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Jeremy Slate

 
Actor: Jeremy Slate
  • Born: Feb 17, 1926 in Atlantic City, New Jersey
  • Died: Nov 19, 2006 in Los Angeles, California
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '60s-'80s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Western
  • Career Highlights: True Grit, Stowaway to the Moon, Cross Current
  • First Major Screen Credit: Girls! Girls! Girls! (1962)

Biography

One of the more talented "barrel-chested surfer boys" of the early '60s to follow in the wake of Tab Hunter and Troy Donahue, Jeremy Slate gained instant notoriety as a playboy hunk who set many a female heart aflutter.

Born February 17, 1926, in Atlantic City, NJ, Slate first fell into the public spotlight at age 34, when cast as second-string fiddle to Keith Larsen in the CBS prime-time series The Aquanauts. Larsen and Slate played Drake Andrews and Larry Lahr, professional deep-sea divers who spent their days salvaging for treasure off the Southern California coast. The adventure drama debuted on CBS Wednesday evening, September 14, 1960. Unfortunately, The Aquanauts (unlike its syndicated competitor, Sea Hunt) ran headfirst into awful ratings. After several attempts by the network to save it from oblivion (including a new lead actor replacing Larsen, a new location in Malibu Beach, and a new title, Malibu Run) it quickly plummeted out of sight before wrapping in September 1961.

Slate's early film roles were almost all of the vacuous-hunk variety, and thus mirrored his Aquanauts turn. He appeared in a brace of Elvis flicks, G.I. Blues (1960) and Girls! Girls! Girls! (1962), and as Scandinavian beefcake Eric Carlson in Bob Hope's musical comedy farce I'll Take Sweden (1965). The Henry Hathaway-directed Westerns The Sons of Katie Elder (1965) and True Grit (1969) provided the actor with slightly more substantial roles. Meanwhile, Slate guest starred on an estimated 100 television programs, from Bewitched to Gunsmoke to Police Story to Mission: Impossible.

Slate maintained a higher profile as a writer and star of the motorcycle cult film Hell's Angels '69 (1969), directed by Lee Madden. This fell in the middle of a spate of grade-Z motorcycle flicks with Slate in the cast, from 1968's The Mini-Skirt Mob to 1967's Born Losers (the first of the Billy Jack cycle) to 1969's Hell's Belles. The "tough guy" role in these films was not anomalous for Slate, for as the '60s rolled on (and the actor entered his forties), his onscreen type shifted from that of a lusty Southern Californian sex symbol to a wizened street tough. The films in which he sustained this image varied somewhat in quality, but Slate scraped bottom (and then some) in William Grefe's nasty exploitationer The Hooked Generation (1969) as the head of a gang of drug pushers.

In 1979, Slate hit a second wind of his career as Chuck Wilson on the ABC daytime soap One Life to Live. The role lasted eight years. During the '80s and '90s, he also appeared as a character actor in such low-profile cinematic features as Deadlock (1988), Maddalena Z (1989), and The Lawnmower Man (1992, playing Father McKeen).

Jeremy Slate died at age 80, of complications following surgery for esophageal cancer, on November 19, 2006. His last film, Terry Leonard's Buttermilk Sky (2007), was released posthumously. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Jeremy Slate
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Jeremy Slate
Born Jeremy Slate
February 17, 1926(1926-02-17)
Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA
Died November 19, 2006 (aged 80)
Los Angeles, California, USA
Occupation Actor
Spouse(s) Twice divorced; married to Tammy Grimes (1966-1967)

Jeremy Slate (February 17, 1926 - November 19, 2006) was an American film and television actor.

Career

From 1979-1987, Slate portrayed Chuck Wilson on the ABC daytime soap opera One Life to Live. Slate costarred with Ron Ely in the 1960-1961 Ivan Tors series The Aquanauts, which was renamed Malibu Run half-way during its brief run on CBS. The series could not compete successfully in the same time slot as NBC durable Western Wagon Train. Slate appeared numerous times on CBS's Gunsmoke. He also guest starred three times in The Alfred Hitchcock Hour on CBS and then NBC, in Mission: Impossible on CBS, Bewitched on ABC, and My Name Is Earl on NBC.

Slate's acting career included major roles in four outlaw biker films in the late 1960s: The Born Losers (1967), The Miniskirt Mob (1968), Hell's Belles (1969), and Hell's Angels '69. As the leader of the Born Losers Motorcycle Club in The Born Losers, Slate is a ruthless yet likeable character who takes on Billy Jack. In Hell's Angels '69 Slate played a man who uses the Hell's Angels as unwitting dupes in a plan to rob a casino in Las Vegas; several real-life members of the Hell's Angels — including Angels president Ralph "Sonny" Barger, Terry the Tramp and Magoo — had significant speaking roles in the film.

He was briefly married to the actress Tammy Grimes. He died in Los Angeles, California, following surgery for cancer.

Filmography

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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