If you like this person, let us know!
Birth name Ronald Egan RandellNationality USABirth 8 october 1918 at Sydney (
Australie)
Death 11 june 2005 (at 86 years) at Woodland Hills (
USA)
Ronald Egan "Ron" Randell (October 8, 1918 – June 11, 2005) was an Australian-born American film and stage actor.
Biography
Australian career
Randell was born Sydney, Australia. He started his career as a stage and radio performer in his teens. He soon established himself as a leading male juvenile for radio, acting for 2KY Players, George Edwards, BAP and on Lux Playhouse. He also worked as a compere for variety shows, in particular with Jack Davey. The majority of his stage work was done at the Minerva Theatre, including performances in Of Mice and Men and The Voice of the Turtle.
In 1943-44 he toured America, working in theatre and radio in San Francisco and Los Angeles, before returning to Sydney. Around this time he changed his professional name from "Ron Randall" to "Ron Randell" to avoid confusion with actor George Randall.
Randell's break came when he was spotted by producer Nick Perry at the Minerva Theatre performing in While the Sun Shines. This led to Randell being cast as the lead in Smithy, a biographical movie about the pioneering Australian aviator Sir Charles Kingsford Smith, who made the first flight across the Pacific (from the United States to Australia) in 1928. (The film was released as Pacific Adventure in the United States and as Southern Cross in the UK).
Randell had previously appeared in another film, A Son Is Born, opposite Peter Finch and Muriel Steinbeck. Although made before Smithy, its release was held off until after the latter film had come out to take advantage of its publicity.
Hollywood
Smithy had been made with funds from Columbia Pictures who offered Randell a long-term contract and he moved to Hollywood in October 1946.
Columbia cast Randell as Bulldog Drummond in two low-budget films, Bulldog Drummond at Bay and Bulldog Drummond Strikes Back. (These were made for an independent company, Venture, but released through Columbia.) Columbia were impressed enough by this to cast Randell in a good support roles in an expensive "A" production, It Had to Be You (1947). This was followed by The Mating of Millie (1947) and the prestigious The Loves of Carmen (1948). Then came Sign of the Ram and two lower budgeted films The Lone Wolf and His Lady and Make Believe Ballroom.
He continued to work in television and theatre and had a number of good roles for other studios, including Kiss Me, Kate (as Cole Porter), I Am a Camera, King of Kings, The She-Creature and The Longest Day.
Arguably his best performance was in King of Kings, as the Roman centurion Lucius, who defends Christ at his trial as a sort of impromptu legal counsel, and presumably becomes converted to Christianity after the Crucifixion.
England
Frustrated at the progress of his career, Randell moved to England in the 1950s. From October 1954 through December 1955, Randell hosted the ABC anthology series The Vise. In 1957 to 1958 he starred in the lead role in O.S.S..
Later career
He returned to Hollywood.
In 1964 he appeared as Hubert Ambrose in the Perry Mason episode, "The Case of the Illicit Illusion." He guest starred twice on Bewitched in 1964 and 1967 and played a lead role in the two- part The Contenders episodes for the Mission: Impossible series in 1968.
Ron Randell's Broadway credits included Terence Rattigan's The Browning Version (1948), Candida (1952), The World of Suzie Wong (1958), Butley (1972), Mrs. Warren's Profession (1976), Bent (1979), Duet for One (1981), and The School for Scandal (1995).
He returned to Australia in 1969 to appear in There's a Girl in My Soup.
Best films
(1961)
(Actor) Usually with