Morgan Woodward

Woodward as deputy Shotgun Gibbs from The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, 1959.

Morgan Woodward (born September 16, 1925, in Fort Worth, Texas) is an American actor.

He is probably best known for his recurring role on the soap opera Dallas as Marvin "Punk" Anderson. He also played the silent, sunglasses-wearing "man with no eyes", Boss Godfrey (the Walking Boss) in Cool Hand Luke (1967), and has the most guest appearances on Gunsmoke, according to "Gunsmoke" by Barabas.

The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp

One of Woodward's longest television roles was in forty-two episodes between 1958 and 1961 in the ABC television series The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, as the deputy/sidekick "Shotgun" Gibbs. The series stars Hugh O'Brian. In that series, Woodward played a tall, cantankerous, shotgun-toting backwoodsman who eventually became the trusted deputy of lawman Wyatt Earp in his days as a Kansas and later Arizona lawman. Several episodes have comedy scenes about Gibbs and his beloved and supposedly highly intelligent mule, Roscoe. Though often overshadowed by the cool menace of Douglas Fowley's Doc Holliday, Woodward portrayed Gibbs as a solid, trustworthy, and more pragmatic partner to Earp, making Gibbs a character who, though ostensibly rough around the edges, would gradually come to share many of the qualities demonstrated over the years by another trusted television deputy, Ken Curtis' world-weary Festus Haggen on Gunsmoke, who like Shotgun Gibbs also rode a mule. He also made multiple guest appearances on Wagon Train between 1958 and 1965.[1]

Star Trek

Woodward guest starred in two different episodes of the original series of Star Trek as two different characters. In the first-season episode "Dagger of the Mind" (1966), Woodward plays Dr. Simon van Gelder, a deputy director of a facility for the criminally insane. Van Gelder himself becomes a victim of these experiments and is confined as one of the patients. Escaping to the orbiting USS Enterprise, the deranged and incoherent (due to his condition) Van Gelder eventually recovers enough to be able to divulge the nefarious goings-on at the hospital. (This is with the aid of Mr. Spock's "mind meld", which is used for the first time in this episode.)

In articles in the magazines Starlog[2] and Entertainment Weekly, Woodward called the role of Dr. Simon Van Gelder the most physically and emotionally exhausting acting job of his career. Desperate to get out of Westerns and expand his range, he was cast against type for this episode and was so well regarded that he was cast in "The Omega Glory" in the series' second season. Playing Van Gelder did take its toll on his personal life, as he confesses that for three weeks afterwards he was anti-social towards friends and family. He is grateful that this episode opened up whole new opportunities for him.

In the second-season episode, "The Omega Glory", Woodward portrays Captain Ron Tracey, the commander of the starship USS Exeter, a sister ship to the USS Enterprise. Tracey is arrested for violating the United Federation of Planets "Prime Directive", but not before taking Captain Kirk and his landing party hostage in an attempt both to avoid arrest and secure more phaser guns needed to defeat a native group hostile to a second group which Tracey now leads. The commander believes until his arrest that he remains infected by a disease that killed the rest of the Exeter crew but for which he seems to have immunity so long as he remains on the planet, and is convinced a serum for this disease will be able to provide virtual immortality for humankind, as planet natives are able to live for hundreds of years disease-free, despite Doctor McCoy later finding that the cause of their longevity is evolutionary and not pathogenic.

Dallas

Woodward was a familiar face on the television drama series Dallas from 1980-1989. His recurring role was Marvin "Punk" Anderson, a friend of Jock Ewing's, and a member of the "cartel" of oil barons. As the series progressed, Woodward's role became that of an advisor to the Ewing sons, and a voice of reason. His character's wife Mavis was played by character actress Alice Hirson. Hirson and Woodward were written out of the show during the 1989 season for budgetary reasons although the characters were mentioned in the following last two seasons of the show.

TV appearances

Woodward made many other television guest appearances, including:

Selected filmography

References

  1. "Morgan Woodward villain in films". The Deseret News. August 8, 1973. Retrieved May 9, 2014.
  2. Starlog (USA) May 1988, Vol. 11, Iss. 130, pg. 72-73, by: Mark Phillips, "Morgan Woodard: Keeping Sane"

External links

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