Gene Evans
Known for: Acting
Born: July 10, 1922 in Holbrook, Arizona, USA - Died: March 31, 1998
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Gene Evans (July 11, 1922 - April 1, 1998) was an American actor. He was born in Holbrook, Arizona, but reared in Colton, California. His acting career began while he was serving in World War II. He performed with a theatrical troupe of GIs in Europe. Evans made his film debut in 1947 and appeared in dozens of movies and television programs. He specialized in playing tough guys like cowboys, sheriffs, convicts and sergeants. Evans appeared in numerous films produced, directed, and written by Samuel Fuller. In his memoirs A Third Face, Fuller described meeting Evans when casting his Korean War film The Steel Helmet in 1950. Fuller threw an M1 Garand rifle at Evans, who caught it and inspected it as a soldier would have done. Evans had been a U.S. Army engineer in the war. Fuller kept Evans and refused John Wayne for the role. and fighting to keep him despite Robert L. Lippert and his partner wanting Larry Parks for the role. Fuller walked off the film and would not return until Evans was reinstated. Evans also appeared in Fuller's Fixed Bayonets!, Hell and High Water, Shock Corridor and lost thirty pounds to play the lead in Park Row. Evans portrayed the authoritarian but wise father, Rob McLaughlin, on the 1956-1957 television series My Friend Flicka, based on a Western novel and film of the same name set in Wyoming. He appeared with Anita Louise (1915–1970) as his wife, Nell, Johnny Washbrook (born 1944) as his son, Ken, and fellow character actor Frank Ferguson (1899–1978), as the ranch handyman, Gus Broeberg, who addressed Evans as "Captain". In 1958, Evans co-starred as Major Al Arthur in the film Damn Citizen based on the life of crusading Louisiana State Police superintendent Francis Grevemberg. Keith Andes starred as Grevemberg. In the fall of 1976, Evans starred in the eleven-episode CBS adventure series Spencer's Pilots, with Christopher Stone, Todd Susman, and Britt Leach. In January 1979, Evans appeared as Garrison Southworth in one episode of CBS's Dallas in January 1979. He appeared in ten episodes of CBS's Gunsmoke with James Arness, including "The Snow Train" and "Tatum". In 1965, he guest starred as Jake Burnett in the episode "Vendetta" of ABC's western The Legend of Jesse James starring Christopher Jones. Two years later, he appeared as Deedricks in the episode "Breakout" of another ABC western, Custer, starring Wayne Maunder in the title role. In the late 1980s, Evans appeared on stage as the gruesome Papa in the stage production Papa is All, directed by playwright Tommy F. Scott in Jackson, Tennessee. He retired to a farm in Tennessee following his role in the original film version of Walking Tall. Description above from the Wikipedia article Gene Evans, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Known for
Showing 24 of 126 titles
Nevada Smith
Sam Sand
Armored Car Robbery
William 'Ace' Foster
Criss Cross
Donlan (uncredited)
Hell and High Water
Chief Holter
Support Your Local Sheriff!
Tom Danby
The Ballad of Cable Hogue
Clete
Ace in the Hole
Deputy Sheriff
Walking Tall
Sheriff Al Thurman
Shock Corridor
Boden
It Happens Every Spring
Batter Mueller (uncredited)
Park Row
Phineas Mitchell
Crashout
Maynard 'Monk' Collins
Operation Petticoat
Chief Molumphry
Lassie: The New Beginning
Sheriff Marsh
The War Wagon
Deputy Hoag
The Sad Sack
Sgt. Major Elmer Pulley
The Giant Behemoth
Steve Karnes
Donovan's Brain
Dr. Frank Schratt
The Long Wait
Servo
Assigned to Danger
Joey
The Bravados
John Butler
Young and Wild
Det. Sgt. Fred Janusz
Shootout in a One-Dog Town
Gabe
The Steel Helmet
Sergeant Zack