Sneha Girap (Editor)

Bill Cable

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Years active
  
1970–1996


Name
  
Bill Cable

Bill Cable Bill Cable also known by the pseudonyms Stoner Cable and


Full Name
  
William Laurence Cumpanas

Born
  
May 2, 1946 (
1946-05-02
)
Gary, Lake County, Indiana, U.S.

Occupation
  
Model, actor and film stuntman

Similar
  
Bruce A Young, Jack McGee (actor), George Dzundza

Zodiac Sign
  
Taurus

Nationality
  
American

Died
  
March 7, 1998 (aged 51) Los Angeles, California, U.S.

Christian Brando, Christina Crawford, Bill Cable--Rare TV Interview


Bill Cable, also known by the pseudonyms "Stoner", "Cable", and "Bigg John" (May 2, 1946 – March 7, 1998), was a model, actor, and film stuntman.

Contents

Bill Cable Bill Cable 1946 1998 Find A Grave Memorial

Bill Cable - Pee wee's Big Adventure 1985


Biography

Bill "Billy" Cable was the grandchild of Thomas Ante and Katherine Pezo. In 1914 his grandfather left the village of Klenovac in Dalmatia, Croatia, and moved to Gary, Indiana. He became a member of the former Hrvatski Sinovi CFU Lodge 396 and would eventually serve as the lodge's president. After Cable's grandfather died in 1950, his family moved to California.

Cable was a standout football player for North Hollywood High School as an offensive tackle, and became a varsity captain in his senior year. He continued playing football after enrolling at the University of Nevada, but eventually stopped after a serious head injury. His other hobbies included motorcycles and guns.

Bill Cable was a partner of actress Cassandra Peterson, whom he modeled and lived with. He married Shirley Cumpanas in Nevada in 1985 and she had an affair with Christian Brando, son of actor Marlon Brando, which led to their divorce, according to an interview and essay with Cumpanas to Penthouse magazine. He and Cable remained friends. In 1990, both were interviewed by Skip E. Lowe on the Skip E. Lowe Globe.

In October 1996, Cable was involved in a motorcycle accident in Laurel Canyon in which he sustained a fractured vertebra in his neck, leaving him paralyzed from the chest down. Cable died of these injuries on March 7, 1998, at the age of 51. His funeral was attended by Paul Reubens (Pee-wee Herman). Cable was cremated. The William Laurence Cumpanas Fund was established after his death, supporting the Croatian Sons CFU Lodge 170 in Merrillville, Indiana.

Model

From 1970, Cable was a model for COLT Studio Group, where he was photographed by Jim French. He was photographed by Bob Mizer for the Athletic Model Guild. Cable later posed for the book More Nudes, photographed by Kenn Duncan, whose collection was donated to The New York Public Library by Kenn Duncan's brother and sister in 2003. He was also photographed by Tommy Marshall, Ray Allen, Robert Scott Hooper, Dave Sands, Jeff Dunas and for Playgirl by David Meyer, Raul Vega and Mr. Blackwell. Pornographic pictures of Cable having sex with women were published in Hollywood Hotline, Star Nudes, and Hollywood Rated X in the 1970s.

Photos of him were also published in Playgirl, Playboy, OUI, Ah Men - Clothing Catalog, That Look! - Clothing Catalog, Frederick's of Hollywood - Clothing Catalog, QQ Magazine, After Dark, California Scene, Honcho, The Best of Gallery, MANPOWER!, DAVID, In Touch, Blue Boy, BARFLY, GROOVY GUY, VECTOR, Celebrity Sleuth, H.E.L.P. Drummer, DRUMMER, BODY, International, Entertainment West, HIT & FUN, Olympus (first edition in January 1972) and Mandate (first edition in April 1975).

Actor

Cable acted in mainstream films, including gay and straight erotic films, as a film stuntman and apparitions for TV productions. His first cinematic movie, Bijou (1972), was directed by Wakefield Poole. Cable starred in the short erotic gay film Cooling It in 1973.

He worked on Elvira's Movie Macabre in 1984 (Frankenstein's Castle of Freaks - 1974, won a new cult audience when it aired on the horror series). Cable also appeared in the films Pee-wee's Big Adventure in 1985, Elvira, Mistress of the Dark, La posta in gioco, Basic Instinct, The Last Tango in Acapulco, Jungle Blue, What's Love, Flesh and Bullets and The Deadly Cure.

References

Bill Cable Wikipedia


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