Robert Lansing

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Biography

Robert Lansing was an actor whose tall stature, tough looks and commanding manner belied an often thoughtful and introspective screen personality. Not that acting had necessarily been his only choice - there was jazz. As a youngster, he played drums with various dance bands and was bitten by the acting bug after performing in and directing high school plays, winning the Southern California Shakespearean Festival for dramatic acting at the age of fifteen. Then came two years of army service in Japan, where he worked with the Armed Forces Radio Service. After his discharge, he hitched a ride to New York, but stopped over in Ft. Wayne, Indiana, to spend two years as a radio announcer and act in local theatre. Once finally arrived in the 'Big Apple', he became just another struggling hopeful, frequenting the soup kitchen on 6th Avenue and travelling to auditions. Like countless others in the same position, he had to do in-between jobs to make ends meet, which in his case meant, working in a plastics factory and as a hat check attendant at a Latin Quarter nightclub. His first big break came, when he was hired to play the part of Dunbar in 'Stalag 17' on Broadway in May 1951. This was followed by roles in several prestige plays, including 'Cyrano de Bergerac' and 'Richard III', but resulted neither in recognition nor financial reward. By 1956, he was still living with his wife and child in a vermin-infested tenement on Second Avenue. Considering himself the last 'no-name leading man' in New York, Lansing decided to return to California and try his luck in films. After a few small parts in TV anthology dramas, he landed his first leading role on the big screen as a scientist who stumbles upon a method to penetrate solid matter .

  • Primary profession
  • Actor·soundtrack
  • Country
  • United States
  • Nationality
  • American
  • Gender
  • Male
  • Birth date
  • 17 October 1864
  • Place of birth
  • Watertown (city)· New York
  • Death date
  • 1928-10-30
  • Death age
  • 66
  • Place of death
  • New York City
  • Cause of death
  • Natural causes
  • Spouses
  • Emily McLaughlin
  • Education
  • Amherst College
  • Knows language
  • English language
  • Member of
  • Democratic Party

Movies

TV

Books

Trivia

1991 to 1993: President of The Players, the famous theatrical club in New York City.

Borrowed his stage moniker from the capital city of Michigan.

Rugged American leading man of 1950s Broadway and 1960s standard film and television action drama -- the star of several television series ( "12 OClock High" and "The Man Who Never Was" among others).

Daughter with Hardy: Alice Lucille now known as Alyiki.

Son with Emily McLaughlin : Robert Frederick Orin Lansing.

The "Star Trek" episode "Assignment: Earth", in which Lansing plays a human raised on a distant planet and sent to Earth as a troubleshooter, was written as the springboard for a spin-off series. The new series was to feature more adventures of Gary Seven (Lansing) and Roberta Lincoln (Teri Garr ), but it never came about.

He made guest appearances on both of the longest running prime time dramas in United States television history: "Gunsmoke" and "Law & Order" .

Appearing with then wife Gari Hardy on It Takes Two, revealed that she wore her wedding ring on her middle finger because she was of Greek heritage.

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