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Christopher Jones (actor)

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Occupation
  
Actor

Parents
  
Robbie Jones, J.G. Jones

Role
  
Movie actor

Name
  
Christopher Jones

Years active
  
1965-1970, 1996


Christopher Jones (actor) Christopher Jones actor Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Full Name
  
William Frank Jones

Born
  
August 18, 1941 (
1941-08-18
)

Died
  
January 31, 2014, Los Alamitos, California, United States

Spouse
  
Susan Strasberg (m. 1965–1968)

Children
  
Jennifer Robin Jones, Christopher Jones, Jr.

Movies
  
Ryan's Daughter, Wild in the Streets, The Looking Glass War, Three in the Attic, You Got Served

Similar People
  
Susan Strasberg, David Lean, Chris Stokes, Frank Pierson, Paula Strasberg

Christopher jones tribute


William Frank Jones, better known as Christopher Jones (August 1, 1941 – January 31, 2014), was an American stage, movie, and television actor from Jackson, Tennessee.

Contents

Christopher Jones (actor) Ryan39s Daughter star Christopher Jones dies of cancer aged

Early life

Christopher Jones (actor) Christopher Jones Rising Star Actor Who Quit the Field

He was born in Jackson, Tennessee, where his father was a grocery clerk and his mother Robbie was an artist. Jones' father admitted her to the state hospital in Bolivar, Tennessee, in 1945, for holding a gun to his head after he was caught being unfaithful. Jones and his brother were then placed in Boys Town in Memphis, where he became a fan of James Dean after being told he bore a resemblance to him. He then joined the Army, but went AWOL, and after serving a sentence in a military prison, he moved to New York, where he began his acting career. His mother died when he was 19.

Acting career

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Jones (adopting the stage name Christopher) made his Broadway debut on December 17, 1961, in Tennessee Williams's The Night of the Iguana, directed by Frank Corsaro and starring Shelley Winters. Winters introduced Jones to actress Susan Strasberg, the daughter of method acting progenitor Lee Strasberg. Jones later studied at Strasberg's Actors Studio. Despite friction with her father, Jones married Susan in 1965. The couple had a daughter, Jennifer Robin Jones, in 1966, named as a tribute to actress Jennifer Jones.

Christopher Jones (actor) Christopher Jones Rising Star Actor Who Quit the Field

Moving to Hollywood, Jones was cast in the title role of ABC's television series The Legend of Jesse James (produced by 20th Century Fox), which ran for 34 episodes in the 1965–66 season. When the series ended, he accepted the title role in the 1968 movie Chubasco (1968) with Susan Strasberg playing his character's lover/wife. Their real marriage did not survive the filming, and they divorced in 1968.

Christopher Jones (actor) Actor Christopher Jones Dies at 72 Today39s News Our

Jones' next acting role, as rock star and presidential aspirant Max Frost in the film Wild in the Streets (1968), costarring Shelley Winters, propelled him to the peak of his fame. He appeared later in the same year with Yvette Mimieux in the sex comedy Three in the Attic. Jones also became friends with actress Sharon Tate and her husband Roman Polanski. He later recounted that he had an affair with Tate while she was pregnant with Polanski's child, and that she had a premonition of her death (she was murdered by members of the Manson family).

Christopher Jones (actor) WHERE ARE THEY NOW CINEMA RETRO TRACKS DOWN HOLLYWOOD

After two films in Europe with Pia Degermark (The Looking Glass War and Brief Season, both 1969), Jones was cast by director David Lean in Ryan's Daughter (1970). The two men had a difficult relationship, as did many actors who worked with David Lean. This intensified when production of the film took 12 months instead of the expected six because David Lean would wait for the right composition of clouds or the perfect storm to brew. Unknown to Christopher, he was drugged during his filming of Ryan's Daughter by Sarah Miles, according to her first autobiography A Right Royal Bastard, which caused Christopher to believe he was having a breakdown. Jones also was involved in a car crash, not knowing he had been drugged. The director and producers never informed him of the drugging. Later, Lean would dub his voice, causing a bad reputation for Jones (Beyond the Epic: The Life and Films of David Lean). This took a personal toll on Jones, who returned from Ireland to California after filming ended (staying for a time in his manager Rudy Altobelli's guest house, the cottage behind the house where Tate had died), and abandoned his acting career. He engaged in a few long-term relationships, did painting, art deco, and Roman classic sculpting in clay and had a family life, living quietly at the beach with his children.

Later life

Jones was offered the part of Zed in Pulp Fiction (1994) by director Quentin Tarantino, but he turned it down. He made a final screen appearance in crime comedy Mad Dog Time (1996) for his friend director/actor Larry Bishop, who appeared in Christopher's first movie Wild in the Streets. In his later years, he had a career as an artist and sculptor. His works included an oil painting of Rudolph Valentino that was displayed at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery.

Death

He died on January 31, 2014, at the age of 72, due to complications arising from gallbladder cancer. He is survived by seven children, Jennifer Strasberg, Christopher Jones Jr., Jeromy McKenna, Delon Jones, Tauer Jones, Calin Jones, and Seagen Jones. He is interred at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery.

Filmography

Actor
1996
Mad Dog Time as
Nicholas Falco
1970
Ryan's Daughter as
Major Doryan
1970
The Looking Glass War as
Leiser
1969
Una breve stagione as
Johnny Philips
1968
Three in the Attic as
Paxton Quigley
1968
Wild in the Streets as
Max Frost
1968
Chubasco as
Chubasco
1967
The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (TV Series) as
Greg Martin
- The Test Tube Killer Affair (1967) - Greg Martin
1967
Judd for the Defense (TV Series) as
Brandon Hill
- Tempest in a Texas Town (1967) - Brandon Hill (as Chris Jones)
1965
The Legend of Jesse James (TV Series) as
Jesse James
- A Burying for Rosey (1966) - Jesse James
- Wanted: Dead and Only (1966) - Jesse James
- A Field of Wild Flowers (1966) - Jesse James
- Dark Side of the Moon (1966) - Jesse James
- The Hunted and the Hunters (1966) - Jesse James
- The Last Stand of Captain Hammel (1966) - Jesse James
- 1863 (1966) - Jesse James
- As Far as the Sea (1966) - Jesse James
- Things Don't Just Happen (1966) - Jesse James
- The Chase (1966) - Jesse James
- Benjamin Bates (1966) - Jesse James
- The Lonely Place (1966) - Jesse James
- South Wind (1966) - Jesse James
- The Cave (1966) - Jesse James
- Return to Lawrence (1966) - Jesse James
- A Real Tough Town (1966) - Jesse James
- The Colt (1966) - Jesse James
- Reunion (1966) - Jesse James
- The Empty Town (1966) - Jesse James
- The Man Who Killed Jesse (1965) - Jesse James
- The Widow Fay (1965) - Jesse James
- The Man Who Was (1965) - Jesse James
- The Celebrity (1965) - Jesse James
- Manhunt (1965) - Jesse James
- One Too Many Mornings (1965) - Jesse James
- Jail Break (1965) - Jesse James
- The Judas Boot (1965) - Jesse James
- The Quest (1965) - Jesse James
- Vendetta (1965) - Jesse James
- The Raiders (1965) - Jesse James
- The Pursuers (1965) - Jesse James
- Put Me in Touch with Jesse (1965) - Jesse James
- The Dead Man's Hand (1965) - Jesse James
- Three Men from Now (1965) - Jesse James (as Chris Jones)
Self
2003
Padre Pio Sanctus (Documentary) as
Self - Padre Pio (English Version / segment "Padre Pio Man of God") (voice)
1999
Padre Pio: Man of God (Video documentary) as
Self - Padre Pio (English Version) (voice)
1999
E! True Hollywood Story (TV Series documentary) as
Self
- Christopher Jones (1999) - Self
1970
Film Night (TV Series) as
Self
- We're the Last of the Travelling Circuses (1970) - Self (as Chris Jones)
Archive Footage
2018
The Andrew Klavan Show (Podcast Series) as
Self - Star in 'Wild in the Streets'
- Scandal in Coward County (2018) - Self - Star in 'Wild in the Streets'

References

Christopher Jones (actor) Wikipedia