Rusty Lane
Rusty Lane (May 31, 1899 – October 10, 1986),[1] was a college professor who in his forties left academia to become a professional actor. He appeared in several Broadway productions during the 1940s and 1950s, including three years as an original cast member for Mister Roberts.[2] He was in the original cast for another Tony award-winning play, The Desperate Hours.[3] Lane also took up screen acting, performing in 21 films and making hundreds of televisions appearances from 1950 up through 1973, including as the star of the TV series Crime with Father,[4] and as a regular cast member of the daytime serial The Clear Horizon.[5]
Rusty Lane | |
---|---|
Born | James Russell Lane May 31, 1899 Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
Died | October 10, 1986 87) (aged Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Other names | J. Russell Lane, Russell Lane |
Education | University of Illinois |
Occupation(s) | Actor, college professor |
Years active | 1927-1942 (professor) 1943-1973 (actor) |
Spouses |
|
Children | Sara Lane 4 others |
Early life
James Russell Lane was born in Chicago, Illinois, the younger of two children for Mack M. Lane, a school teacher and principal, and Cora Barr Lane.[6][7] As a young man he used his middle name in preference to his first, but otherwise was known by his nickname "Rusty". Later, as a teacher and professor he used "J. Russell Lane" for formal situations.
By age 17, his family had moved to suburban Crete, Illinois, from where Lane enlisted in the U.S. Army on July 17, 1917.[8][9] Sent for training with the Illinois National Guard at Champaign, Illinois,[10] he was assigned to the US 124th Field Artillery Regiment.[11] By October, his regiment had moved to Camp Logan in Houston, Texas.[11] He received a medical discharge on December 24, 1917,[9] due to a foot injury.[12] He then worked as a teacher in a private school run by Arthur Lane, in Pisgah, Iowa.[13]
College
Lane was a student at the University of Illinois from 1922[14] thru 1926 when he graduated.[15] He played football his first two years under coach Bob Zuppke, was a member of the 1923 championship team with Red Grange, but lost part of that season due to academic probation.[16] His later college years were focused on theater and public speaking under the mentorship of Professor W. C. Troutman. He was elected president of the college dramatic society,[17] took part in plays,[18] and in his senior year represented Illinois at an interstate public speaking competition held in Madison, Wisconsin.[19]
Academic career
After graduation Lane took up a teaching position in Iowa City, Iowa.[20] Lane taught public speaking at Iowa City High School, served as its dramatics director, and also took part in theater productions at the University of Iowa.[21][22] After one year he left to take up a position at La Crosse State Teachers College (now the University of Wisconsin–La Crosse).[23] He spent two years there, teaching public speaking and staging college plays, then was selected by his former college mentor, W. C. Troutman, who was now at the University of Wisconsin, to be business manager for the university theater in Madison.[24]
Lane would spend nearly fourteen years at the University of Wisconsin, managing the university theater and teaching public speaking. During this time he brought many top stage stars to the university for performances, and helped develop some future stars (Don Ameche, Tom Ewell, Uta Hagen, Don Fellows, Cy Howard) as well.[25] He also oversaw the opening of the new Wisconsin Union Theater, at which in April 1942, Knickerbocker Holiday, the one hundredth production of his college directing career was staged.[26] Lane resigned his position the same month.[27] After several months doing radio and stage work in New York City, he took a position with the American Red Cross, producing entertainment for servicemen in England.[12]
East Coast career
Stage work
While in London, Lane persuaded playwright Maxwell Anderson to allow the US Army to stage his play The Eve of St. Mark as a non-profit production.[28] Lane supervised the production, which was mounted in the Scala Theatre and featured American soldiers and Red Cross workers in the cast.[29] Lane returned to New York to direct Anderson's new play Storm Operation.[30] Rehearsals began in November; by December 13, 1943, the play had its first tryout in Baltimore, followed by a week in Pittsburgh.[31] However, in between tryouts Lane was replaced as director.[31] Lane then went into the cast of Decision by Edward Chodorov, which had its first tryout on January 21, 1944, at the Wilmington, Delaware Playhouse.[32] It premiered at the Belasco Theatre on February 2, 1944, with Lane drawing mild praise for his supporting role from The New York Times.[33] John Chapman of the New York Daily News was more generous, writing: "Rusty Lane, a drama professor and director, makes his acting debut in the role of a lawyer, and proves that self-taught or not, he is well taught".[34]
Decision ran until June 17, 1944,[35] after which Lane went into the cast of Lower North by Martin Bidwell.[36] A weak war training comedy drama,[36] it closed after just nine days.[37] Lane was then cast in his first screen role, Now It Can Be Told, a movie being made in New York by Louis de Rochemont for 20th Century-Fox.[38] The film was released as The House on 92nd Street in late 1945 to generally good reviews.[39] In May 1945 Lane was hired by the USO to produce and direct stage plays that its various entertainment troupes could take to overseas bases.[40] During the next year he would craft five productions of popular plays for USO companies.[40]
Lane next performed in Bathsheba by Jacques Deval, which opened March 26, 1947 and starred James Mason in his Broadway debut.[41] Lane portrayed Joab, for which he received mild commendation from the Daily News critic, who was a bit hard on the two leads, James Mason and Pamela Kellino.[41] The Brooklyn Daily Eagle said Deval's characters "seem to have gotten into his play simply because some clothes had come from a costumer's and needed men and women to fill them".[42] The play closed on April 19, 1947.[43] Two years later Lane told Earl Wilson "Oooh, what a stinker that one was!"[25]
The Experimental Theatre presented Bertolt Brecht's Galileo in a limited engagement of six performances from December 7 through December 14, 1947.[44] The play was translated by Charles Laughton, who would also star as the Italian astronomer.[44] Lane was part of a supporting cast that included Joan McCracken, Wesley Addy, and John Carradine, under the direction of Joseph Losey.[44]
Mister Roberts
After doing a trio of unsuccessful plays, Lane was cast in a critical and popular hit, the 1948 Tony Award winner Mister Roberts. This had an opening tryout at the Shubert Theatre in New Haven, Connecticut on January 23, 1948, where the reviewer predicted immediate success on Broadway and mentioned Lane favorably.[45] Another tryout was mounted at Philadelphia's Walnut Theatre,[46] before the play premiered on Broadway at the Alvin Theatre on February 18, 1948.[47]
Lane's character, Chief Johnson, was a supporting role, the first on stage each night.[48] However, he also understudied the lead role of "Doc", played by Robert Keith.[49] When Keith was in an auto accident during May 1948, Lane took over as Doc until Keith was able to return, while his own part was played by ensemble cast member Robert Keith Jr.[50] Besides Doc, Lane was also understudy for the role of the Captain.[51]
Though his evenings were committed to Mister Roberts, Lane was able to utilize his days to do a number of radio broadcasts for the anthology series Grand Central Station.[52][53] He also had time to perform in his second movie, Johnny One-Eye, for a segment filmed near Washington Square Park during late July 1949.[54] And he also moonlighted during June 1950 for his first known television performance on Hands of Destiny.[55]
After almost three years of playing Chief Johnson, Lane was promoted to the lead role of the Captain, taking over from William Harrigan, who left in November 1950 for an RKO movie contract.[56] Lane's name now appeared in the newspaper ads for the play along with the other three principals. He would play that part on tour even after the original Broadway production closed at the Alvin Theatre during January 1951 and formed a second road company.[fn 1][57] Lane's involvement with Mister Rogers finally came to end when the road company closed during May 1951. According to columnist Irvin Farman, Lane had played in "1,382 performances... He was the only member of the cast who played every Broadway and road tour performance, playing the chief 1,063 times, Doc 56 times, and the captain 263 times".[2]
Crime with Father
With no stage commitments at hand, Lane moved into television acting during 1951. Besides doing anthology shows, he also starred in his own mystery series, Crime with Father. This program, debuting on ABC television on August 31, 1951, had him as police homicide detective Jim Riland, a widower whose daughter Chris Riland (Peggy Lobbin) often aided and complicated his investigations. According to columnist Terry Vernon, the show was filmed on actual streets without using stock clips or background projections, and showed the home life of the Rilands.[58] The New York Times review of the first episode said it was "...an obviously low-budgeted series, has a far better than average quality of production, even if the pistol shots still sound like cap pistols".[59]
The series lasted for 21 episodes, its final original broadcast coming on January 18, 1952. Because it was a filmed series, it played longer in some markets. After it ended, Lane went right back to doing anthology series.[60] He also did a recurring character called Porphory Pete on the family-orientated Captain Video and His Video Rangers. This was a live daily science-fiction program on the DuMont Television Network. Porphory Pete was a "raffish, interplanetary prospector" who was friends with Captain Video.[61] A newspaper article by Robert Downing, who played a villain, establishes that Lane's participation in the daily show may have lasted for weeks, however, very few actual episodes can be identified today.[61] Another television program for which Lane had at least a recurring, if not a regular role, was a short-lived NBC fantasy-adventure series, Operation Neptune.[62][63]
Return to stage
Stockade was a grim play, "a sobering drama" according to Brooks Atkinson, taken from chapters of From Here to Eternity that were left out of the film version.[64] Atkinson praised the "vivid characterizations" of Lane and other actors, but Louis Sheaffer felt the play was "drab" and "uninspired",[65] while John Chapman called it "cheerless, sadistic and pointless".[66] The play flopped quickly at the Off Broadway President Theatre during early 1954, and Lane went on with doing anthology series on television.
However, the number of television episodes he did declined during the second half of 1954. The New York-based DuMont Television Network was failing, and the bulk of new production work was moving towards Hollywood. Lane, still resident in New York City, now filled the gaps between TV spots with lower-paying regional theater work.[67][68][69] Towards the end of December 1954 he was cast in what would be his final Broadway performance.[70]
The Desperate Hours
The Desperate Hours was adapted by Joseph Hayes from his novel. The story concerns a suburban family of four whose quiet home is invaded by three escaped convicts. Staged by Robert Montgomery, it starred Karl Malden and Nancy Coleman as the parents, with Paul Newman as the convict leader.[71] The play had its first tryout at the Shubert Theater in New Haven, Connecticut on January 6, 1955.[72] It then went to Philadelphia's Locust Street Theatre on January 12, 1955,[73] for a highly praised three-week run.[74]
The play opened on February 10, 1955, at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre on Broadway.[3] Lane's role in this play as a police lieutenant was smaller than his parts in Mister Roberts and Stockade, and reviewers mention him only in passing.[75] Besides an excellent cast, taut writing and staging, the production had an extraordinary set design by Howard Bay.[75]
After 212 performances, The Desperate Hours closed on Broadway on August 13, 1955, and a road company was sent out to the West Coast that included Lane and his wife Sara Anderson.[76] By late October 1955, Lane was back in New York for filming of The Harder They Fall,[77] but he returned to Los Angeles for Beyond a Reasonable Doubt in March 1956.[78]
West Coast career
Films and television
James Mason cast Lane for Bigger Than Life, which was filmed during May 1956 under the working title of One in a Million.[79] Going forward, all of Lane's screen work would be produced in Los Angeles.[fn 2] Lane made ten films during 1957–1958, but the quality of the pictures trailed off considerably in the latter year, and it would be 1963 before he made another. His television work expanded during that same period, with some guest star parts in narrative series. However, a great many of his small screen roles were character bits, often as a sheriff or judge or police detective.
The Clear Horizon
Lane was cast in a major role for the CBS daily daytime drama, The Clear Horizon, starting in July 1960.[80] This show followed an Army officer, Roy Selby (Ed Kemmer) and his wife Anne (Phyllis Avery) after his transfer to an Army space program test site near Cape Canaveral, Florida.[5] Third-billed Lane played Harry Moseby, a sergeant formerly under Selby's command and godfather to his young son. Moseby was on his second marriage, and his wife Frances (Eve McVeagh) was discovering she didn't care for Army life.[5] The show's creator and head writer, Manya Star, a former WAVES officer, was adamant the program was not a soap opera: "The emphasis is on the men, and the women know how to cope with things, instead of wringing their hands".[81] Among the show's secondary storylines was that of Corporal Davis (James Edwards), a Negro soldier who fights to get into Officer Candidate School, and the difficulty in finding housing for his wife after he does.[81] Another storyline concerned a Jewish army officer (Michael Fox) who was married to a French Catholic woman (Gerry Gaylor).[81]
The show was filmed, not broadcast live.[82] Six episodes were made each week, to build up a reserve for vacations.[82] During March 1961 CBS stopped broadcasting original episodes; however, stations behind the network feed used filmed copies to keep showing it into April. Columnist Allen Rich queried CBS VP for Daytime Programs Bruce Lansbury about the switch from soap operas like Clear Horizon and Full Circle to game shows.[83] Lansbury claimed the network was trying to provide entertainment instead of displaying other people's problems, and that reader mail favored the changes.[83] Less than a year later, a new CBS VP for Daytime Programs, Lawrence White, announced that The Clear Horizon would resume new episodes on February 26, 1962,[fn 3] citing popular demand for its return.[84][85]
The second life of The Clear Horizon lasted only until June 15, 1962, when it was dropped from the CBS daytime schedule in favor of a traditional soap opera, The Brighter Day, which was expanded from 15 minutes to a half-hour.[86] This was in spite of a letter-writing campaign to CBS by fans of The Clear Horizon.[86]
Later life
Television continued to be Lane's main source of acting work during the 1960s. He made only five films during that decade, but performed in 64 television episodes, not even counting The Clear Horizon. He had a small recurring role as a court clerk on the legal drama Sam Benedict, and another as police Sgt. Murchison on 87th Precint. Lane's performing work wound down to just five television episodes during the early 1970s. His last known acting job was for an episode of Gunsmoke in 1973.
Lane lived for another thirteen years after retiring.[1]
Personal life
At age 43, Lane stood 5'8 1/2" (174 cm) tall, weighed 160 pounds (72.5 kg), and had gray eyes and brown hair.[87]
While teaching at Iowa City High School in 1926, Lane met Laura Koch, who was also a teacher there.[88] They were married on August 1, 1928, at her parents' home in St. Ansgar, Iowa.[89] During their fifteen years of marriage they had two daughters, Laura Lee Lane and Carol Anne Lane,[25] who were occasionally cast in University of Wisconsin stage productions.[90][91] They were divorced in May 1946.[92]
Columnist Whitney Bolton reported that whenever Lane found himself in a long-running stage production, he'd populate his theatre dressing room with wildlife.[93] During Mister Roberts it was cages of hamsters, while for The Desperate Hours he had a large aquarium stocked with Apistogramma from Venezuela.[93]
Lane had often cast two sisters from Madison named Gloria and Sara Anderson while staging plays at the university during 1940–1941.[94][91] Gloria stayed with the university, but Sara went on to New York where she found stage work on Broadway.[95] Several years later Lane also went to New York, and eventually met up with Sara Anderson again when both were in Storm Operation. Despite a twenty-year age difference, they married on May 21, 1947.[92] Their first child, Susan Russell Lane,[96] later became an actress under the stage name Sara Lane, though she was called "Russell" by her family.[97] They also had two other children together, Walter and Margarethe.[97] After their move to California, they lived at a cabin in Topanga Canyon, near the south entrance close to the ocean.[97]
Stage performances
Listed by year of first performance, excluding student productions
Year | Play | Role | Venue | Notes/source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1943 | The Eve of St. Mark | (Producer) | Scala Theatre | Though Lane's role was producer, he is often credited with directing this production.[29] |
1944 | Decision | Bennett | Belasco Theatre Ambassador Theatre |
Lane was an honest lawyer for a group battling racism in war factory work.[34] |
Lower North | Pratzell | Belasco Theatre | Lane played the CPO of a US Navy training unit in this flop.[36] | |
1947 | Bathsheba | Joab | Ethel Barrymore Theatre | [41] |
Galileo | Barbarini | Maxine Elliott's Theatre | This was a limited engagement of six performances with the actors working at scale.[44] | |
1948 | Mister Roberts | Chief Johnson | Alvin Theatre | Tony award winner for Best Play of 1948. Lane also played Doc and the Captain during the original run.[2] |
1951 | Mister Roberts | The Captain | Touring Company | [2] |
1953 | Mister Roberts | Doc | Berkshire Playhouse | One week run for the end of the Berkshire Theatre Festival.[98] |
1954 | Stockade | Jack Molloy | President Theatre | Lane was an incarcerated soldier in this grim short-lived Off Broadway production.[64] |
My Aunt Daisy | Westport Country Playhouse | Original play by Albert Halper and Joseph Schrank, starred Jo Van Fleet.[67] | ||
Mister Roberts | The Captain | Paper Mill Playhouse | Three week run; with Jeffrey Lynn, Daniel Keyes, Casey Walters, Sara Anderson.[68] | |
Sabrina Fair | Paper Mill Playhouse | Lane's wife Sara Anderson starred in this two-week run.[69] | ||
1955 | The Desperate Hours | Lt. Carl Fredericks | Ethel Barrymore Theatre | Tony award winner for Best Play of 1955.[3] |
The Desperate Hours | Lt. Carl Fredericks | Touring Company | [76] | |
Radio performances
Year | Program | Episode | Notes/source |
---|---|---|---|
1948 | Grand Central Station | Deaf But Not Dumb | Mystery set in Adirondacks lodge; with Cathleen Cordell, Donald Buka, Gregory Morton, and Will Geer[52] |
Late Growth | 10th Anniversary show; Sarah Fussell, E. G. Marshall, Joe Sweeney, and Will Geer.[53] | ||
Identical | Leon Janney and Lane are twin brothers, with Cathleen Cordell.[99] | ||
1949 | Grand Central Station | No Time for Poetry | [100] |
Go by Rail, Stay Out of Jail | With Staats Cotsworth, Doro Merande, Cathleen Cordell, Vaughn Taylor.[101] | ||
1950 | Grand Central Station | A Promise to Cathy | Foreign correspondent is tempted to crime. With John Beal, Howard Smith, Polly Rowles.[102] |
The Heel | With Staats Cotsworth, James Lanphier, Olga Fabien, Kathleen Comegys.[103] | ||
Human Nature | Story of summer romance stars Judy Parrish and Les Tremayne, with Helen Claire, Gavin Gordon, Joseph Boland.[104] | ||
Solitaire | With Don Hanmer, Mimi Strongin.[105] | ||
1951 | Grand Central Station | Eyewitness | With Dean Harens and Patricia Wheel.[106] |
1953 | Best Plays | Mister Roberts | NBC hour-long adaption starred Arthur Kennedy, Wendell Holmes, Leon Janney, with Lane reprising Chief Johnson.[107] |
Grand Central Station | The Search | With Darren McGavin, Janet Ward, Ann Shoemaker.[108] | |
Grand Central Station | Strange Legacy | With Scott Forbes, Jean Gillespie.[109] | |
Filmography
Film (by year of first release)
Year | Title | Role | Notes/source |
---|---|---|---|
1945 | The House on 92nd Street | Admiral | Filmed in New York under the working title Now It Can Be Told.[38][39] |
1950 | Johnny One-Eye | Filmed in New York, Lane had a small uncredited bit in this while still playing in Mister Roberts.[54] | |
1951 | Fourteen Hours | Henry Hathaway hired over 300 actors to do small bits in this film. | |
1956 | The Harder They Fall | Danny McKeogh | [77] |
Beyond a Reasonable Doubt | Judge | [78] | |
Bigger Than Life[fn 4] | Bob LaPorte | [79] | |
1957 | The Shadow on the Window | Capt. McQuade | Filmed in July 1956, with a working title of The Missing Witness.[110] |
Fury at Showdown | Riley | ||
Johnny Tremain | Samuel Adams | ||
Portland Exposé | Tom Carmody | ||
Appointment with a Shadow | Pat O'Connell | ||
1958 | The Rawhide Trail | Captain | Filmed during October 1957, under the working title The Rawhide Breed.[111] |
Damn Citizen | Police Insp. Sweeney | At least one newspaper account had the working title as Damned Citizen.[112] | |
High School Confidential | Desk Sergeant | ||
Party Girl | Judge Davis | ||
I Want to Live! | Judge | ||
1963 | Spencer's Mountain | Dean Buck | |
1964 | The New Interns | Dr. Morton Gardner | |
Fate Is the Hunter | Supervisor | ||
Youngblood Hawke | Gus Adam | ||
1967 | Banning | Guard | |
Television performances 1950–1959
Listed in original broadcast order
Year | Series | Episode | Role | Notes/source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1950 | Hands of Destiny | Hold Hands with the Devil | Lane's first known television appearance was with this anthology series.[55] | |
The Big Story | Roy J, Battersby, New York Reporter | |||
1951 | Shadow of the Cloak | Mightier Than the Sword | Both Lane and his second wife Sara Anderson were in this episode. | |
Cameo Theatre | Special Delivery | |||
Hands of Destiny | The Squealer | With Charles Lewis, Joe Silver,[fn 5] and Sydma Scott.[113] | ||
Big Town | Neighborhood Story | |||
Suspense | The Incident at Stony Point[fn 6] | With Donald Buka and Russell Hardie.[114] | ||
Crime Photographer | Sudden Death | |||
Somerset Maugham Theatre | The Great Man | Murray Matheson tangles with a jealous husband (Lane) while traveling in Peru.[115] | ||
Crime with Father | (All 21 episodes) | Capt Jim Riland | The only TV series in which Lane starred; with Peggy Lobbin as his daughter. | |
1952 | The Web | Honeymoon at the Grand | Stolen diamonds bring Lane, Billy Redfield, and Haila Stoddard together.[116] | |
The Web | The Phantom of the Bridge | With Bobby Santon and Paul Langton.[117] | ||
Captain Video and His Video Rangers | Birth of the Galaxy | Porphory Pete | Lane had a recurring role on this family-orientated science fiction series. | |
Captain Video and His Video Rangers | (Episode for 1952-03-31) | Porphory Pete | This was a live daily show whose episode names, if any, were seldom published. | |
The Big Story | The Case of the Weeping Crocodile | Frank Winge | Lane starred as a reporter who solves a murder mystery.[118] | |
Suspense | The Debt | Jesse | ||
Treasury Men in Action | The Case of the Sparkling Alibi | With Edward Binns and Joe Mantell.[119] | ||
Captain Video and His Video Rangers | (Episode for 1952-06-23) | Porphory Pete | ||
Suspense | Fifty Beautiful Girls | With Grace Kelly, Robert Keith Jr, Rod Steiger, Joseph Anthony.[120] | ||
Police Story | The Newark, New Jersey Case | Det Sgt Kinney | Lane stars in this true crime dramatisation.[121][122] | |
Dark of Night | Brewery | |||
The Adventures of Ellery Queen | Death in the Sorority House | Sheriff | ||
Television Playhouse | The Darkness Below | Drama of a coal mine cave-in starred Ralph Meeker, Mike Kellin, Gerald S. O'Loughlin and Kim Stanley.[123] | ||
1953 | The Web | Long Shot | ||
The Big Story | Joseph O. Haff | New York Times reporter (Lane) clears man of forgery charge.[124] | ||
You Are There | The Conquest of Mexico | Capt. de Olid | ||
You Are There | The Signing of the Declaration of Independence | Samuel Adams | ||
Eye Witness | The Righteous | Story of a lynch mob, with Henry Jones, Barbara Joyce.[125] | ||
Jimmy Hughes, Rookie Cop | Premiere | Inspector Ferguson | With Wendy Drew.[126] | |
Operation Neptune | (Unknown episodes) | Admiral Bigelow | NBC short-lived fantasy series, with Ted Griffin, Richard Holland, Harold Conklin, and Jim Boles.[62][63] | |
Danger | Windy | Youth lives in his own dream world; with Rod Steiger and Georgianna Johnson.[127] | ||
The Revlon Mirror Theater | One Summer's Rain | Franchot Tone is a playwright with only one long-ago success; with Joseph Anthony, Barbara Baxley.[128] | ||
Circle Theatre | A Story to Whisper | Cartoonist draws comic strip from the lives of real people; with Hildy Parks, Leslie Nielsen.[129] | ||
Kraft Theatre | Keep Our Honor Bright | Harvey Wilson | Live NBC play, with Michael Higgins, James Dean, Addison Richards, Joan Potter.[130] | |
The Web | Strange Sanctuary | With E. G. Marshall, Jack Warden, Marion Nobel.[131] | ||
The Man Behind the Badge | The Nebraska Story | [132] | ||
Danger | The Man with the Gun | With William Prince, Norma Crane.[133] | ||
The Web | The Blue Glass Bottle | With Virginia Gilmore, Bill Sharon.[134] | ||
Span of Time | (TV Movie) | |||
1954 | Medallion Theatre | The Magic Touch | ||
Inner Sanctum | The Stranger | Innkeeper | ||
The Man Behind the Badge | The Ohio State Prison Story | With Leslie Nielsen, Dick Moore.[135] | ||
The Web | The Barrier | |||
Inner Sanctum | The Sound of Birds | Brule | ||
Love Story | Norma Loves Mike | Premiere episode for this anthology series; with Betty Lou Holland, Perry Fiske.[136] | ||
The Steel Hour | The End of Paul Dane | Lane played a "broad-minded cop"; with Robert Preston, Theresa Wright, Warren Stevens.[137] | ||
The Adventures of Ellery Queen | Buck Fever | Sheriff | ||
Inner Sanctum | The Silent Bride | Frisby | ||
The Man Behind the Badge | The Case of the Mutinous Crew | With Mario Gallo, James Bender, and Ernest Parmentier.[138] | ||
The Marriage | Premiere | |||
Circle Theatre | Explosion | Two brothers trapped in coal mine; with Joe Maross, Frank Overton, Alfreda Wallace.[139] | ||
Inner Sanctum | Blind Luck | Brenner | ||
1955 | You Are There | The Death of Stonewall Jackson | ||
You Are There | The First Flight of the Wright Brothers | Samuel P. Langley | Wilbur (James Gregory) and Orville Wright (William Prince) fly at Kitty Hawk.[140] | |
1956 | Crusader | The Secret | Captain Jethro | |
Appointment with Adventure | The Bridge of the Devil | Wallace | ||
Soldiers of Fortune | The Greater Magic | Prof. Winsby Lowe | ||
Alfred Hitchcock Presents | Season 2 Episode 5: "None Are So Blind" | Police Detective | ||
Zane Grey Theater | Stage for Tucson | Marshal Tharpe | ||
Studio 57 | The Blue Wall | McCloud | ||
Crusader | The Cop Killer | Comm. Alfred Ryan | ||
1957 | The 20th Century Fox Hour | End of a Gun | Telegrapher | |
Alfred Hitchcock Presents | Season 2 Episode 18: "The Manacled" | Train Conductor | ||
General Electric Theater | No Skin Off Me | Jasper Jones | ||
Tales of Wells Fargo | The Hasty Gun | Marshal Tom Ogborn | ||
State Trooper | Death on the Rock | Walter Johnson | ||
Alfred Hitchcock Presents | Season 2 Episode 34: "Martha Mason, Movie Star" | Police Detective | ||
Whirlybirds | Fury Canyon | Sheriff Bates | ||
Climax! | Necessary Evil | |||
Perry Mason | The Case of the Drowning Duck | Chief Glass | ||
Alfred Hitchcock Presents | Season 3 Episode 9: "The Young One" | Sheriff Matt | ||
1958 | Sugarfoot | Deadlock | Jed Botts | |
Climax! | Four Hours in White | Luther Reeves | Lane played father to Steve McQueen in this hospital drama. | |
Maverick | The Savage Hills | Marshal | ||
Whirlybirds | Search for an Unknown Man | Sheriff | ||
Mike Hammer | Stay Out of Town | Sheriff Al Miller | ||
M Squad | The Fight | Mel Harmon | ||
Alfred Hitchcock Presents | Season 3 Episode 32: "Listen, Listen.....!" | Father Rafferty | ||
Suspicion | Death Watch | Glen Squires | ||
Have Gun – Will Travel | The Manhunter | Judge | ||
Lassie | The Rocking Chair | Joe Bascom | ||
The Restless Gun | The Nowhere Kid | Josiah Stevens | ||
Wanted Dead or Alive | The Fourth Headstone | Sheriff Sam Gladstone | ||
Playhouse 90 | Heart of Darkness | Griggs | ||
Man with a Camera | Six Faces of Satan | Storekeeper | ||
Tales of Wells Fargo | The Happy Tree | Hank Benson | ||
Lawman | The Master | Cattleman Brady | ||
The Veil | Girl on the Road | Sheriff | ||
1959 | Perry Mason | The Case of the Glittering Goldfish | Harry Tiller | |
Union Pacific | Iron West | Borden | ||
Buckskin | Cousin Casey | Moose | ||
Wagon Train | The Clara Duncan Story | Ron Waldron | [141] | |
The Real McCoys | Insurance Policy | Mr. Simmons | [142] | |
The Texan | The Smiling Loser | W. J. Morgan | ||
M Squad | High School Bride | Jay McCandless | ||
One Step Beyond | Echo | Joe | ||
Schlitz Playhouse | Hostage | |||
Tales of Wells Fargo | Young Jim Hardie | Herman Jackson | ||
Rescue 8 | Dangerous Salvage | Jake Randall | ||
Man with a Camera | The Man Below | Chief of Police | ||
Bourbon Street Beat | Secret of Hyacinth Bayou | Pops Polybe | [143] | |
Tightrope | The Money Fight | Captain Ragland | ||
Sugarfoot | The Gaucho | Mike Travers | ||
Special Agent 7 | Bogus Bonds of Balaam | |||
Television performances 1960–1973
Listed in original broadcast order
Year | Series | Episode | Role | Notes/source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1960 | Bronco | Masquerade | Luke Davis | |
The Alaskans | The Long Pursuit | Doc Williams | ||
The Deputy | The Two Faces of Bob Claxton | Judge Jones | ||
Overland Trail | All the O'Mara's Horses | Rusty Ransom | ||
The Detectives | Little Girl Lost | Johnson | ||
Peter Gunn | Slight Touch of Homicide | Arthur Wilkie | ||
The Twilight Zone | The Mighty Casey | Commissioner | ||
Bat Masterson | Barbary Castle | Marshal | ||
The Clear Horizon | (See Notes) | Sgt Harry Moseby | Daily weekday episodes from July 11, 1960, to March 10, 1961, likely with occasional breaks.[5] | |
Tate | Quiet After the Storm | Jesse | [144] | |
Harrigan and Son | Junior Joins the Law Firm | The Judge | Premiere episode for this series.[145] | |
Alfred Hitchcock Presents | Season 6 Episode 3: "Very Moral Theft" | Mr. Ivers | ||
The Roaring 20's | Burnett's Woman | Commissioner | ||
One Step Beyond | If You See Sally | Mr. Casey | ||
The Real McCoys | The Hermit | Sheriff | ||
Shotgun Slade | The Lady and the Piano | Doctor | ||
1961 | The Bob Cummings Show | Executive Sweet | ||
87th Precint | Lady in Waiting | Sgt Murchison | ||
The Roaring 20's | Another Time, Another War | Commissioner | ||
Bonanza | The Friendship | Warden | ||
1962 | 87th Precinct | Out of Order | The Desk Sergeant | |
Outlaws | A Bit of Glory | Joe | ||
87th Precinct | A Bullet for Katie | Sgt Murchison | ||
Lassie | The Odyssey Part 1 | Mike Finch | ||
Alfred Hitchcock Presents | Season 7 Episode 20: "The Test" | The Judge | ||
The Clear Horizon | (See Notes) | Sgt Harry Moseby | Daily weekday episodes from February 27, 1962, to June 15, 1962, likely with occasional breaks.[84] | |
Adventures in Paradise | The Baby Sitters | Brady | ||
The Tall Man | Phoebe | Trager | [146] | |
The Alfred Hitchcock Hour | Season 1 Episode 4: "I Saw the Whole Thing" | Judge Martin | ||
Sam Benedict | Hear the Mellow Wedding Bells | Court Clerk Kelly | ||
Life Is a Lie, Love Is a Cheat | Court Clerk Kelly | |||
The Bird of Warning | Court Clerk Kelly | |||
Too Many Strangers | Court Clerk Kelly | |||
77 Sunset Strip | The Snow Job Caper | Police Chief Austin | ||
1963 | Sam Benedict | Run Softly, Oh Softly | Court Clerk Kelly | |
The Virginian | The Money Cage | Ezra Griswold | ||
Wagon Train | The Emmett Lawton Story | Del Masters | ||
Death Valley Days | Coffin for a Coward | Billy Johnson | ||
My Three Sons | Total Recall | Skipper Thompson | ||
Arrest and Trial | A Shield Is for Hiding Behind | Wright | ||
Death Valley Days | Deadly Decision | Judge | ||
Temple Houston | Toll the Bell Slowly | Poag | ||
Lassie | Lassie and the Winged Enemy | Freight Train Conductor | ||
The Alfred Hitchcock Hour | Season 2 Episode 9: "The Dividing Wall" | Otto Brandt | ||
1964 | Kraft Suspense Theatre | The Deep End | Doc Stacey | |
Hazel | Scheherazade and Her Fring Pan 1 | Fisherman #1 | ||
Hazel | Scheherazade and Her Fring Pan 2 | Fisherman #1 | ||
Mr. Novak | I'm on the Outside | Lt. Comerford | ||
Kraft Suspense Theatre | A Cruel and Unusual Night | Warden | ||
McHale's Navy | Fuji's Big Romance | Chief Wabango | Perhaps the lowpoint of Lane's television career. | |
1965 | Dr. Kildare | All Brides Should Be Beautiful | Gus Markham | |
Gunsmoke | Seven Hours to Dawn | Johnson | ||
Peyton Place | (1965-11-01) | Jim Fogerty | Few actors in Hollywood escaped doing a bit part in this series. | |
Peyton Place | (1965-11-11) | Jim Fogerty | ||
The F.B.I. | Pound of Flesh | Mayor Russell | ||
1966 | Branded | Nice Day for a Hanging | Sheriff | |
The Fugitive | Coralee | Frank Reynolds | ||
Bonanza | The Oath | Fielding | ||
1967 | Death Valley Days | A Wrangler's Last Ride | Pa Roberts | |
The Big Valley | Time After Midnight | Chairman Gaines | ||
Bonanza | Judgement at Olympus | Judge | ||
Judd, for the Defense | To Love and Stand Mute | Dr. Davis | ||
1968 | Batman | The Joke's on Catwoman | Judge | |
Death Valley Days | Britta Goes Home | Preacher | ||
The Virginian | Seth | Sheriff Calder | Lane's daughter Sara Lane was a regular cast member when he did this episode.[147] | |
Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color | Boomerang, Dog of Many Talents: Part 1 | F. M. Higbee | ||
Judd, for the Defense | In a Puff of Smoke | Magistrate Edgar Brown | ||
Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color | Boomerang, Dog of Many Talents: Part 2 | F. M. Higbee | ||
This Is the Life | Old Smiley | |||
1970 | Gunsmoke | Stark | Bo | |
1971 | Dan August | Prognosis: Homicide | Bearded Janitor | |
1972 | Gunsmoke | Alias Festus Haggen | Sheriff Buckley | |
The Mod Squad | Yesterday's Ashes | The Seadog | ||
1973 | Gunsmoke | The Hanging of Newly O'Brien | Grandpa | |
Notes
- There had been a road company of Mister Roberts for the previous eighteen months.
- His last New York originated TV programs were broadcast in January 1955; his next television work, appearing during summer 1956, would be Hollywood produced.
- The actual second debut was the following day, February 27, as it was pre-empted by a CBS news special on an event with John Glenn, who had returned from his orbital flight the week before.
- It's working title was One in a Million
- Silver had been another of Lane's students at Wisconsin.
- IMDb has this as "The Incident at Story Point", while some contemporary newspaper listings had it as "The Incident at Stony Light".
References
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- 1910 United States Federal Census for J Russell Lane, Illinois > Cook > Chicago Ward 7 > District 0431, retrieved from Ancestry.com
- James Russell Lane, in the U.S., Veterans Administration Master Index, 1917-1940, retrieved from Ancestry.com
- James R Lane, in the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs BIRLS Death File, 1850-2010, retrieved from Ancestry.com
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