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Robert Rockwell

AKA: Bob Rockwell
Birthday: 1920-10-15
Died: 2003-01-25
Birthplace: Chicago, Illinois, USA


Robert Rockwell was an American stage, film, radio and television actor. He is best known for playing the handsome, but awkward biology teacher Philip Boynton in the radio and television sitcom Our Miss Brooks opposite Eve Arden. A native of Lake Bluff, Illinois, Rockwell studied at the Pasadena Playhouse, from which he obtained a master's degree. During World War II he enlisted in the US Navy for four years serving in Washington D.C. Dramatic roles often eluded him, however, after beginning his career as a contract player for Republic Studios he appeared, over his almost 50-year acting career, in more than 350 television episodes and, on stage, opposite José Ferrer in the 1946 Broadway production of Cyrano de Bergerac, and with Ginger Rogers during the 1960s in a San Diego production of Whitfield Cook's play A More Perfect Union. He appeared in the first Superman television show episode as Clark Kent's father, Jor-El in 1952. He appeared in a 1959 Perry Mason episode "The case of the Deadly Toy" as love interest to the defendant Claire Allison as Dick Benedict. He starred in the 1961 Perry Mason episode "The Case of the Misguided Missile" as an Air Force officer court-martialled on a murder charge. He later starred in the 1962 Perry Mason episodes "The Case of the Lurid Letter" as Everett Rixby, a high school principal, and the murderer Cole B. Troy in "The Case of the Shapely Shadow". He also appeared as Ed Purvis in the 1965 episode Perry Mason episode "The Case of the Candy Queen". Rockwell starred in his own ABC western-themed television series, The Man from Blackhawk in the 1959-1960 season. Rockwell was cast as the Blackhawk Insurance Company's key investigator, Sam Logan, who is assigned to weed out fraud in the payment of claims. He also played Sam Thompson in Thompson's Ghost, Tom Bennett in The Bill Cosby Show[4]:106 and Officer Russo in Adam-12. In 1967 he played a littering tourist in the Lassie episode "Lassie's Litter Bit", an iconic episode which earned a trip for Lassie to the White House to shake hands with then First Lady "Ladybird" Johnson who had used the famous collie in her Keep America Beautiful Campaign. Rockwell was a founding member of the California Artists Radio Theatre. He played standard leads in a couple of anti-Communist-era features, including Republic's The Red Menace, in which he is cast as a returning veteran of World War II, who is duped by communists. Later in his career, he appeared on episodes of Petticoat Junction, Growing Pains, and Beverly Hills, 90210. His appearances in commercials and voiceovers totaled more than 200, most notably as the armchair grandfather treating his grandson to a piece of candy in the 1995 version of the Werthers Original candy spot.

Filmography

Belle of Old Mexico
Character: Kip Armitage III
Unmasked
Character: Detective Lt. James 'Jim' Webster

Espionage Target: You
Character: Agent (uncredited)
The Red Menace
Character: Bill Jones
A Letter to Nancy
Character: Pastor

Our Miss Brooks
Character: Phillip 'Phil' Boynton
Trial Without Jury
Character: Police Lt. Bill Peters
Federal Agent at Large
Character: Dr. Ross Carrington

Destination Big House
Character: Dr. Walter Phillips
Sol Madrid
Character: Chief Danvers
Lonely Heart Bandits
Character: Police Lt. Carroll

The Blonde Bandit
Character: Dist. Atty. Devron
The Frogmen
Character: Lt. Bill Doyle

Lassies Abenteuer in Alaska
Character: Dean Chalmers

Lassie: The miracle
Character: Will Thorne
Murder in Texas
Character: Parker
Alias the Champ
Character: Ron Peterson

Just for You
Character: John Ransome
Women from Headquarters
Character: Gates
Lassie: The Adventures of Neeka
Character: Dean Chalmers (archive footage)

You Gotta Stay Happy
Character: Eddie
Turn the Other Cheek
Character: Ben Hanson
The War of the Worlds
Character: Forest Ranger at Crash Site (uncredited)

Hell Hath No Fury
Character: Mr. Stewart
The Prince Who Was a Thief
Character: (uncredited)
Prisoners in Petticoats
Character: Mark Hampton