Though typically overshadowed by Hollywood's A-list, there were respectable performances by numerous actors and actresses who never became major film stars. A common occurrence was their transition to the new medium of television, often becoming familiar faces in homes across America. These periodic posts offer insight into their transition.
Richard
Denning: Louis Albert Heindrich Denninger, Jr. (1914-98)
Richard
Denning got his start in Hollywood starring in a few popular radio
programs of the 1940s and early 1950s. The most famous was being
opposite Lucille Ball in the radio comedy, My
Favorite Husband,
which
set the groundwork for her Lucy Ricardo character. But with no face
for radio, the handsome Denning soon was singled out, first as a bit
player then gained starring roles in mostly low-budget films. He was
always fun to watch in spite of being cast in some forgettable films.
Denning
was successful at garnering many supporting film roles during his
early years in Hollywood as in the musical comedy, The Farmer's
Daughter (1940), or The Glass Key (1942), and Black Beauty (1945) all
the while rubbing elbows with some major film stars. He was the lead
in numerous routine B-movies where he often played cool, easygoing
characters able to hold his own in a fistfight. The 6’ Denning
could deliver sarcastic quips with coolness in a Dick Powell fashion.
Perhaps his most infamous role was in Creature from the Black Lagoon
(1954) supporting Richard Carlson and Julie Adams followed by his
lead in another science-fiction cult classic, Target Earth (1954). He
had a nice turn in The Crooked Web (1955) as an undercover government
agent routing out a German war crimes officer.
Television
credits began to pile up with the lighthearted crime show, Mr. &
Mrs. North (1952-54). Denning played a mystery magazine publisher
who—along with his wife—moonlight as amateur detectives, echoing
the Thin Man film series of the 1930s. The show was also a follow-up
to a decade-old film as well as a radio mystery program of the same
name. Denning kept busy with lead roles in the series The Flying
Doctor (1959) and as the private investigator, Michael Shayne
(1960-61) tooling around Miami in a 1960 Oldsmobile convertible.
Beyond his screen time, the show was a dud. The comedy dud, Karen
(1964-65), was next followed by his being called out of retirement to
play Hawaii’s governor in seventy-three episodes of the classic
police show, Hawaii Five-O (1968-80).
Note:
Richard Denning was born in Poughkeepsie, New York but his family
moved to Los Angeles before his second birthday. He attended Manual
Arts College earning a Master of Business Administration degree from
Woodbury Business College in Los Angeles. Denning married horror film
and B-movie actress Evelyn Ankers in 1942. Their marriage lasted
until her death in 1985.
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