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Ed Nelson

AKA: Edwin Stafford Nelson
Birthday: 1928-12-21
Died: 2014-08-09
Birthplace: New Orleans, Louisiana, USA


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Edwin Stafford Nelson (born December 21, 1928) is an American actor. Nelson has appeared in numerous television shows, more than fifty motion pictures, and hundreds of stage productions. Until 2005, he was teaching acting and screenwriting in his native New Orleans at two local universities there. Hurricane Katrina prompted him to move his family to Sterlington near Monroe in Ouachita Parish in northeastern Louisiana. Nelson began acting while attending Tulane University in New Orleans. He left college after two years to study at the New York School of Radio and Television Technique. After graduating, he took a position as a director at WDSU-TV in New Orleans. By 1956, acting became his central focus and he moved to the Los Angeles area. Early in his career he worked with famed B-movie producer Roger Corman on such Corman films as Cry Baby Killers, A Bucket of Blood, Teenage Cave Man and Attack of the Crab Monsters. In 1958 he participated in Bruno VeSota's science fiction horror film The Brain Eaters. His early television career featured many guest starring roles in such series as The Fugitive, Gunsmoke, Harbor Command, Tombstone Territory, Tightrope, The Blue Angels (as arrogant flight instructor Lieutenant Dayl Martin), Laramie, COronado 9, The Eleventh Hour, Bonanza, Thriller (US TV series), and Channing, an ABC drama about college life. In 1964 he won his most famous role portraying Dr. Michael Rossi on the ABC drama Peyton Place, which ran from 1964 to 1969. Nelson's fellow cast members included Mia Farrow, Ryan O'Neal, and Dorothy Malone. Dr. Rossi proved to be so popular that by 1968, he became the lead actor on the show. Nelson reprised his role in two made-for-TV movies, Murder in Peyton Place and Peyton Place: The Next Generation. After Peyton Place ended, Nelson worked in many more productions of all varieties, including starring role in many movies of the week, a second TV series, "The Silent Force," and a popular morning talk show which he hosted for three years. Soon after, Nelson struck gold with his critically acclaimed portrayal of elusive pit crew chief Robert Denby in the hit film Riding with Death (1976), earning him several prestigious accolades and legions of devoted fans. He portrayed a dangerous impostor in the adventure movie For the Love of Benji (1977). During the 1980s, Nelson took on the role of Senator Mark Denning in the daytime soap Capitol. Nelson also spent a couple of years as Harry Truman onstage replacing James Whitmore for the National Tour of "Give 'Em Hell, Harry." While living in Los Angeles, Nelson was an active member of the Screen Actors Guild and was elected to the union board for many years. Nelson is a long-standing member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and continues a long tradition of participation in voting for the Academy Awards. In 1999, Nelson returned to Tulane University to finish credits toward his undergraduate degree, which he completed the following year at the age of seventy-one. Nelson continues to act as the opportunity arises. He and his wife of fifty-eight years, Patsy, enjoy semi-retirement visiting his six children and fourteen grandchildren. Description above from the Wikipedia article Ed Nelson, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Filmography

Born to Be Sold
Character: Carl Strickland
A Bucket of Blood
Character: Art Lacroix

Attack of the Crab Monsters
Character: Ensign Quinlan
Airport 1975
Character: Major John Alexander
Time to Run
Character: Warren Cole

Carnival Rock
Character: Cannon
New Orleans Uncensored
Character: Charlie
The Brain Eaters
Character: Dr. Paul Kettering

The Boneyard
Character: Jersey Callum
Devil's Partner
Character: Nick Richards / Pete Jensen

Night of the Blood Beast
Character: Dave Randall
The Girl, the Gold Watch & Everything
Character: Joseph Locordolos
Houston, We've Got a Problem
Character: Gene Kranz, Flight Director

Deadly Weapon
Character: General Stone
The Man from Galveston
Character: Cole Marteen
The Screaming Woman
Character: Carl Nesbitt

The Young Captives
Character: Norm Britt
Anatomy of a Seduction
Character: Mark Kane
Along Came a Spider
Character: Dr. Martin Becker

A Little Game
Character: Paul Hamilton
Runaway!
Character: Nick Staffo
T-Bird Gang
Character: Alex Hendricks

Valley of the Redwoods
Character: Dino Michaelis
Murder in Peyton Place
Character: Dr. Michael Rossi
Superdome
Character: George Beldridge

Linda
Character: Paul Reston
Who Am I?
Character: General Sharman
Midway
Character: Admiral Harry Pearson

Bayou
Character: Etienne (as Edwin Nelson)
Enola Gay: The Men, the Mission, the Atomic Bomb
Character: President Harry S. Truman

Riding with Death
Character: Robert Denby
Doctors' Private Lives
Character: Dr. Mike Wise
Sworn to Silence
Character: Victor Handler

Judgment at Nuremberg
Character: Captain at Nightclub Announcing Call-up of Officers (uncredited)
Leave Yesterday Behind
Character: Mr. Clarkson
I, Mobster
Character: Sid - Henchman (uncredited)

Cries of Silence
Character: Dr. August Claiborne
Swamp Women
Character: Police Sergeant
Acapulco Gold
Character: Ray Hollister

The Fatal Impulse
Character: Brundage
The Crash of Flight 401
Character: Philip Mulwray
The Return of Frank Cannon
Character: Mike Danvers

Teenage Cave Man
Character: Blonde Tribe Member
For the Love of Benji
Character: Chandler Dietrich

Police Headquarters
Character: Lt. Calvin Zenger
Peyton Place: The Next Generation
Character: Dr. Michael Rossi
Runaway Jury
Character: George Dressler

Help Wanted: Male
Character: George Dobbs
The Cry Baby Killer
Character: Rick Connor
Soldier in the Rain
Character: James Priest

That's the Way of the World
Character: Carlton James
Police Academy 3: Back in Training
Character: Governor Neilson
Rock All Night
Character: Pete

Teenage Doll
Character: Police Officer 'Dutch' / Blind Man
She Gods of Shark Reef
Character: Guard (uncredited)