Posted on 08/13/2014 7:33:07 AM PDT by Captain Peter Blood
Ed Nelson, a star of the 1960s primetime soap Peyton Place and an actor with almost 200 credits, mostly in television, died on Saturday in Greensboro, N.C. He was 85.
Nelson had most recently appeared in the 2003 courtroom thriller Runaway Jury, starring Gene Hackman. He had a more significant role as General Sherman in the 1998 Jackie Chan vehicle Who Am I.
On Peyton Place, he played Dr. Michael Rossi during the entire five-year run of the series 436 episodes. He returned in 1985 for reunion telepic Peyton Place: The Next Generation.
But Nelson was already a TV veteran by the time he was cast on Peyton Place in 1964. After a string of small parts in Roger Corman B movies during the mid to late 50s, he began guesting on Westerns such as Zane Grey Theater, Have Gun Will Travel, The Rifleman, Maverick, Rawhide and Gunsmoke plus other series such as Twilight Zone, The Untouchables, The Fugitive and Dr. Kildare.
Nelson appeared with James Shigeta and Martin Sheen in what would become a famous episode of The Outer Limits in which astronauts are experimented upon by aliens.
He had uncredited roles in the films Elmer Gantry and Judgement at Nuremberg.
After Peyton Place, Nelson starred in the brief series The Silent Force with Lynda Day George.
During the 1970s he guested on every conceivable series, including Marcus Welby, M.D., Cannon, Night Gallery, Mod Squad, Mission: Impossible, Kung Fu, Ironside and Police Woman.
He appeared in the film Airport 75 as Major John Alexander and in 1976 war epic Midway as Admiral Harry Pearson. He also appeared in kidpic For the Love of Benji.
Credits during the 80s include Lou Grant, Quincy M.E., The Fall Guy, Dynasty, MacGyver and Murder, She Wrote.
Nelson played President Harry S Truman in the 1980 telepic Enola Gay: The Men, the Mission, the Atomic Bomb, in the 1989 feature Brenda Starr, starring Brooke Shields, and onstage in Give em Hell Harry!
He also appeared in 1986 feature comedy Police Academy 3: Back in Training.
Edwin Stafford Nelson was born in New Orleans. He studied at Tulane U. for two years before heading off to New York to start his acting career. Later he returned to complete his degree at Tulane.
Nelson is survived by Patricia, his wife of 63 years; four daughters; two sons; 14 grandchildren; and 10 great-grandchildren.
That makes three.
Agree 100%. It’s funny. Years ago, I used to watch vintage fare primarily for the storylines and such. But nowadays, I think I get almost as much, if not more, satisfaction from just watching the way the characters interact and comport themselves. Like ADULTS always used to. It’s just so refreshing. Almost like a tonic.
Whereas in modern fare, there’s such a preening self-consciousness to every movement, every bit of dialogue. The male protagonists seem so juvenile and unmanly, and the female protagonists are tart and abrasive, and lacking in just about all traditional feminine traits. I just can’t take it seriously. Maybe it is indeed reflective of the current culture and manner of the times, but I can’t really “identify” with it or frankly, even respect it. It’s just too pathetic, too gay.
It was almost like a repertory theater back then, in terms of tv productions and the roster of talent. They had the acting chops to deliver the goods again and again, often being tapped at very short notice.
A somewhat sadly unheralded group, all those fine character actors and such. One thing about that generation of performers is that they usually had a broad range of living and life-experience before they found acting success. Came from places all across the country and mid-america, often suffered through the Depression and/or fought in WW2 or Korea, did construction jobs and such. That was quickly lost with the later crop of actors, directors, creators, that followed... and it was noticeable.
Anyway, like I said, I always liked Ed Nelson.
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