Jack Taylor(II)
- Actor
- Writer
- Additional Crew
Jack Taylor was born as George Brown Randall on October 21, 1936. Tall,
slim, and handsome, with a lean face, a pencil thin mustache, and a
distinguished air about him, Taylor began his acting career in the
early 1950's on "The Jack Benny Show," in which he co-starred with Marilyn
Monroe. Jack also had roles on the TV shows "Sheena, Queen of the
Jungle" and "Adventures of Captain Grief." He then went to Mexico and
acted in a few stage plays. Taylor subsequently appeared in such
Mexican horror pictures as "The Curse of Nostradamus" and "The Monsters
Demolisher." In addition, he worked for reigning master Mexican horror
directors Frederico Curiel and Alphonso Corona Blake. Jack next moved
to Spain in the early 60s. He has an uncredited bit part in the big
budget historical epic "Cleopatra." Taylor achieved his greatest
enduring cult popularity with his memorably sleazy portrayals of
elegant, but decadent aristocratic types in a handful of entertainingly
trashy Jess Franco exploitation features that include the trippy
"Succubus," "Eugenie ... the Story of Her Journey Into Perversion,"
"Female Vampire," "Sex Charade," and "Voodoo Passion." Besides Franco,
Jack has acted in movies for directors Leon Klimovsky, Armando de
Ossorio, Jose Larraz, and Juan Piquer Simon. Among Taylor's most
notable parts are morally dubious voyeur "hero" Luis in the
terrifically twisted "The Vampires' Night Orgy," archaeologist
Professor Jonathan Grant in "Night of the Sorcerors," a priest who
Arnold Schwarzenegger beats up for his robes in the exciting
rough'n'tumble fantasy action treat "Conan the Barbarian," sniveling
gay college professor Arthur Brown in the outrageously gory slasher
schlocker "Pieces," a stern whaling ship captain in Monte Hellman's
fine "Iguana," and suave rare book collector Victor Fargas in Roman
Polanski's excellent "The Ninth Gate." Jack
Taylor continued to act in films with pleasing regularity well into his 70's.