Robert Lansing, intense and unhappy with television

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – ‘Television is just awful,’ Robert Lansing told me. ‘I’ve done a lot of it but not from choice. I’ve done an awful lot of garbage; an awful lot of lousy things. I’m not saying I’m ashamed but I think my career is almost one-hundred percent ahead of me. I’ve fouled up until now.’

By 1974 when I interviewed him for the Windsor Star, he had many screen credits, starring in TV series such as ‘Twelve O’Clock High’ and ‘87th Precinct’ and movies including ‘The 4-D Man’ and ‘The Grissom Gang’.

Lansing, who was born on this day in 1928, was in Detroit starring with Barbara Bel Geddes (left) in the Jean Kerr comedy ‘Finishing Touches’ for four weeks at the Fisher Theater following a hit Broadway run.

A dynamic actor with a powerful forehead and intense eyes, he was shorter than he appeared onscreen, as most actors are, but still an imposing presence. His serious expression turned only occasionally to a broad, warm smile as he spoke in his hotel apartment about his decision to leave television.

He’d had a good run in the early Sixties as Det. Steve Carella in ‘87th Precinct’ based on the crime stories of Evan Hunter writing as Ed McBain but he wasn’t satisfied with it. 

‘Not really. We had some of the elements Evan had but we didn’t do them nearly so well,’  he said. ‘The first mystery, which we never explained, was why Steve’s wife was a deaf-mute. Gregory Walcott’s part originally was a heavy, your token bad cop, but we made him a good cop.’ (photo left, l-r , Norman Fell, Lansing, Ron Harper, Gregory Walcott)

He had lasted just one season as Brig.Gen. Frank Savage (Gregory Peck’s role in the movie) in a TV version of ‘Twelve O’Clock High’ (below) and he had a sour view of the state of network television in general. ‘Television hasn’t changed,’ he said. ‘Most people who work in television are aware of this. “All in the Family” is a cop-out. It’s pretending to be grown-up. Archie Bunker uses the “nice” colloquialisms for his racism not the real bigoted bullshit. I don’t know any actors off-hand who like television. Possibly Jim Arness (‘Gunsmoke’), who’s a marvellous guy, or Mike Connors (‘Mannix’). No, not Mike, he wanted a big movie career. They’re not doing it because they want to but television is a medium that cannot offend, not the the public or the advertisers, It’s all rushed. You don’t have the time to be better.’

He cited Peter Falk in ‘Columbo’. ‘He has a constant fight to keep his show up,’ Lansing said. ‘Television won’t get any better until people begin to realise that the screen in the corner is not free. Maybe the we can get into pay-TV and really start doing something.’

Lansing was almost as disillusioned anout the movie business as he was about television. Then in his late 40s, Lansing got into acting as a young man. Born in San Diego, he said, ‘I was one of those Depression kids. We went all over. I was interested in acting since I was a kid. I did summer stock and so on, and finally Broadway. I got into pictures in 1951. I was a stand-in and stuntman for Dick Haymes in a picture called “St. Benny the Dip”.’

He hadn’t made a favourite movie yet. ‘“The 4-D Man” was fun and I thought “The Grissom Gang” (below) was a marvellous picture but it didn’t go anywhere,’ he said. ‘Robert Aldrich, who made “The Grissom Gang”, is the finest director. I loved his last picture, “Emperor of the North”. But the industry is in an horrendous state. It’s just a part of what’s happening in the United States. A year ago, there were about twenty-thousand actors in the Screen Actors Guild. Of those, about three-thousand were making above the poverty level. I wasn’t on television last season and I won’t be on next season. If I did all the things I was offered, I could earn a great amount of money but I don’t want to any more. So you cut down your personal overhead, sell the boat, get out of Beverly Hills. I have three more months touring with this play and then I’m going off to some island in the Pacific to sit down for a while.’

Lansing’s screen appearances were sporadic after that with just three series, ‘Automan’ with Desi Arnaz Jr., ‘The Equalizer’ with Edward Woodward and ‘Kung Fu: The Legend Continues’ with David Carradine.

He died of lung cancer aged 66 in 1994.

 

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That time on the ‘Hill Street Blues’ set with Charles Haid

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – ‘You don’t say Hill and you don’t say Renko. You say Hill and Renko’. Charles Haid (above right) stated the case for one of the most durable partnerships on television in the 1980s on the hit cop show ‘Hill Street Blues’. Continue reading

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How Tina Turner dealt with her troubled past

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – ‘As crazy as it was,’ said Tina Turner, ‘I laugh about it. ’ The queen of rock’n’roll, who has died aged 83, was talking about her difficult childhood in Tennessee and her abusive marriage to rocker Ika Turner. Continue reading

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When Joan Collins kicked me off the set of ‘Dynasty’

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Joan Collins was pointing at me. I was on the set of the hit primetime soap opera ’Dynasty’. It’s important to make yourself as invisible as possible on a busy TV soundstage so I stood quietly at the rear. TV shows proceed at a rapid pace and performers often need to be prompted by a floor manager. I wasn’t surprised to see Collins blow her lines. Continue reading

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Why British comic Eric Sykes didn’t become a movie star

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Eric Sykes, who was born on May 4 one hundred years ago, was one of Britain’s most treasured comedians on radio and television but he might have become a leading actor in movies too as ‘The Liquidator’.

English thriller writer John Gardner wrote more than fifty novels including fourteen original James Bond yarns at the request of the Ian Fleming estate.

‘The Liquidator’, his first novel published in 1964, was a smart and funny spoof about a reluctant secret agent named Boysie Oakes. Mistakenly thought to be a ruthless killer but actually a coward who hates guns, he hires a real assassin named Griffen to bump off people in order to keep the rewards coming.  Continue reading

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That time Michelle Pfeiffer thought she’d sworn on live TV

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Michelle Pfeiffer was worried that she’d dropped an f-bomb on live television.

The actress, who turns 65 today, came to meet me right after she appeared on CNN to talk about the John Landis black comedy ‘Into the Night’ in which she played a wild-child who discovers the dark side of Los Angeles. She’d said she knew something about that and told of an encounter that occurred when she was just getting started as an actress. A man offered her some cash and an all-expenses paid 24-hour trip. She turned him down. Continue reading

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Composer Patrick Doyle on his triumph over cancer

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Anyone who has spent time with film composer Patrick Doyle (above with wife Lesley and me) knows that he is one of the funniest men alive. Not so many know that his sense of humour played a large part in keeping him from an early death. Continue reading

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When Dar Robinson leapt from Toronto’s CN Tower

STICK, Dar Robinson, Burt Reynolds, Jose Perez, 1985. ©Universal

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – The perfect word to describe legendary movie stuntman Dar Robinson, who was born on this day in 1947: unfuckwithable. It allowed him to create thrilling stunts in films such as ‘Stick’, ‘Sharkey’s Machine” (below)), ‘Papillon’ and ‘Magnum Force’ and combined with a bright smile and killer pickup line, it made him catnip to the ladies. Continue reading

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Seven Michael Caine guilty favourites …

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Michael Caine, who is still making films in his 90s with ‘The Great Escaper’ due out this year, has made so many movies that some tend to get lost. Here are seven I’ve always found worth a watch even though they are of varying quality. Continue reading

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Why Michael Caine faced every film with dread

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Almost forty years ago, I created a weekly movie supplement in Canadian TV Guide called Bigscreen. I wanted a big name for the first edition and Hollywood publicist Jerry Pam facilitated a Q&A with his longtime client, Michael Caine. As Caine turns 90 today, here’s what he had to say when he was nominated for an Academy Award for ‘Educating Rita’ (above with Julie Walters). Continue reading

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