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Mike Morgan

 
Actor: Mike Morgan
  • Born: 1928
  • Died: Jun 05, 1958 in London, England
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '50s
  • Major Genres: Comedy
  • Career Highlights: The Horse's Mouth
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Horse's Mouth (1958)

Biography

Mike Morgan was a young, very gifted actor whose life and career were cut short tragically early. Morgan made his screen acting debut in 1957, with a small role in the Ealing comedy Barnacle Bill, directed by Charles Frend and starring Alec Guinness. He was cast in a much larger part in the comedy The Horse's Mouth, directed by Ronald Neame and starring Guinness (who also wrote the screenplay), which went into production in the spring of 1958. Morgan was brilliant in the role of Nosey, the stuttering, nervous, yet totally guileless and dedicated acolyte of Guinness' character, the artist Gulley Jimson. Morgan was in a major portion of the movie, including the first scene and the final shot, sharing most of his scenes with Guinness or Kay Walsh, and performed brilliantly; he also had the final line in the film. It should have been a star-making performance for the young actor, who wasn't yet 30 years old (and looked 20), but it turned out to be a memorial. In May of 1958, shortly after principal photography on the picture was completed, Morgan fell ill, and within a week he died of a particularly virulent strain of meningitis. As many of his scenes were outdoor location shots, the dialogue couldn't be used, and the intention had been to loop his voice in later, in the studio -- this was accomplished by means of a voice mimic. In a 2002 interview about The Horse's Mouth accompanying its release on DVD in America, Neame said that on watching the movie anew, he was unable to tell any longer where Morgan's real voice was and where the mimic's voice replaced him. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Mike Morgan
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Mike Morgan
Pitcher
Born: October 8, 1959 (1959-10-08) (age 50)
Tulare, California
Batted: Right Threw: Right 
MLB debut
June 11, 1978 for the Oakland Athletics
Last MLB appearance
September 2, 2002 for the Arizona Diamondbacks
Career statistics
Win-Loss record     141-186
Earned run average     4.23
Strikeouts     1,403
Teams
Career highlights and awards

Michael Thomas Morgan (born October 8, 1959 in Tulare, California) is a former right-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball who competed for twelve different teams from 1978-2002, currently the major league record. [1]

Contents

Major League career

Morgan was selected by the Oakland Athletics in 1978 as the fourth overall pick in the Major League Draft.

Morgan made his Major League debut on June 11 of that year with Oakland. He spent two seasons with Oakland before spending the 1980 and 1981 seasons in the minor leagues.

In 1982, Morgan resumed his Major League career with the New York Yankees. In 1983, he played for the Toronto Blue Jays. He spent the entire 1984 season in Toronto's farm system before being chosen by the Seattle Mariners in the Rule 5 draft in December of that year. Morgan played for the Mariners from 1985–87. He spent the 1988 season with the Baltimore Orioles. He won the Little League's Junior Cy Young honor that year for humanitarian work.

From 1989–91, Morgan pitched for his sixth team, the Los Angeles Dodgers. Morgan's first winning season came in 1991, his lone All-Star season, with a 14–10 record. However, Morgan was also known for an infamous footnote. On July 28 of that year, he was at the losing end of Montreal Expos pitcher Dennis Martinez's perfect game, even though Morgan himself was perfect through the first five innings.

From 1992–95, Morgan pitched for the Chicago Cubs. In 1992, he went 16–8. In 1995, he was traded to the St. Louis Cardinals. After being released from the Cardinals in 1996, he signed with the Cincinnati Reds and spent the remainder of the 1996 and all of 1997 with the Reds.

In 1998, Morgan signed with the Minnesota Twins. He was traded later that season to the Cubs. He was on the mound for Mark McGwire's record-tying 61st home run. He went to the postseason for the first time, but the Cubs lost to the Atlanta Braves in the National League Division Series. In 1999, Morgan joined his 11th team, the Texas Rangers.

In 2000, the 40-year-old journeyman signed with his 12th and final team, the Arizona Diamondbacks. Morgan was a reliever who was also an emergency starter. In 2001, Morgan and the Diamondbacks won the World Series in seven games against the New York Yankees. Morgan retired in 2002 with Arizona. He was the last active player to have competed during the 1978 season and one of the last four (the others being Jesse Orosco, Rickey Henderson and Tim Raines) to have played during the 1970s and continue to play past the 2000 season. He currently resides in Ogden, Utah

In the 597 games Morgan pitched, 411 were starts. His career record was 141-186 with a 4.23 earned run average, 1403 strikeouts and eight saves in 2772-1/3 innings pitched.

Morgan was tied with journeyman NHLer Mike Sillinger and MLB journeyman pitcher Matt Skrmetta for the most teams played for in any North American professional sport through 2006. However, Morgan's record was broken in 2006 when Skrmetta joined his 24th professional team and 13th organization in June 2006. [2]

See also

References

External links


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Learn More
Mighty Fine Dancin' (1991 Album by Mike Morgan & the Crawl)
Turn out the Lights (1996 Album by Robert Ealey)
Beach Music Beat (1999 Album by Various Artists)

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Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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TV Listings
Mike Morgan at LocateTV.com

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