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Where Sam Elliott learned to be a man
Actor Sam Elliott talks to Sam Jones about where his perception of what it means to be a man came from. Want more Off Camera? http://offcamera.com Watch full...
Thank you my friend Maj Marty Hogan for making us aware that August 9 is the anniversary of the birth of American actor Samuel Pack Elliott
Happy 75th birthday Samuel Pack Elliott!
Images:
1. 2017 Samuel Pack Elliott and Katharine Ross in THE HERO.
2. Sam Elliot with his wife Katharine Juliet Ross, her daughter Cleo Cole Elliott and her boyfriend Randy Christopher.
3. Sam Elliott posing with Ginger Balazs outside a coffee shop in North Eugene, Oregon.
1. Background from https:registerguard.com/news/20170713/at-home-in-oregon-critically-acclaimed-lead-role-for-actor-sam-elliott-raises-part-time-oregonians-profile-around-town
"At home in Oregon: A critically acclaimed lead role for actor Sam Elliott raises the part-time Oregonian’s profile around town
Editor’s note: This story was originally published in July 2017 just after Sam Elliott finished filming “A Star is Born.” He is nominated for an Oscar for his role in that film.
It’s that inimitable baritone; a deep, sonorous drawl that’s addictive to the ears, can make women melt and make men half his age wish they had just half his machismo.
His is the voice that tickled audiences as The Stranger in the 1998 Coen Brothers film “The Big Lebowski” with lines such as: “Well, a wiser fella than myself once said, ‘Sometimes you eat the b’ar, and sometimes the b’ar, well, he eats you.’ ”
The voice you know from Coors beer, Dodge Ram and American Beef Council ads.
Sam Elliott, veteran Hollywood actor and — maybe you didn’t know this — part-time Linn County resident, along with his wife of 33 years, Oscar-nominated actress Katharine Ross, is not talking about his five-decade film and television career, the one that’s hotter than ever even as his 73rd birthday looms.
No, Elliott is sitting on the patio of the Starbucks at Delta Highway and Green Acres Road in Eugene talking about what he’s going to do later that day: “I’m gonna go from here to Jerry’s (Home Improvement), and I’m not looking forward to it,” Elliott says. “I like Jerry’s. I got nothin’ against Jerry’s, but all of a sudden moving around town is not as easy as it was.”
Not when you star in two Netflix series and you’re getting some Oscar buzz for your latest film, “The Hero.” Not when you just wrapped a role starring with Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga in the remake of “A Star is Born.” Not when you’re expected in the Massachusetts woods later this month to star in something called “The Man Who Killed Hitler and then The Bigfoot.”
The guy who has the “world’s greatest living mustache,” according to Rolling Stone film critic David Fear, is starting to talk about how “it’s insane,” all of this work coming so late in his career, when a stranger, Ginger Balazs, suddenly walks up and wants to know: “Can I join the party? You look just like my husband. I have to show you a picture of him!”
“No,” Elliott kindly says. “I don’t want to see a picture. We’re in the middle of an interview.”
Balazs’s Columbia Bank co-worker, Delores Wilson, has already mustered the courage to politely interrupt this conversation and ask for a photo with the star of one of her favorite shows, “The Ranch,” the Neflix sitcom about a dysfunctional Colorado family that also stars Ashton Kutcher and Debra Winger.
Both women apologize, and Elliott complies — as he does when it happens again and again over the course of a couple of hours — snapping a selfie with each of them before they return to work at the bank next door to Starbucks.
“A national treasure”
“The Hero,” a 93-minute indie film made in just 18 days for only $1.2 million last year in Los Angeles, has been playing at the Broadway Metro in downtown Eugene since June 30. It’s a rare leading-man role for Elliott, who stars as Lee Hayden, an aging actor with a golden voice and a fading career who is known mostly for playing cowboys in westerns and confronts his own mortality after being diagnosed with cancer.
The similarities between Elliott and Hayden are no coincidence. Writer-director Brett Haley wrote the script specifically for Elliott after the two first worked together on 2015′s “I’ll See You in My Dreams.”
The role is getting Elliott some of the best reviews of his career.
Two of those reviews — Rolling Stone and The New York Times — have used the term “national treasure” in describing Elliott and his performance in the touching comedy-drama.
“That’s a scary thought,” Elliott quips.
But he’s also getting some early Oscar consideration, as these online headlines attest:
• “Give Sam Elliott the Best Actor Oscar Now” — Rolling Stone.
• “Sam Elliott is Oscar Worthy in ‘The Hero’ — awardscircuit.com.
• “Oscars 2018: Best Actor Predictions” — indiewire.com.
The latter website lists Elliott as one of five “front-runners” for the best actor Oscar, ahead of 17 “contenders” that include previous winners Tom Hanks and Daniel Day-Lewis.
Elliott, who has never been nominated for an Academy Award, doesn’t put much stock in reviews or Oscar predictions eight months ahead of the March 4 ceremony.
“That’s another one of those things — you have no control,” he says. “It’s just, I don’t know.”
Asked what it would mean to him, though, to be sitting there in Hollywood’s Dolby Theatre, next to Ross, 77, who plays his ex-wife in “The Hero” and was nominated exactly a half century ago for best supporting actress as Elaine Robinson in 1967′s “The Graduate,” Elliott says: “Well, you know, recognition by your peers is about as big as it gets. I would never pooh-pooh that. That said, I think there’s a lot of solicitation ... and maybe some politics in it.
“If people go see the movie, that’s the reward. The reward is in the making of the film; doing the work — it’s all about the work.”
Texas roots
Samuel Pack Elliott was born Aug. 9, 1944, in Sacramento to Nelson Elliott, a predator control specialist for the U.S. Department of Fish & Wildlife, and Glynn Elliott, who later taught at Reynolds High School in Troutdale. He has an older sister, Glenda, who lives in Southern California.
Their parents were born in Texas, where the family’s roots go back generations and one great-great-great-grandfather served as a surgeon during the Texas Revolution in 1835-36.
In 1957, when Elliott was 13, the family moved to Portland after his father was transferred. Young Sam attended Madison High School as a freshman and David Douglas High School his final three years, graduating in 1962. A top prep hurdler in the state, Elliott enrolled at the University of Oregon [UO] in the fall hoping to become one of legendary UO track and field coach Bill Bowerman’s “Men of Oregon.”
“I had visions of being a ‘Man of Oregon’ but didn’t have what it took and was not ever academically inclined, ” Elliott says. “I came down here and (messed) around and got booted out.”
He lasted just two terms.
After leaving the UO and enrolling in Clark College in Vancouver, Wash. — where he ran both the 120-yard high hurdles and the 360-yard intermediate hurdles — Elliott appeared in the college’s production of “Guys and Dolls.”
After obtaining a two-year degree in 1965, he re-enrolled at the UO and pledged the SAE fraternity, still hoping to obtain a four-year degree. But again, academics were not his thing.
Then his father died of a heart attack in Portland at age 54.
“That killed me,” Elliott recalls.
His mother lived to be 96, dying in Portland in 2012. Elliott now owns the family home in northeast Portland.
In the years before he died, Nelson Elliott, who never graduated from college himself but wanted that more than anything for his only son, told him that his chances of landing on the big screen were unrealistic.
“He gave me that proverbial line, ‘You’ve got a snowball’s chance in hell of having a career in (Hollywood),’ ” Elliott recalls. “He was a realist, my dad.
“He was a hard worker. He had a work ethic that I’ve fashioned mine after, and I thank him for that every day.”
With matinee-idol looks, a quiet confidence and that distinctive voice, Sam Elliott moved to Los Angeles in the late 1960s and soon signed as a “contract player” with 20th Century Fox.
His first role came on the TV cop drama “Felony Squad” during the 1968-69 season. He landed his first film role, Card Player No. 2, in 1969′s “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” which also starred Ross, although they would not begin dating until both starred in the 1978 horror film “The Legacy.”
Seen in Eugene
Elliott and Ross purchased their 200-acre Linn County property that sits a few miles south of Brownsville in the mid-1990s, Elliott says.
They’re only here about a month per year and head back this week to their seaside home in Malibu on property they’ve owned since the 1970s. They hope to live in Oregon year-round eventually.
“At some point, that’s the dream,” Elliott says. “I’ve always loved the Willamette Valley.”
Still, Elliott has in many ways become just one of us: someone who buys his groceries at Market of Choice (he’s most commonly spotted at the Green Acres Road store), his steaks at Long’s Meat Market in south Eugene and his gardening supplies at Down to Earth near Fifth and Olive streets.
“He’s just the greatest guy,” says David Cothern, who works in the Down to Earth nursery that Elliott likes to frequent. “So personable and easy. If all of Hollywood were like that, what a better world it would be.”
And when Elliott has a hankering for fish and chips? He heads to Newman’s Fish Company on Willamette Street.
“I’ve eaten at Newman’s three times this week,” he says.
Keep your eyes peeled, and you might even spot Elliott at Saturday Market. He was there on July 1 with his 32-year-old daughter, Cleo.
“I covered up my head and shut my mouth and had a ball,” Elliott says.
Covered your head with ...?
“A stocking cap,” he says.
In July?
“Yeah,” Elliott says, “so I looked just as weird as the rest of ’em. I love the Saturday Market.”
2. Film and TV filmreference.com/film/4/Sam-Elliott.html#ixzz5wBj2Qn7
"Famous Works
CREDITS
Film Appearances
Card player number two, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Twentieth Century-Fox, 1969
Richie Robinson, The Games, Universal, 1970
Johnny Lawler, Molly and Lawless John, Producers Distributors Corporation, 1972
Pickett Smith, Frogs, American International Pictures, 1972
Rick Carlson, Lifeguard, Paramount, 1976
Pete Danner, The Legacy (also known as The Legacy of Maggie Walsh) Universal, 1979
Gar, Mask, Lorimar, 1985
Mike Marshak, Fatal Beauty, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/United Artists, 1987
Richie Marks, Shakedown (also known as Blue Jean Cop), Universal, 1988
Wade Garrett, Road House, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/United Artists, 1989
John Riggs, Prancer, Orion, 1989
Charles Turner, Jr., Sibling Rivalry, Columbia, 1990
Larry Dodd, Rush, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/Pathe, 1991
Brigadeer General John Buford, Gettysburg, New Line Cinema, 1993
Virgil Earp, Tombstone, Buena Vista, 1993
Marshal Bill Speakes, The Desperate Trail, Turner Home Entertainment, 1994
Voice of Kaa (Python), The Jungle Book (also known as Adventures of Mowgli and Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book), 1996
The stranger, The Big Lebowski, Gramercy, 1998
Jim Ed Love, The Hi-Lo Country, Gramercy, 1998
Kermit Newman, The Contender (also known as Manipulations),DreamWorks, 2000
Sergeant Major Basil Plumley, We Were Soldiers, Paramount, 2002
General Thunderbolt Ross, The Hulk, Universal, 2003
Television Appearances
Series
Dr. Doug Robert, Mission: Impossible, CBS, 1970-1971
Chance McKenzie, The Yellow Rose, NBC, 1983-1984
Movies
Bryant, The Challenge, ABC, 1970
Ensign Sandover, Assault on the Wayne, ABC, 1971
Detective Charlie Bronski, The Blue Knight, NBC, 1973
Captain Wood, I Will Fight No More Forever, ABC, 1975
Tell Sackett, The Sacketts, NBC, 1979
Hugh Cardiff, Wild Times, syndicated, 1980
Dr. John Hill, Murder in Texas, CBS, 1982
Dal Traven, The Shadow Riders (also known as Louis L'Amour's The Shadow Riders), CBS, 1982
Title role, Travis McGee (also known as Travis McGee: The EmptyCopper Sea), 1983
D. Jordan Williams, A Death in California (also known as Psychopath), ABC, 1985
Harry Wingate, The Blue Lightning, CBS, 1986
Sam Houston (title role), Houston: The Legend of Texas (also knownas Gone to Texas: The Sam Houston Story), CBS, 1986
Con Vallian, The Quick and the Dead, HBO, 1987
Conn Conagher (title role), Conagher (also known as Louis L'Amour's Conagher), TNT, 1991
Lyn Cutter, Fugitive Nights: Danger in the Desert (also known as Fugitive Nights), 1993
Bill Bell, The Ranger, the Cook, and a Hole in the Sky (also knownas Hole in the Sky), ABC, 1995
Mr. Howland, Blue River, 1995
Ross Bishop, Woman Undone (also known as Joshua Tree), Showtime, 1996
John Pierce, Final Cut, HBO, 1996
The Adventures of Mowgli, HBO, 1997
Charlie Falon, Dogwatch (also known as Dead End), HBO, 1997
Bill Tilghman, You Know My Name (also known as Bill Tilghman), TNT, 1998
Congressman Tom Raskob, Fail Safe, CBS, 2000
Detective Lukas Black, Pretty When You Cry, HBO, 2001
Miniseries
Sam Damon, Once an Eagle, NBC, 1976
Tom Keating, Aspen (also known as The Innocent and the Damned), NBC, 1977
Wild Bill Hickock, Buffalo Girls, CBS, 1995
Captain Bucky O'Neil, Rough Riders (also known as Teddy Roosevelt and the Rough Riders), TNT, 1997
Specials
The World's Greatest Stunts: A Tribute to Hollywood's Stuntmen, ABC, 1988
The Hollywood Christmas Parade, syndicated, 1989
Host, The Golden Globe Awards, TBS, 1990
Interviewee, Big Guns Talk: The Story of the Western (documentary), TNT, 1997
Episodic
Jack, "Kiss me, Kill You," Felony Squad, 1968
Attendant, "The Fatal Hours," Felony Squad, 1968
Marine leader, "Blind Terror," Felony Squad, 1969
"Death Bait," Lancer, CBS, 1969
"The Great Humbug," Lancer, CBS, 1969
Martin Reed, "Six Hours to Live," Land of the Giants, 1969
"Blue Skies for Billy Sharpe," Lancer, CBS, 1970
Cory Soames, "The Wedding," Gunsmoke, CBS, 1972
"Good Times Are Just Memories," The Mod Squad, ABC, 1972
Bill Saunders, "Little Girl Lost," Mannix, CBS, 1973
"Die, Darling, Die," Hawkins, 1973
"A Time to Live," Doc Elliot, 1974
Jack Houston, "The Two-Faced Corpse," Hawaii Five-O, CBS, 1974
"Farewell, Mary Jane," Police Woman, NBC, 1975
Also appeared in episodes of The F.B.I, ABC, and The Streets ofSan Francisco, ABC.
Pilots
Title role, Evel Knievel, CBS, 1974
Texarkana, CBS, 1998
Television Work
Movies
Executive producer, Conagher (also known as Louis L'Amour's Conagher), TNT, 1991
Executive producer, You Know My Name (also known as Bill Tilghman), TNT, 1998
WRITINGS
Television Movies
(With Katherine Ross and Jeffrey M. Meyer) Conagher (adapted fromLouis L'Amour's book of the same title; also known as Louis L'Amour's Conagher), TNT, 1991"
Actor Sam Elliott talks to Sam Jones about where his perception of what it means to be a man came from.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GGHFYGl6q_M
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Happy 75th birthday Samuel Pack Elliott!
Images:
1. 2017 Samuel Pack Elliott and Katharine Ross in THE HERO.
2. Sam Elliot with his wife Katharine Juliet Ross, her daughter Cleo Cole Elliott and her boyfriend Randy Christopher.
3. Sam Elliott posing with Ginger Balazs outside a coffee shop in North Eugene, Oregon.
1. Background from https:registerguard.com/news/20170713/at-home-in-oregon-critically-acclaimed-lead-role-for-actor-sam-elliott-raises-part-time-oregonians-profile-around-town
"At home in Oregon: A critically acclaimed lead role for actor Sam Elliott raises the part-time Oregonian’s profile around town
Editor’s note: This story was originally published in July 2017 just after Sam Elliott finished filming “A Star is Born.” He is nominated for an Oscar for his role in that film.
It’s that inimitable baritone; a deep, sonorous drawl that’s addictive to the ears, can make women melt and make men half his age wish they had just half his machismo.
His is the voice that tickled audiences as The Stranger in the 1998 Coen Brothers film “The Big Lebowski” with lines such as: “Well, a wiser fella than myself once said, ‘Sometimes you eat the b’ar, and sometimes the b’ar, well, he eats you.’ ”
The voice you know from Coors beer, Dodge Ram and American Beef Council ads.
Sam Elliott, veteran Hollywood actor and — maybe you didn’t know this — part-time Linn County resident, along with his wife of 33 years, Oscar-nominated actress Katharine Ross, is not talking about his five-decade film and television career, the one that’s hotter than ever even as his 73rd birthday looms.
No, Elliott is sitting on the patio of the Starbucks at Delta Highway and Green Acres Road in Eugene talking about what he’s going to do later that day: “I’m gonna go from here to Jerry’s (Home Improvement), and I’m not looking forward to it,” Elliott says. “I like Jerry’s. I got nothin’ against Jerry’s, but all of a sudden moving around town is not as easy as it was.”
Not when you star in two Netflix series and you’re getting some Oscar buzz for your latest film, “The Hero.” Not when you just wrapped a role starring with Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga in the remake of “A Star is Born.” Not when you’re expected in the Massachusetts woods later this month to star in something called “The Man Who Killed Hitler and then The Bigfoot.”
The guy who has the “world’s greatest living mustache,” according to Rolling Stone film critic David Fear, is starting to talk about how “it’s insane,” all of this work coming so late in his career, when a stranger, Ginger Balazs, suddenly walks up and wants to know: “Can I join the party? You look just like my husband. I have to show you a picture of him!”
“No,” Elliott kindly says. “I don’t want to see a picture. We’re in the middle of an interview.”
Balazs’s Columbia Bank co-worker, Delores Wilson, has already mustered the courage to politely interrupt this conversation and ask for a photo with the star of one of her favorite shows, “The Ranch,” the Neflix sitcom about a dysfunctional Colorado family that also stars Ashton Kutcher and Debra Winger.
Both women apologize, and Elliott complies — as he does when it happens again and again over the course of a couple of hours — snapping a selfie with each of them before they return to work at the bank next door to Starbucks.
“A national treasure”
“The Hero,” a 93-minute indie film made in just 18 days for only $1.2 million last year in Los Angeles, has been playing at the Broadway Metro in downtown Eugene since June 30. It’s a rare leading-man role for Elliott, who stars as Lee Hayden, an aging actor with a golden voice and a fading career who is known mostly for playing cowboys in westerns and confronts his own mortality after being diagnosed with cancer.
The similarities between Elliott and Hayden are no coincidence. Writer-director Brett Haley wrote the script specifically for Elliott after the two first worked together on 2015′s “I’ll See You in My Dreams.”
The role is getting Elliott some of the best reviews of his career.
Two of those reviews — Rolling Stone and The New York Times — have used the term “national treasure” in describing Elliott and his performance in the touching comedy-drama.
“That’s a scary thought,” Elliott quips.
But he’s also getting some early Oscar consideration, as these online headlines attest:
• “Give Sam Elliott the Best Actor Oscar Now” — Rolling Stone.
• “Sam Elliott is Oscar Worthy in ‘The Hero’ — awardscircuit.com.
• “Oscars 2018: Best Actor Predictions” — indiewire.com.
The latter website lists Elliott as one of five “front-runners” for the best actor Oscar, ahead of 17 “contenders” that include previous winners Tom Hanks and Daniel Day-Lewis.
Elliott, who has never been nominated for an Academy Award, doesn’t put much stock in reviews or Oscar predictions eight months ahead of the March 4 ceremony.
“That’s another one of those things — you have no control,” he says. “It’s just, I don’t know.”
Asked what it would mean to him, though, to be sitting there in Hollywood’s Dolby Theatre, next to Ross, 77, who plays his ex-wife in “The Hero” and was nominated exactly a half century ago for best supporting actress as Elaine Robinson in 1967′s “The Graduate,” Elliott says: “Well, you know, recognition by your peers is about as big as it gets. I would never pooh-pooh that. That said, I think there’s a lot of solicitation ... and maybe some politics in it.
“If people go see the movie, that’s the reward. The reward is in the making of the film; doing the work — it’s all about the work.”
Texas roots
Samuel Pack Elliott was born Aug. 9, 1944, in Sacramento to Nelson Elliott, a predator control specialist for the U.S. Department of Fish & Wildlife, and Glynn Elliott, who later taught at Reynolds High School in Troutdale. He has an older sister, Glenda, who lives in Southern California.
Their parents were born in Texas, where the family’s roots go back generations and one great-great-great-grandfather served as a surgeon during the Texas Revolution in 1835-36.
In 1957, when Elliott was 13, the family moved to Portland after his father was transferred. Young Sam attended Madison High School as a freshman and David Douglas High School his final three years, graduating in 1962. A top prep hurdler in the state, Elliott enrolled at the University of Oregon [UO] in the fall hoping to become one of legendary UO track and field coach Bill Bowerman’s “Men of Oregon.”
“I had visions of being a ‘Man of Oregon’ but didn’t have what it took and was not ever academically inclined, ” Elliott says. “I came down here and (messed) around and got booted out.”
He lasted just two terms.
After leaving the UO and enrolling in Clark College in Vancouver, Wash. — where he ran both the 120-yard high hurdles and the 360-yard intermediate hurdles — Elliott appeared in the college’s production of “Guys and Dolls.”
After obtaining a two-year degree in 1965, he re-enrolled at the UO and pledged the SAE fraternity, still hoping to obtain a four-year degree. But again, academics were not his thing.
Then his father died of a heart attack in Portland at age 54.
“That killed me,” Elliott recalls.
His mother lived to be 96, dying in Portland in 2012. Elliott now owns the family home in northeast Portland.
In the years before he died, Nelson Elliott, who never graduated from college himself but wanted that more than anything for his only son, told him that his chances of landing on the big screen were unrealistic.
“He gave me that proverbial line, ‘You’ve got a snowball’s chance in hell of having a career in (Hollywood),’ ” Elliott recalls. “He was a realist, my dad.
“He was a hard worker. He had a work ethic that I’ve fashioned mine after, and I thank him for that every day.”
With matinee-idol looks, a quiet confidence and that distinctive voice, Sam Elliott moved to Los Angeles in the late 1960s and soon signed as a “contract player” with 20th Century Fox.
His first role came on the TV cop drama “Felony Squad” during the 1968-69 season. He landed his first film role, Card Player No. 2, in 1969′s “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” which also starred Ross, although they would not begin dating until both starred in the 1978 horror film “The Legacy.”
Seen in Eugene
Elliott and Ross purchased their 200-acre Linn County property that sits a few miles south of Brownsville in the mid-1990s, Elliott says.
They’re only here about a month per year and head back this week to their seaside home in Malibu on property they’ve owned since the 1970s. They hope to live in Oregon year-round eventually.
“At some point, that’s the dream,” Elliott says. “I’ve always loved the Willamette Valley.”
Still, Elliott has in many ways become just one of us: someone who buys his groceries at Market of Choice (he’s most commonly spotted at the Green Acres Road store), his steaks at Long’s Meat Market in south Eugene and his gardening supplies at Down to Earth near Fifth and Olive streets.
“He’s just the greatest guy,” says David Cothern, who works in the Down to Earth nursery that Elliott likes to frequent. “So personable and easy. If all of Hollywood were like that, what a better world it would be.”
And when Elliott has a hankering for fish and chips? He heads to Newman’s Fish Company on Willamette Street.
“I’ve eaten at Newman’s three times this week,” he says.
Keep your eyes peeled, and you might even spot Elliott at Saturday Market. He was there on July 1 with his 32-year-old daughter, Cleo.
“I covered up my head and shut my mouth and had a ball,” Elliott says.
Covered your head with ...?
“A stocking cap,” he says.
In July?
“Yeah,” Elliott says, “so I looked just as weird as the rest of ’em. I love the Saturday Market.”
2. Film and TV filmreference.com/film/4/Sam-Elliott.html#ixzz5wBj2Qn7
"Famous Works
CREDITS
Film Appearances
Card player number two, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Twentieth Century-Fox, 1969
Richie Robinson, The Games, Universal, 1970
Johnny Lawler, Molly and Lawless John, Producers Distributors Corporation, 1972
Pickett Smith, Frogs, American International Pictures, 1972
Rick Carlson, Lifeguard, Paramount, 1976
Pete Danner, The Legacy (also known as The Legacy of Maggie Walsh) Universal, 1979
Gar, Mask, Lorimar, 1985
Mike Marshak, Fatal Beauty, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/United Artists, 1987
Richie Marks, Shakedown (also known as Blue Jean Cop), Universal, 1988
Wade Garrett, Road House, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/United Artists, 1989
John Riggs, Prancer, Orion, 1989
Charles Turner, Jr., Sibling Rivalry, Columbia, 1990
Larry Dodd, Rush, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/Pathe, 1991
Brigadeer General John Buford, Gettysburg, New Line Cinema, 1993
Virgil Earp, Tombstone, Buena Vista, 1993
Marshal Bill Speakes, The Desperate Trail, Turner Home Entertainment, 1994
Voice of Kaa (Python), The Jungle Book (also known as Adventures of Mowgli and Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book), 1996
The stranger, The Big Lebowski, Gramercy, 1998
Jim Ed Love, The Hi-Lo Country, Gramercy, 1998
Kermit Newman, The Contender (also known as Manipulations),DreamWorks, 2000
Sergeant Major Basil Plumley, We Were Soldiers, Paramount, 2002
General Thunderbolt Ross, The Hulk, Universal, 2003
Television Appearances
Series
Dr. Doug Robert, Mission: Impossible, CBS, 1970-1971
Chance McKenzie, The Yellow Rose, NBC, 1983-1984
Movies
Bryant, The Challenge, ABC, 1970
Ensign Sandover, Assault on the Wayne, ABC, 1971
Detective Charlie Bronski, The Blue Knight, NBC, 1973
Captain Wood, I Will Fight No More Forever, ABC, 1975
Tell Sackett, The Sacketts, NBC, 1979
Hugh Cardiff, Wild Times, syndicated, 1980
Dr. John Hill, Murder in Texas, CBS, 1982
Dal Traven, The Shadow Riders (also known as Louis L'Amour's The Shadow Riders), CBS, 1982
Title role, Travis McGee (also known as Travis McGee: The EmptyCopper Sea), 1983
D. Jordan Williams, A Death in California (also known as Psychopath), ABC, 1985
Harry Wingate, The Blue Lightning, CBS, 1986
Sam Houston (title role), Houston: The Legend of Texas (also knownas Gone to Texas: The Sam Houston Story), CBS, 1986
Con Vallian, The Quick and the Dead, HBO, 1987
Conn Conagher (title role), Conagher (also known as Louis L'Amour's Conagher), TNT, 1991
Lyn Cutter, Fugitive Nights: Danger in the Desert (also known as Fugitive Nights), 1993
Bill Bell, The Ranger, the Cook, and a Hole in the Sky (also knownas Hole in the Sky), ABC, 1995
Mr. Howland, Blue River, 1995
Ross Bishop, Woman Undone (also known as Joshua Tree), Showtime, 1996
John Pierce, Final Cut, HBO, 1996
The Adventures of Mowgli, HBO, 1997
Charlie Falon, Dogwatch (also known as Dead End), HBO, 1997
Bill Tilghman, You Know My Name (also known as Bill Tilghman), TNT, 1998
Congressman Tom Raskob, Fail Safe, CBS, 2000
Detective Lukas Black, Pretty When You Cry, HBO, 2001
Miniseries
Sam Damon, Once an Eagle, NBC, 1976
Tom Keating, Aspen (also known as The Innocent and the Damned), NBC, 1977
Wild Bill Hickock, Buffalo Girls, CBS, 1995
Captain Bucky O'Neil, Rough Riders (also known as Teddy Roosevelt and the Rough Riders), TNT, 1997
Specials
The World's Greatest Stunts: A Tribute to Hollywood's Stuntmen, ABC, 1988
The Hollywood Christmas Parade, syndicated, 1989
Host, The Golden Globe Awards, TBS, 1990
Interviewee, Big Guns Talk: The Story of the Western (documentary), TNT, 1997
Episodic
Jack, "Kiss me, Kill You," Felony Squad, 1968
Attendant, "The Fatal Hours," Felony Squad, 1968
Marine leader, "Blind Terror," Felony Squad, 1969
"Death Bait," Lancer, CBS, 1969
"The Great Humbug," Lancer, CBS, 1969
Martin Reed, "Six Hours to Live," Land of the Giants, 1969
"Blue Skies for Billy Sharpe," Lancer, CBS, 1970
Cory Soames, "The Wedding," Gunsmoke, CBS, 1972
"Good Times Are Just Memories," The Mod Squad, ABC, 1972
Bill Saunders, "Little Girl Lost," Mannix, CBS, 1973
"Die, Darling, Die," Hawkins, 1973
"A Time to Live," Doc Elliot, 1974
Jack Houston, "The Two-Faced Corpse," Hawaii Five-O, CBS, 1974
"Farewell, Mary Jane," Police Woman, NBC, 1975
Also appeared in episodes of The F.B.I, ABC, and The Streets ofSan Francisco, ABC.
Pilots
Title role, Evel Knievel, CBS, 1974
Texarkana, CBS, 1998
Television Work
Movies
Executive producer, Conagher (also known as Louis L'Amour's Conagher), TNT, 1991
Executive producer, You Know My Name (also known as Bill Tilghman), TNT, 1998
WRITINGS
Television Movies
(With Katherine Ross and Jeffrey M. Meyer) Conagher (adapted fromLouis L'Amour's book of the same title; also known as Louis L'Amour's Conagher), TNT, 1991"
Actor Sam Elliott talks to Sam Jones about where his perception of what it means to be a man came from.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GGHFYGl6q_M
FYI CPT (Join to see) MSgt David HoffmanSgt (Join to see)
SFC (Join to see)cmsgt-rickey-denickeSGT Forrest Fitzrandolph
CWO3 Dave AlcantaraSgt John H.PVT Mark Zehner
SPC Robert Gilhuly1sg-dan-capriSGT Robert R.
CPT Tommy CurtisSGT (Join to see) SGT Steve McFarland
Col Carl WhickerSGT Mark AndersonSSG Michael Noll
SFC Jack Champion
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LTC Stephen F.
FYI A1C Ian Williams COL Mikel J. Burroughs LTC Greg Henning MSgt Robert C Aldi CMSgt (Join to see) SGT (Join to see) SGT John " Mac " McConnell SP5 Mark Kuzinski PO1 H Gene Lawrence PO2 Kevin Parker PO3 Bob McCord LTC Jeff Shearer SGT Philip Roncari PO3 Phyllis Maynard CWO3 Dennis M. SFC William Farrell TSgt Joe C. SGT (Join to see) LTC Wayne Brandon LTC (Join to see)
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LTC Stephen F.
FYI Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. Maj Robert Thornton CPT Scott Sharon SSG William Jones SSG Donald H "Don" Bates PO3 William Hetrick PO3 Lynn Spalding SPC Mark Huddleston SGT Rick Colburn CPL Dave Hoover SPC Margaret Higgins SSgt Brian Brakke SP5 Jeannie CarleSCPO Morris Ramsey Sgt Albert Castro
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