- Born: Aug 15, 1925 in Fresno, California
- Occupation: Actor
- Active: '50s-'90s
- Major Genres: Drama, Action
- Career Highlights: Good Neighbor Sam, Harlow, Avalanche Express
- First Major Screen Credit: Live Fast, Die Young (1958)
| Actor: Michael Connors |
| Filmography: Michael Connors |
| Wikipedia: Mike Connors |
| Mike Connors | |
|---|---|
| Born | Krikor Ohanian August 15, 1925 Fresno, California |
| Years active | 1952–present |
| Spouse(s) | Mary Lou Willey (1949–present) |
Mike Connors (born August 15, 1925) is an American actor best known for playing detective Joe Mannix in the long-running CBS television series, Mannix. Before that, he had played a crime-fighting investigator, wielding a .38 handgun hidden in his back, in another CBS series Tightrope.
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Born Krikor Ohanian in Fresno, California, of Armenian descent, he graduated from University of California at Los Angeles, where he was a member of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. An avid basketball player who was nicknamed "Touch" by his teammates, he is credited in his early films, such as Island in the Sky (1953), Swamp Women, a.k.a. Swamp Diamonds, Five Guns West (1955), and Flesh and the Spur (1957) as Touch Connors.
He played basketball for Coach John Wooden at UCLA.
Connors recalled in an interview that he was renamed by Henry Willson saying that "Ohanian" was too close to the actor George "O'Hanlon" and came up with "Touch Connors".[1]
In 1956, still billed as Touch Connors, he played an Amalekite herder in Cecil B. DeMille's The Ten Commandments starring Charlton Heston.
He appeared in numerous television series, including the co-starring role in the 1955 episode "Tomas and the Widow" of the NBC western anthology series Frontier. He appeared in two Rod Cameron syndicated crime dramas, City Detective and the western-themed State Trooper, and played the villain in the first episode filmed (but second one aired) of ABC-TV's smash hit Maverick opposite James Garner in 1957. He also appeared on two other syndicated series, The Silent Service, based on true stories of the submarine section of the United States Navy, and Sheriff of Cochise, set about Bisbee, Arizona.
Connors thereafter launched his own series: (1) CBS's Tightrope (September 8, 1959–September 13, 1960), (2) CBS's Mannix (September 16, 1967–August 27, 1975) and (3) ABC's Today's F.B.I. (October 25, 1981–August 14, 1982). His Tightrope series was very popular in Mexico during the early 1960s, so the local recording company Discos Orfeon released a 45 rpm single of Connors singing in Spanish.
Connors' long history of police and military roles very possibly was the reason he was chosen to play Air Force Colonel Harrison "Hack" Peters in Herman Wouk's 1988 World War II-based miniseries "War and Remembrance".
He currently lives in Encino, California.
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