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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1957
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Stacy Harris (July 26, 1918 – March 13, 1973) was a Canadian-born actor with hundreds of film and television appearances. His name is often found spelled Stacey Harris.
Harris was an Army pilot whose leg was injured in a plane crash less than six months after he enlisted in 1937. That injury prevented him from re-enlisting when World War II began, but he served with the American Volunteer Group as an ambulance driver and with the French Foreign Legion as a dispatch rider. Before becoming an actor, he held a variety of jobs, including newspaper reporter, boxer, sailor, and artist.
Harris played varied characters, often villains, on various programs produced by Jack Webb's Mark VII Limited, such as Dragnet, Noah's Ark, GE True, Adam-12, and Emergency!.
Harris guest starred in the religion anthology series, Crossroads, and played a gangster in the 1956 time travel television episode of the anthology series Conflict entitled "Man from 1997" opposite James Garner and Charles Ruggles. Thereafter, he appeared as Whit Lassiter in the 1958 episode "The Man Who Waited" of the NBC children's western series, Buckskin. He guest starred as Colonel Nicholson in the 1959 episode "A Night at Trapper's Landing" of the NBC western series, Riverboat, starring Darren McGavin.
Harris appeared too in three syndicated series, Whirlybirds, starring Kenneth Tobey, Sheriff of Cochise and U.S. Marshal, both with John Bromfield, and as the character Ed Miller in the episode "Mystery of the Black Stallion" of the western series, Frontier Doctor, starring Rex Allen. He was cast in two episodes of the David Janssen crime drama, Richard Diamond, Private Detective.
Harris in 1958 portrayed Max Bowen in "The Hemp Tree" and in 1959 as Abel Crowder in "Rough Track to Payday", episodes of the CBS western series, The Texan, starring Rory Calhoun.
In 1960, Harris was cast as a drummer named Cramer in the episode "Fair Game" of the ABC western series, The Rebel, starring Nick Adams. Harris appeared in three episodes of CBS's Perry Mason, playing the role of murder victim Frank Curran in "The Case of the Married Moonlighter" (1958), Perry's client Frank Brooks in "The Case of the Lost Last Act" (1959), and murderer Frank Brigham in "The Case of the Crying Comedian" in 1961.
In 1969, Harris played the corrupt and cowardly Mayor Ackerson of the since ghost town of Helena, Texas, in the episode "The Oldest Law" of the syndicated television series, Death Valley Days, hosted by Robert Taylor not long before Taylor's own death. Popular character actor Jim Davis played Colonel William G. Butler (1831-1912), who takes revenge on the town after its citizens refuse to disclose the killer of Butler's son, Emmett, who died from a stray bullet from a saloon brawl. Butler arranges for the San Antonio and Aransas Pass Railway to bypass Helena; instead Karnes City, south of San Antonio, becomes the seat of government of Karnes County. Tom Lowell (born 1941) played Emmett Butler, and Tyler McVey was cast as Parson Blake in this episode.
Harris died March 13, 1973, at the age of 54 in Los Angeles, California of an apparent heart attack. CLR
Gender
Male
Birthday
July 26, 1918
Died
March 13, 1973
Birthplace
Big Timber, Quebec, Canada
Also Known As
Cast a Long Shadow
1959
O'Hara, United States Treasury: Operation Cobra
1971
Sylvia
1965
Brainstorm
1965
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World
1963
The D.A.: Conspiracy to Kill
1971
An American Dream
1966
The Redhead from Wyoming
1953
The Great Sioux Uprising
1953
The Mountain
1956
Bloody Mama
1970
The Great Sioux Massacre
1965
Three Lives
1953
The Hunters
1958
Companions in Nightmare
1968
Good Day for a Hanging
1959
Countdown
1967
His Kind of Woman
1951
Raintree County
1957
Dragnet
1954
+ 9 more movies
Perry Mason
1957
Perry Mason
1957
Perry Mason
1957
Bonanza
1959
Bonanza
1959
Bonanza
1959
Bonanza
1959
The Alfred Hitchcock Hour
1962
The Alfred Hitchcock Hour
1962
Wagon Train
1957
Wagon Train
1957
Wagon Train
1957
Have Gun, Will Travel
1957
Ironside
1967
Mannix
1967
Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre
1956
Adam-12
1968
Adam-12
1968
Adam-12
1968
The Virginian
1962
+ 44 more TV shows