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Interesting actor trivia


I have been researching this piece for quite a while and hoped to post it whenever I got more information. But now that the show is off the air at METv, I'm just going to go ahead with it while there might still be some viewers who may find it interesting.

Sometimes after watching an episode, I'd be curious about some of the actors and wondered whether they ever appeared in much else. I'd come to this site and do a little research. Here's what I came up with.

In the episode "Dan Hostage", the actress who plays the wife of a small diner owner shot by a robber was Virginia Arness, wife of James Arness.

In "Blast Area Copter", the hostage of bandit Joe Flynn was Helene Stanton, later the real-life mother of TV's Dr. Drew.

In "Auto Press", the villain's girlfriend is Anne Neyland, a former Miss Texas and later a regular date of Elvis Presley.

In "Desert Town", the attractive blond villain is Kay Faylen, who was Regis Philbin's wife at the time. He was then a host of his own late-night radio talk show in San Diego. They divorced in 1968.

In "Radioactive", Jack Stang played the guy who found the radioactive device and took it home. He was a close friend of novelist Mickey Sphillane, who named the main character in his final crime novel Jack Stang. Spillane hoped that one day Stang would play Mike Hammer in a film and even financed a screen test for him toward that end.

Also in "Radioactive", the role of an older woman was played by Kathleen Mulqueen, the wife of HIGHWAY PATROL's director Paul Guilfoyle.

Veteran actor George Meader's last role was in "Radioactive".

In "Motel Robbery", the wicked lady was played by Marilyn Buferd, Miss America of 1946.

Also in "Motel Robbery", Rhodes Reason was brother of Rex Reason, noted actor in THIS ISLAND EARTH.

In "Convicted Innocent", the young lady who witnessed a robbery at a gas station was Wendy Wilde, daughter of Cornel Wilde.

Finally, the evil lady villain in "Express Delivery", "Resident Officer", and "Fear" was gorgeous Lynn Cartwright, wife of prolific bad guy Leo Gordon. If you don't know his name, you will know his face, so look him up.

This isn't as long as I'd wanted to make it, but like I said, the show's off the air and it's pointless not to just go ahead and share it.

"Truth is its own evidence." - Ralph Waldo Emerson

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Very interesting.

Leo Gordon also did some writing and appeared numerous times with his wife.
Also served time in real life. Could play a very scary bad guy.

Also couldn't help but notice, according to imdb, some of the actors went absolutely nowhere after Highway Patrol. Don't ask me to name them, as they are quite forgetful.

Thanks for the trivia. Looks like you put a lot of work into it.

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Yes, it was a lot of work but kind of a work of love, too. Like I said in the post, I originally didn't plan to post all that until I had about twice as much info to share.

Anyway, I too noticed that the roles on HIGHWAY PATROL seem to have been either the high point of some brief careers or among the final ones. Once in a great while, we see somebody on their way to bigger things, such as Clint Eastwood or Joe Flynn.

"Truth is its own evidence." - Ralph Waldo Emerson

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and some lowlife punk called "Leonard Nimoy"

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Saw his episode this morning!!!!

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Pat Conway who guest starred in the episode " Radioactive" (1955) went on to have his own Western TV series " Tombstone Territory " (1957-1959)

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Robert Conrad and Dyan ( Dianne) Cannon guest starred in the episode " Revenge" 1959. Robert Conrad when on to star in his own TV series " The Wild Wild West" 1965-1969. Dyan Cannon went on to a successful film career spanning over 50 years.

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The trivia is easy to find under each episode listed in IMBD. Not a great amount of work to list.

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Very interesting, and I appreciate the time and effort put into it.


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http://www.CaliforniaDreamsPhotography.com
@CaliDreamsPhoto

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Thanks. That means a lot, coming from you.

"Truth is its own evidence." - Ralph Waldo Emerson

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Interesting. Several of them I was aware of but that was mostly new information to me. But I think I can add the best one to your list. When I watched the episode on THIS network I was impressed with how exceptionally lovely this young lady was. When I looked her up I understood why.

Judy Lewis as "Honey" in the 1959 "Narcotics Racket" episode:

"A man and woman (Fred and Honey) pose as a federal narcotics agent and an apprehended pusher in order to swindle businesspeople by convincing them that their relatives will be implicated in drug crimes if they don't pay thousands of dollars in bribe money. When their attempt to swindle diner owner "Ma" Davis ends in murder, they decide to pull two more quick jobs before leaving the area. They panic and flee the scene when their second target refuses to be taken, and he is subsequently able to give the Highway Patrol a description of the two and their vehicles. They abandon one of their cars in an attempt to elude the roadblocks, but a violent confrontation ensues when they are spotted by Dan Mathews and Sergeant Williams."


From her obituary in the New York Times:

Judy Lewis, Secret Daughter of Hollywood, Dies at 76. Her mother was Loretta Young. Her father was Clark Gable.

Judy Lewis spent her first 19 months in hideaways and orphanages, and the rest of her early life untangling a web of lies spun by a young mother hungry for stardom but unwilling to end her unwed pregnancy.

Loretta Young’s deception was contrived to protect her budding movie career and the box-office power of the matinee idol Gable, who was married to someone else when they conceived their child in snowed-in Washington State. They were on location, shooting the 1935 film “The Call of the Wild,” fictional lovers in front of the camera and actual lovers outside its range.

When Ms. Lewis was 19 months old, her mother brought her back home and announced through the gossip columnist Louella Parsons that she had adopted the child.

Ms. Lewis, a former actress who died on Friday at the age of 76, was 31 before she discerned the scope of the falsehoods that cast her, a daughter of Hollywood royalty, into what she later described as a Cinderella-like childhood. Confronted by Ms. Lewis, Young finally made a tearful confession in 1966 at her sprawling home in Palm Springs, Calif."

That means when she filmed this episode, she wouldn't know the truth for another seven years.





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Hollywood was much different back in the 1950s. Most actors belonged to specific studios. And many of them made the rounds of appearing on several series. It wasn't uncommon to see the same actor appear as different characters in a variety of tv series... and no one really thought it was odd back then. Hollywood seemed like a much smaller community back then.




I wish these guys would stop jumping

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SEA HUNT had a lot of return actors I guess since they knew how to SCUBA
Saw Larry Hagman the other day




See some stars here
http://www.vbphoto.biz/

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Thanks for posting this. Very interesting. I remember looking up Kay Falen after seeing that episode because I thought she was a beauty. Just saw Joe Flynn last night thanks to youtube.

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