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Charles Drake (actor)

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Full Name
  
Charles Ruppert

Years active
  
1939–1976

Occupation
  
Actor

Education
  
Nichols College

Charles Drake (actor) Charles Drake Biography and Filmography 1917

Born
  
October 2, 1917 (
1917-10-02
)
New York City, New York, USA

Resting place
  
Cremains scattered into the Atlantic Ocean

Died
  
10 September 1994, East Lyme, Connecticut, United States

Movies
  
Harvey, It Came from Outer Space, The Glenn Miller Story, To Hell and Back, Winchester '73

Similar
  
Jesse Hibbs, Peggy Dow, Richard Carlson, Josephine Hull, Audie Murphy

Charles Drake (October 2, 1917 – September 10, 1994) was an American actor.

Biography

Drake was born as Charles Ruppert in New York City. He graduated from Nichols College and became a salesman. In 1939, he turned to acting and signed a contract with Warner Brothers. He was not immediately successful. During World War II Drake served in the United States Army. Drake returned to Hollywood in 1945 and was cast in Conflict which starred Humphrey Bogart. His contract with Warner Brothers eventually ended. In the 1940s, he did some freelance work, like A Night in Casablanca.

Charles Drake (actor) httpsimagesnasslimagesamazoncomimagesMM

In 1949, he moved to Universal Studios. In 1950 Drake co-starred with James Stewart and Shelley Winters in Winchester '73 and again co-starred with Stewart in the film Harvey a screen adaptation of the Broadway play.

In 1955, Drake turned to television as one of the stock-company players on Montgomery's Summer Stock, a summer replacement for Robert Montgomery Presents and three years later he became the host of the British TV espionage weekly Rendezvous. Also that year, he co-starred in the Audie Murphy bio pic, To Hell and Back, as Murphy's close friend "Brandon".

In 1959, he starred in the Western film, No Name on the Bullet, where he played a doctor dedicated to saving a small town from a dangerous assassin.

On November 14, 1961, Drake played the role of state line boss Allen Winter in the episode "The Accusers" of NBC's Laramie western series. In the story line, housekeeper Daisy Cooper (Spring Byington) identifies Winter as having left a hotel room right after a saloon girl, Carla Morton, portrayed by Joanne Linville, is murdered there. At first, few believe Daisy because Winter is a respected man in Laramie and the boss of Cooper's boss, series character Slim Sherman (John Smith). Carla had pressured Winter to leave his wife and marry her. When Daisy searches for further proof of Winter's guilt, Winter resorts to sabotage of Daisy's carriage and stakes out the Sherman Ranch, posing as an Indian, while Slim is away on an overnight assignment authorized by Winter. Slim suddenly becomes convinced of Daisy's story and rides swiftly to her rescue.

In 1967, Drake played the part of Oliver Greer in The Fugitive episode "The One That Got Away". He guest starred in the fourth season (1968–1969) of NBC's Daniel Boone as Simon Jarvis. He played in eighty-three films between 1939 and 1975, including Scream, Pretty Peggy. More than fifty were dramas, but he also acted in comedies, science fiction, horror, and film noir.

Drake is a part of the legacy of Star Trek, having played the role of Commodore Stocker in the original series' second-season episode, "The Deadly Years" (December 8, 1967).

He died on September 10, 1994 in East Lyme, Connecticut, at the age of seventy-six.

References

Charles Drake (actor) Wikipedia