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David Hedison, a native of Providence, Rhode
Island (born May 20), began his acting career with the Sock & Buskin Players
at Brown University before moving to New York to study with Sanford Meisner
and Martha Graham at the Neighborhood Playhouse, and with Lee Strasberg at
the Actors Studio. From there, he moved to off Broadway productions and a
film contract with 20th Century-Fox.
His work o n the New York
Stage includes Turgenev's A Month in the Country, directed by Sir
Michael Redgrave and starring Uta Hagen, for which he won a Theater World
Award, Christopher Fry's A Phoenix Too Frequent and Clifford Odets'
Clash by Night. He toured with Anita Gillette in the National Company
of Neil Simon's Chapter Two and appeared in Los Angeles in the West
Coast premiere of Alan Bowen's Forty Deuce, and in the Allan Miller
production of Are You Now or Have You Ever Been? in the role of Larry
Parks. He also toured with Elizabeth Ashley in the Joseph Hayes' new play,
Come into My Parlour, and was in the world premiere run of Bernard
Slade's Return Engagements.
In addition to appearing in A. R.
Gurney's Love Letters with Anita Gillette in 1998, David has also
appeared in Alone Together, First Love and as the
long-suffering husband in The Tale of the Allergist's Wife at the
Cape Playhouse in Dennis, MA in 2002. |
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While at Fox, Hedison made
two television series: Five Fingers and the long-running Voyage to
the Bottom of the Sea as Captain Crane. He has also appeared in a great
variety of roles, from the PBS Television Theatre's production of Oliver
Hailey's For the Use of the Hall, directed by Lee Grant, and the NBC
mini-series A.D., directed by Stuart Cooper, to ABC's Dynasty II:
The Colbys. For five years, he played Spencer Harrison in the NBC
daytime series Another World. He has worked extensively on British
television, including the BBC presentation of Tennessee Williams' Summer
and Smoke in the role of John Buchanan opposite Lee Remick and performed
in a West End production of James Leo Herlihy's Bad Bad Jo Jo. |
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Between the stage and
television work, he has maintained a steady career in feature films, from
his first film under contract to Fox, The Enemy Below (1957), with
Robert Mitchum, to the popular Megiddo: The Omega Code 2 (2002) with
Michael York and Michael Biehn. He played Felix Leiter in two James Bond
films, Live and Let Die and Licence to Kill. Film buffs will
also remember him in the title role in the original version of The Fly.
The film was selected as one of the "Sci-Fi 100" in Entertainment Weekly
as being one of the all-time greatest works of science fiction.
In
recent years, David has also starred in Fugitive Mind (1999) with
Michael Dudikoff and Gil Gerard, and Mach 2 (2000) with Brian
Bosworth and Michael Dorn. David's two most
recent films, Spectres and Death by Committee were released in
2005. |
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In January of 2004, David
debuted on the CBS Daytime drama The Young and the Restless as
Judge Arthur Hendricks, an old flame of
Katherine Chancellor. Soon after
his arrival in Genoa City, Arthur was revealed to be the biological father
of Katherine's new found daughter, Jill Foster Abbott. Jill was given away
at birth and adopted and was only now beginning to know her birth parents.
Arthur saw Kay through her relapse into alcoholism, helped stage the
intervention that sent her to rehab, and when Kay was sober, they became engaged
to be married.
When Arthur's bitter stepson, Harrison,
learned of the marriage, he came to Genoa City, told Katherine he believed
Arthur was responsible for the death of his mother and planted fake insurance
papers that Jill found. She confronted Arthur and demanded to know the
truth. Heartbroken his new found family would believe a stranger over him,
Arthur broke the engagement and left town. David's
last airdate on Y & R was November 29, 2004.

In 2005, David attended two conventions in the US:
FX in Orlando, FL in January and Wonderfest in Louisville, KY, Memorial
Day weekend. He and his wife Bridget
went to Europe in early May, with David signing autographs in Swindon and
Basildon in the UK, before spending a week in Italy. His film
Spectres was released on DVD in April
and had it's cable premiere on the Lifetime Movie Network in June. His
other unreleased film, Death By Committee
was re-titled Reality Trap
and was shown at the Avignon Film Festival
in Avignon, France in June. David was interviewed by the MI6
Bond page and was a guest interview on Roger Moore's official site in the
fall.
In the early part
of 2006, David appeared at the Hollywood Collectors Show in
Burbank, CA and was in demand for interviews prior to the release of
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea on
DVD, February 21, 2006. The 2nd Voyage
DVD was released on July 11, 2006, with David's DVD interview and the
Blooper reel. David did another round of interviews for that. The
third Voyage set was released on October 24 (Season 2 vol. 1) and David
was interviewed again. The fourth Voyage DVD release was released
February 20, 2007.
The
first third season release of Voyage on DVD was on June 19, 2007. The
remainder of the season 3 episodes will release on October 23. All three
releases included clips from David's interview for
The Fantasy
Worlds of Irwin Allen in 1995.
In the summer and fall of 2006 and into 2007, David worked on four audio
books. The first ,McKnight's Memory,
was first released in October of 2007,
but remains unpublished
to date pending a new distribution deal. The
second, The King, McQueen and the Love Machine
was released June 15, 2008.
The third project was an 12 minute introduction to the reissue
of the James Bond Lifestyle
that came out June 7, 2007. His fourth audio book project The
Casino Caper was released in August
of 2007.
David attended the Megacon convention February 18-20, 2007 and performed Uncle Vanya at the Actor's
Studio West. He spent time in South Africa, England and Italy in the
early Spring. He recorded an interview for the Sept 11 DVD re-release of
The Fly in London in May
and an audio commentary track in LA as part of the bonus features on
The Fly Collection, which
includes all three of the early films. He performed Love
Letters with Nancy Dussault at
Monmouth University on August 3, 4 and 5.

David made three
personal appearances: the first at the Hollywood Collectors show,
October 6-7; and then back to back appearances in Denver at MileHiCon 39
on October 27 and the Collectors Supershow in Northglenn on October 28,
2007.
David
got 2008 off to a rousing start by celebrating the
35th
anniversary of his Bond Film Live and Let Die in England, with
autograph signings at the Vintage Magazine Ship on March 22 and by
attending the Memorabilia show in Birmingham March 29-30. David then
wrote an introduction to the James Bond comic The Paradise Plot
that was released in the United States on July 8.
David spent from June of 2007 until March of 2008
working on the trade paperback The Fly at 50! in collaboration
with Diane Kachmar and David Goudsward.
The Fly at 50 was published in 2008
and is available at Amazon.com.

David celebrated the
35th anniversary of his Bond Film
Live and Let Die in England, with autograph signings at the Vintage
Magazine Ship on March 22 and by attending the Memorabilia show in
Birmingham, March 29-30. He thoroughly enjoyed his time in England.
David was asked
his opinion on the AMC website about The Fly The Opera which
debuted in Paris on July 2 and attended the Los Angeles Opera
premiere in September of 2008.
David ended the
celebration of the 50th anniversary of The Fly by attending the
Chiller show in Parsippany, NJ, October 24-26 and SuperMegafest show in
Framingham, MA (Boston) November 22-23, 2008.
David has
been contributing to a book about his first TV series, Five Fingers.
He also participated in performances of
The Cherry Orchard and I Never Sang for my Father in
Los
Angeles in 2009. David attended Wondercon in San Francisco in
February 2009 and spent time in Spain and Italy in the late
summer. David made two
appearances in the Fall of 2009; the Big Apple Con Comic Con in New York
City, October 16-18 and the Winter Memorabilia Show in Birmingham, UK,
November 21-22. 2009.
David remained active in 2010. He once
again worked on the committee that nominated the five foreign films for
Oscar contention from October 2009 through January of 2010. He
visited England in March and appeared at two autograph shows in the Los
Angeles area. Monsterpalooza in Burbank, April 9-11 and the Anaheim
Comic Con, April 16-18.
In 2011, David
remained popular and busy. In March, he headlined a 60's sci-fi reunion
at Monster Mania in
Cherry Hill,
NJ.
He enjoyed appearing there with Lee Meriwether and Robert Colbert of
Time Tunnel, Batman and Maverick and Roy Thinnes of UFO
and many other roles.
David took part
in and was interviewed for the Vincentennial celebration - 100 years of
Vincent Price - that began in St. Louis In June and ended in
Pittsburgh
in late October with a stop in
Nashville
along the way. In
Pittsburgh at
Monsterbash,
David was "Dad" to two of his sons, Charles Herbert
and Brett Halsey, at the first ever Fly movie reunion. A good time was
had by all.
David celebrates
his 85rd birthday on May 20, even though no one, when they see him,
believes it. David is also looking forward to wishing Sir Roger Moore,
Happy 85 in October.
Link:
Internet Movie
Database: David Hedison
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