
Richard Basehart
Personal Info
Known for
Acting
Gender
Male
Birthday
1914-08-13
Day of Death
1984-09-17 (70 years old)
Place of Birth
Zanesville, Ohio, USA
Richard Basehart
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Richard Basehart (August 31, 1914 – September 17, 1984) was an American actor. He starred in the 1960s television science fiction drama Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, in the role of Admiral Harriman Nelson.
One of his most notable film roles was the acrobat known as "the Fool" in the acclaimed Italian film La strada directed by Federico Fellini. He also appeared as the killer in the film noir classic He Walked by Night (1948), as a psychotic member of the Hatfield clan in Roseanna McCoy (1949), as Ishmael in Moby Dick (1956), and in the drama Decision Before Dawn (1951). He was married to Italian Academy Award-nominated actress Valentina Cortese, with whom he had one son before their divorce in 1960. Cortese and Basehart also costarred in Robert Wise's The House on Telegraph Hill (1951).
Basehart was also noted for his deep, distinctive voice and was prolific as a narrator of many television and movie projects ranging from features to documentaries. In 1980, Basehart narrated the mini-series written by Peter Arnett called Vietnam: The Ten Thousand Day War that covered Vietnam and its battles from the Japanese surrender on September 2, 1945 to the final American embassy evacuation on April 30, 1975. He appeared in the pilot episode of the television series Knight Rider as billionaire Wilton Knight. He is the narrator at the beginning of the show's credits.
In 1971, Basehart played "Captain Sligo", a comical Irishman with a pet buffalo who negotiates a flawed but legal cattle purchase and unconventionally courts a widow with two children, played by Salome Jens, in CBS's western series, Gunsmoke, with James Arness. Basehart appeared in an episode of The Twilight Zone, Hawaii Five-O, and as Hannibal Applewood, an abusive schoolteacher in Little House on the Prairie in 1976.
In 1972, he appeared in the Columbo episode Dagger of the Mind in which he and Honor Blackman played a husband-and-wife theatrical team who were loose parodies of Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh. In the feature realm, he played a supporting role as a doctor in Rage (1972), a theatrical feature starring and directed by George C. Scott. He made a few TV movies including Sole Survivor (1970) and The Birdmen (1971). Both were based on true stories during World War II.
He died at age 70 following a series of strokes. One month before his death, Basehart was an announcer for the closing ceremonies of the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.
Description above from the Wikipedia article Richard Basehart, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Acting
(2004)
Los Angeles Plays Itself
as Roy Morgan/Roy Martin in He Walked By Night (archive footage)
(2002)
The Men Who Made the Movies: Samuel Fuller
as Cpl. Denno (archive footage) (uncredited)
(1982)
Knight Rider: Knight of the Phoenix
as Wilton Knight
(1982)
(1982)
Egypt: Quest for Eternity
as Narrator (Self)
(1980)
Marilyn: The Untold Story
as Johnny Hyde
(1979)
Being There
as Vladimir Skrapinov
(1979)
The Rebels
as Duke of Kentland
(1979)
Planet Mars
as Narrator
(1979)
Land of Celtic Ghosts
as Himself
(1978)
A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court
as King Arthur
(1978)
The Great Bank Hoax
as Manny Benchly
(1977)
The Island of Dr. Moreau
as Sayer of the Law
(1977)
Flood!
as John Cutler
(1977)
Stonestreet: Who Killed the Centerfold Model?
as Elliott Osborn
(1976)
21 Hours at Munich
as Willy Brandt
(1976)
Mansion of the Doomed
as Dr. Leonard Chaney
(1976)
Time Travelers
as Dr. Joshua Henderson (1871)
(1975)
(1975)
Judgment: The Court Martial of Lt. William Calley
as George Latimer
(1973)
The Birdmen
as Schiller
(1973)
Maneater
as Carl Brenner
(1973)
...And Millions Die!
as Dr Douglas Pruitt
(1972)
Chato's Land
as Nye Buell
(1972)
Rage
as Dr. Roy Caldwell
(1972)
The Bounty Man
as Angus Keough
(1972)
Assignment: Munich
as Maj. Barney Caldwell
(1971)
City Beneath the Sea
as The President
(1971)
The Death of Me Yet
as Robert Barnes
(1971)
They've Killed President Lincoln!
as Host / Narrator
(1970)
Sole Survivor
as Brig. Gen. Russell Hamner
(1970)
The Andersonville Trial
as Henry Wirz
(1969)
Love Is a Funny Thing
as Acteur
(1969)
Hans Brinker
as Dr. Boeker
(1968)
The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich
as Narrator
(1965)
The Satan Bug
as Dr. Gregor Hoffman
(1965)
Let My People Go: The Story of Israel
as Narrator (voice)
(1964)
Four Days In November
as Narrator (voice)
(1964)
Trial at Nuremberg
as Narrator
(1963)
Kings of the Sun
as Ah Min
(1963)
The Yanks Are Coming
as Narrator (voice)
(1962)
Hitler
as Adolf Hitler
(1961)
The Savage Guns
as Steve Fallon
(1960)
Portrait in Black
as Howard Mason
(1960)
Five Branded Women
as Eric Reinhardt
(1960)
Visa to Canton
as Don Benton
(1960)
For the Love of Mike
as Father Phelan
(1959)
The Ambitious One
as George Rancourt
(1959)
Jons und Erdme
as Wittkuhn
(1958)
The Brothers Karamazov
as Ivan Karamazov
(1958)
Love and Troubles
as Paolo Martelli
(1957)
Time Limit
as Maj. Harry Cargill
(1957)
Miracles of Thursday
as Martino
(1956)
Moby Dick
as Ishmael
(1956)
Finger of Guilt
as Reginald 'Reggie' Wilson
(1956)
The Extra Day
as Joe Blake
(1955)
The Swindle
as Picasso
(1955)
Canyon Crossroads
as Larry Kendall
(1955)
The Golden Vein
as Ing. Stefano Manfredi
(1955)
Cartouche
as Il conte Jacques de Maudy
(1954)
La Strada
as Il 'Matto'
(1954)
The Good Die Young
as Joe Halsey
(1954)
The Stranger's Hand
as Joe Hamstringer
(1954)
Jailbirds
as Doctor Stefano Luprandi
(1953)
Titanic
as George S. Headley
(1951)
Decision Before Dawn
as Lt. Dick Rennick
(1951)
The House on Telegraph Hill
as Alan Spender
(1951)
Fixed Bayonets!
as Cpl. Denno
(1951)
Fourteen Hours
as Robert Cosick
(1950)
Outside the Wall
as Larry Nelson
(1949)
He Walked by Night
as Roy Martin / Roy Morgan
(1949)
Tension
as Warren Quimby
(1949)
Reign of Terror
as Maximilian Robespierre
(1949)
Roseanna McCoy
as Mounts Hatfield
(1947)
Cry Wolf
as James Caldwell Demarest
(1947)
Repeat Performance
as William Williams