Frederick Coffin(1943-2003)
- Actor
A solid, reliable working actor since the early 70s, Frederick Coffin
was born January 16, 1943 to actress
Winifred Coffin, as one of five
siblings. Educated at Western Reserve Academy, in Hudson, Ohio, Coffin
was both an excellent athlete and student. It was at WRA that he first
began theater studies; he graduated in 1961 with a BA in theater. He
enrolled at the University of Michigan in 1962 intending to play
football, but changed his focus to acting after deciding to perform in
a musical. He would graduate from the U of M with a Masters in Theater.
In the early 70s, he would begin to perform in plays including "Much
Ado About Nothing", "As You Like It", and "King Lear". He would also
start doing guest shots on TV series around this time, amassing a great
many credits in the medium, appearing on such shows as
Kojak (1973),
Hill Street Blues (1981),
Moonlighting (1985),
The Twilight Zone (1985),
Dallas (1978),
Hunter (1984) and
L.A. Law (1986) - to name only
several. In the late 70s, he would start to lend his engaging,
professional, stolid presence to such features as
King of the Gypsies (1978),
Mother's Day (1980) (in which he was
billed as 'Holden McGuire') and
Alone in the Dark (1982),
graduating to major supporting parts in films such as
The Bedroom Window (1987),
Shoot to Kill (1988),
Hard to Kill (1990) (in which he was
particularly fine as Steven Seagals old
friend), Thế giới của Wayne (1992) and
Định Danh (2003), which would sadly turn
out to be his final feature film. He would die on July 31, 2003 in Los
Angeles of lung cancer, survived by wife
Barbara Monte-Britton, whom he
married in 1977, and by his three brothers.