Captain Brad Turner
Bonanza poster
Bonanza 12th September 1959 as Marshal Gerald Eskith
Rawhide poster
Rawhide 9th January 1959 as Brother William
Pursuit poster
Pursuit 22nd October 1958 as Matt Shaw
Suspicion poster
Suspicion 30th September 1957 as Eddie Schumaker / McDillard
Climax! poster
Climax! 7th October 1954 as Dr. Dennis Sullivan