Posted on 01/26/2017 10:00:54 PM PST by Impala64ssa
Mike Connors, who starred as a hard-hitting private eye on the long-running television series Mannix, has died. He was 91.
The actor died surrounded by family Thursday afternoon at a Los Angeles hospital from complications of leukemia that had been diagnosed a week earlier, said his son-in-law, Mike Condon.
Mannix ran for eight years on CBS beginning in 1967. Viewers were intrigued by the tall, smartly dressed, well-spoken detective who could mix it up with the burliest of thugs and leap on the hood of a racing car to prevent an escape. Episodes normally climaxed with a brawl that left the culprits bruised and beaten. 029-acadd-connors.jpg
Actor Mike Connors attends the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences' Primetime Television Crimefighters panel discussion at the Leonard H Goldenson Theatre on Nov. 1, 2010, in North Hollywood, Calif. Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images
Up until Mannix, most private investigators were hard-nosed, cynical guys who lived in a seedy area and had no emotions, Connors theorized in 1997. Mannix got emotionally involved. He was not above being taken advantage of.
In the first season, Joe Mannix was a self-employed Los Angeles private investigator hired by a firm that used computers and high-tech equipment to uncover crime. The ratings were lukewarm. Connors feared the series would be canceled but it was produced by Lucille Balls Desilu studio, and CBS was reluctant to antagonize its biggest star.
In the second season, Mannix opened his own office and combatted low-lifes by himself. The ratings zoomed.
When Mannix was revised the office acquired a secretary, played by African-American actress Gail Fisher.
The network was concerned that affiliates in the South might object to her character but there wasnt any kind of backlash, Connors recalled.
Another highlight was the theme music by legendary screen composer Lalo Schifrin.
Connors also starred in the TV series Tightrope! and Todays FBI. Each lasted one season.
His movie and TV career stretched from the 1950s to 2007, when he had a guest role on Two and a Half Men.
Connors made his film debut in 1952s Sudden Fear, which starred Joan Crawford. Other films included Island in the Sky, The Ten Commandments, and a remake of Stagecoach.
Connors, born Krekor Ohanian in 1925, was from an Armenian community in Fresno. He served in the Air Force during World War II and played basketball at the University of California, Los Angeles.
After graduation he studied law for two years but his good looks and imposing presence attracted him to acting. In an era when film actors were given names like Tab and Rock, he appeared as Touch Connors - Touch being his basketball nickname. He later changed it to Michael and finally, Mike.
Connors and his wife, Mary Lou, were married in 1949 and had two children: a son, Matthew, and a daughter, Dana. Their son, beset by hallucinations starting in his teens, was diagnosed with schizophrenia and before his death lived in a small residential care facility. Connors and his wife championed efforts to erase the stigma of mental illness.
In addition to his wife, daughter and son-in-law, Connors is survived by a granddaughter, Cooper Wills.
Wasn’t Cannon the radio voice of the Lone Ranger too? Man, memories do fade.
The radio voice of the Lone Ranger was Brace Beemer...
I just remember watching one episode where he engaged in a fist fight with some jazzbo under a pier. It seemed to go on for hours. Made me sick to my stomach.
RIP, Mr.Conners...
As well as the voice-over for “The Lone Ranger” opening.
Hyyy-ooll, silver!
And...his son [Robert] who ^skilled^ as “James West” in the original WWW show.
I think I’ll watch another episode of 70s TV!
He was also the narrator on the Rocky and Bullwinkle cartoon series.
I wasn’t aware that Rosie O’Donnell was ever in a detective show.
No matter how "^skilled^" he was, Robert Conrad was not William Conrad's son--
It was during an interview he gave during his Mannix time that I first learned about the Armenian genocide. It got me interested in exploring history for other things I had never been taught.
#9 The photo you included is William Conrad before he started gaining weight..... He later shaved and left just the mustache.
Mannix was one of the show I loved. What a great show it was....
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