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Related: About this forumOn this day, September 18, 1951, "The Day the Earth Stood Still" was released.
It's my favorite movie. I have a lot to add, but I have some work to get to. I have enough time to link to some videos.
Mon Jun 29, 2020: Born on this day, June 29, 1911: Bernard Herrmann.
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On this day, September 18, 1951, "The Day the Earth Stood Still" was released. (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Sep 2020
OP
mitch96
(14,607 posts)1. Loved that movie also.. When I was a kid it so impressed me that I memorized what to say to
Gort if he ever showed up in my bedroom!! Michael Renne was such a class act in this movie..
m
mahatmakanejeeves
(60,684 posts)2. Here's an article about Billy Gray, who was in TDTESS.
I emailed him about something a few years ago. He wrote back. He's still around.
People
No Seeds, No Stems: Pure Bud
Sixty Years After the Cancellation of Father Knows Best, Billy Gray Looks Back on His Years As a Child Actor, the TV Series That Made Him a Star, and the Scandal That Derailed His Career
Billy Gray, right, in Father Knows Best. | Credit: Screen Gems/Kobal/Shutterstock
By Steve Uhler
Sun Sep 06, 2020 | 7:57am
To generations of fans, Father Knows Best (1954-1960) remains the gold standard of TV family sitcoms. Depicting the everyday trials and tribulations of the fictional Anderson family in the small town of Springfield, the show proved so popular it remains on the air in syndication over half a century after it ceased production, and it is reverently referenced in such subsequent TV shows as The Simpsons and Married with Children. Actor Billy Gray played Bud, the rebellious, misfit teenage son of Jim and Margaret Anderson (Robert Young, Jane Wyatt) and brother to older sister Betty (Elinor Donahue) and younger sibling Kathy (Lauren Chapin). Writer Steve Uhler caught up with Gray, now 82, at his home in Topanga to talk about his years on Father Knows Best, his days as a child actor, and the drug bust that prematurely ended his career.
You were a very naturalistic child actor. Robert Wise directed you in The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951) and said you were the best hed ever worked with.
And I gotta thank my mom for that, Im sure. She was an actress, mostly B-Westerns. Shed drive me to auditions when I was a kid. Later in life, our roles were reversed, and I was driving her to auditions. I started around age 5, and she would read me the lines. I was always just the kid next door or the newsboy . I did scores of those kinds of things. I didnt have any lines for several years; I just did bit parts. It wasnt til I was about 10 or 11 that I started getting actual parts that were real characters. About the only instructions I ever got in acting was my mom telling me not to sound like I was reading. And I took that to heart. I tried to avoid sounding like I was reading from a script.
{snip the colorized still from TDTESS and all the rest}
No Seeds, No Stems: Pure Bud
Sixty Years After the Cancellation of Father Knows Best, Billy Gray Looks Back on His Years As a Child Actor, the TV Series That Made Him a Star, and the Scandal That Derailed His Career
Billy Gray, right, in Father Knows Best. | Credit: Screen Gems/Kobal/Shutterstock
By Steve Uhler
Sun Sep 06, 2020 | 7:57am
To generations of fans, Father Knows Best (1954-1960) remains the gold standard of TV family sitcoms. Depicting the everyday trials and tribulations of the fictional Anderson family in the small town of Springfield, the show proved so popular it remains on the air in syndication over half a century after it ceased production, and it is reverently referenced in such subsequent TV shows as The Simpsons and Married with Children. Actor Billy Gray played Bud, the rebellious, misfit teenage son of Jim and Margaret Anderson (Robert Young, Jane Wyatt) and brother to older sister Betty (Elinor Donahue) and younger sibling Kathy (Lauren Chapin). Writer Steve Uhler caught up with Gray, now 82, at his home in Topanga to talk about his years on Father Knows Best, his days as a child actor, and the drug bust that prematurely ended his career.
You were a very naturalistic child actor. Robert Wise directed you in The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951) and said you were the best hed ever worked with.
And I gotta thank my mom for that, Im sure. She was an actress, mostly B-Westerns. Shed drive me to auditions when I was a kid. Later in life, our roles were reversed, and I was driving her to auditions. I started around age 5, and she would read me the lines. I was always just the kid next door or the newsboy . I did scores of those kinds of things. I didnt have any lines for several years; I just did bit parts. It wasnt til I was about 10 or 11 that I started getting actual parts that were real characters. About the only instructions I ever got in acting was my mom telling me not to sound like I was reading. And I took that to heart. I tried to avoid sounding like I was reading from a script.
{snip the colorized still from TDTESS and all the rest}