Clint Walker(1927-2018)
- Actor
- Soundtrack
Clint Walker was born Norman Eugene Walker in Hartford, southwestern Illinois, to Gladys Huldah (Schwanda), a Czech immigrant, and Paul Arnold Walker, who was from Arkansas. Walker almost single-handedly started the
western craze on TV in the 1950s as Cheyenne Bodie in
Cheyenne (1955). Growing up in the
Depression era meant taking work wherever you could get it, and Walker
found himself working at such jobs as Mississippi River boatman,
carnival roustabout and golf caddy. He quit high school at 16 and at
age 17 joined the Merchant Marine. After the war he worked his way
cross country, including working in the oil fields in Brownwood, Texas,
and wound up in California, where he worked as an undercover agent for
a private detective agency on the Long Beach waterfront. After a while
he took a job as a security officer at the Sands Hotel in Las Vegas. It
was there that he met quite a few Hollywood people who told him that
his size, physique and good looks would serve him well in Hollywood and
that he should go to Los Angeles and give it a try. He met actor
Henry Wilcoxon, who introduced him to
director Cecil B. DeMille, and Walker
found himself playing the part of a Captain of the Guard in
Mười Điều Răn Của Chúa (1956).
Someone from Warner Bros. saw the film, found out that Walker was under
contract to producer Hal B. Wallis, bought
up Walker's contract and gave him the lead in "Cheyenne". The series
was a huge hit and spawned countless other western series, from Warners
and other studios. However, Walker was dissatisfied with the way
Warners was handling his career -- they would let other contract
players make films, for example, but he wasn't allowed to -- and that
triggered a dispute which ended up with him taking a walk from the
show. He and Warners eventually settled their disagreements. When the
show ended Walker began to get supporting parts in features, his
biggest and most successful one being
Tiểu Đội Trừng Giới (1967). He
starred in the well-received
The Night of the Grizzly (1966)
and the not-so-well received
None But the Brave (1965), a
WWII film that was Frank Sinatra's one and
only stab at directing. He also played the lead in
Baker's Hawk (1976), and turned in a
good performance as a villain in the TV movie
Scream of the Wolf (1974).
Lately he and several of his colleagues from "The Dirty Dozen" provided
the voices for the animated film
Small Soldiers (1998).