Andrew Lewis Prine (February 14, 1936 – October 31, 2022) was an American film, stage, and television actor.

Andrew Prine
Prine in 2010
Born
Andrew Lewis Prine

(1936-02-14)February 14, 1936
DiedOctober 31, 2022(2022-10-31) (aged 86)
OccupationActor
Years active1957–2015
SpousesSharon Farrell
Brenda Scott
Heather Lowe

Early life

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Prine was born in 1936, in Jennings, Florida. He was raised in a farming community.[1] After graduation from Miami Jackson High School in Miami, Prine attended the University of Miami and performed at the acclaimed Jerry Herman Ring Theatre.

Career

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Early beginnings

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In the mid-1950s, Prine was a "starving" stage actor in New York City.[1] Prine made his acting debut in an episode of United States Steel Hour, in 1957.[2] He was the lead in the Broadway production of Thomas Wolfe's Look Homeward, Angel.[3] Adapted by playwright Ketti Frings, the play opened at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre on November 28, 1957.[4] In 1958, Prine was brought in as a replacement for Anthony Perkins.[5] It ran for a total of 564 performances, and closed on April 4, 1959. The production was a critical success,[6] it won 1958 Best American Play and was nominated for several Tony Awards.[7]

Prine left Broadway in pursuit of acting, after he realised the greater pay difference.[6] From 1959, he was cast in a series of small roles for television.[8] In 1962, Prine was cast in the Academy Award-nominated film The Miracle Worker as Helen Keller's older brother James.[9] He had fond memories of his co-star Anne Bancroft, who was dating Mel Brooks at the time.[1]

Westerns and television: 1960s

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Prine and Earl Holliman in a publicity shot for Wide Country

In 1962, Prine landed the lead role of Andy Guthrie with Earl Holliman in the 28-episode NBC series Wide Country, a drama about two brothers who are rodeo performers which aired between 1962 and 1963.[10] He learnt from rodeo performer and technical advisor Slim Pickens. Prine later credited Holliman for the quality of the series, in terms of rewriting the script and his dedication.[6] After the cancellation of Wide Country, Prine continued to work throughout the 1960s, in such Western television series as Gunsmoke, Bonanza, The Virginian, and Wagon Train.[10]

His other television appearances included the non-Western series Dr. Kildare, Cannon, Combat!, and Twelve O'Clock High.[8] He notably played Dr. Richard Kimble's brother Ray in an important first-season episode of The Fugitive.[11]

In the late 1960s, Prine appeared in three prominent films made by director Andrew V. McLaglen: The Devil's Brigade (1968) with William Holden, Bandolero! (1968) with Jimmy Stewart, Dean Martin and Raquel Welch, and Chisum (1970) with John Wayne. Prine was known for his youthful, egotistical attitude. Nobody else intimidated him, with the exception of Wayne.[6] Out of all the films in his career, Prine confessed that the Westerns were his personal favorite.[1]

Horror and television: 1970s–1980s

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During the 1970s and 1980s, Prine steadily worked in film and television. These series included Baretta, Barnaby Jones, Hawaii Five-O, The Bionic Woman, W.E.B., Dallas, and as Steven in the science-fiction miniseries V and its sequel V: The Final Battle.

Prine appeared in a succession of cult horror films Simon, King of the Witches (1971), Hannah, Queen of the Vampires (1973), Terror Circus (1973), The Centerfold Girls (1974), The Town That Dreaded Sundown (1976), Grizzly (1976), The Evil (1978), and Amityville II: The Possession (1982).[12]

Later years: 1990s–2010s

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During the 1990s, Prine continued to work in film and television. His appearances included Weird Science and Star Trek: The Next Generation.

Prine worked with director Quentin Tarantino on an Emmy-winning episode of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation and in Saving Grace with Holly Hunter, Boston Legal, and Six Feet Under, in addition to feature films with Johnny Knoxville. The Encore Western Channel has featured him on Conversations with Andrew Prine, interviewing Hollywood actors such as Eli Wallach, Harry Carey, Jr., and Patrick Wayne, and film makers such as Mark Rydell with behind-the-scenes anecdotes.[citation needed]

Stage

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A life member of the Actors Studio,[13] Prine's stage work includes Long Day's Journey into Night with Charlton Heston and Deborah Kerr, The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial, directed by Henry Fonda, and A Distant Bell on Broadway.[14]

Legacy

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Prine received the Golden Boot Award for his body of work in Westerns (in 2001)[15] and two Dramalogue Critics Awards for Best Actor in a leading role.[16]

Personal life

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Prine briefly married his first wife, actress Sharon Farrell in 1963. The couple divorced the same year, reportedly after only living together for one month and ten days.[17]

He married his second wife, actress Brenda Scott in 1965. The couple had multiple remarriages and divorces, before they remarried a third time with their relationship lasting from 1973 to 1978.[10]

In 1986, he married his third wife, actress-producer Heather Lowe. The couple were together until his death in 2022.[5]

Karyn Kupcinet investigation

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Prine, Irv Kupcinet and Karyn Kupcinet

From 1962 to her death on November 28, 1963, Prine dated actress Karyn Kupcinet.

The relationship was problematic; Kupcinet was abusing diet pills along with other prescription drugs.[18]

The problems in Kupcinet's relationship with Prine were mainly due to Prine's objections to making the relationship exclusive. After Kupcinet underwent an illegal abortion in July 1963, the relationship cooled, and Prine began dating other women. In turn, Kupcinet began spying on Prine and his new girlfriend.[19]

The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department later determined Kupcinet had delivered threatening and profane messages, consisting of words and letters she had cut out of magazines, to Prine and herself.

On November 30, 1963, Karyn Kupcinet was found dead in her apartment at the age of 22. Coroner Harold Kade concluded that due to a broken hyoid bone in her throat, Kupcinet had been strangled. Her death officially was ruled a homicide.[20]

During the course of its investigation, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department named Andrew Prine as one of its chief suspects. When questioned by law enforcement, Prine said he had talked with Kupcinet twice by phone on Wednesday, the day before her murder, claiming he was trying to resolve a lover's quarrel between them. Detectives considered it possible that, after Prine learned the anonymous threat letters both he and Kupcinet had received had been created by Kupcinet and their unresolved argument, he had a motive for murder. In addition, both Edward Rubin and Robert Hathaway, the two men who had possibly been the last to see her alive, were friends of Prine. They eventually were named as suspects.[21][22][19]

In 1988, Kupcinet's father Irv Kupcinet published a memoir in which he revealed that he and his wife Essee believed that Andrew Prine had nothing to do with their daughter's murder.[23] He was suspicious of a person, still alive when he wrote his memoir, who had no connection to Prine.[23] Irv Kupcinet named David Lange, a neighbor of his daughter, who had twice confessed to friends he was guilty. Later when questioned, Lange suggested he was kidding. However, when a girlfriend who was with Lange in his upper apartment told him about the police activity at his friend Karen's apartment, his reaction was adamant and he told her to close the drapes and keep quiet. She thought his demeanor was strange because Lange often had been in Karyn's apartment.[citation needed]

Death

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Prine died of natural causes while on vacation in Suresnes, France on October 31, 2022, at the age of 86.[5]

Filmography

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  • Kiss Her Goodbye (1959) as Kenneth 'Kenny' Grimes
  • The Miracle Worker (1962) as James Keller
  • Advance to the Rear (1964) as Private Owen Selous
  • Texas Across the River (1966) as Lieutenant Sibley
  • The Devil's Brigade (1968) as Private Theodore Ransom
  • Bandolero! (1968) as Deputy Sheriff Roscoe Bookbinder
  • This Savage Land (1969) (TV movie) as Timothy Pride
  • Generation a.k.a. A Time for Caring, A Time for Giving (1969) as Winn Garand
  • Along Came a Spider (1970) (TV movie) as Sam Howard
  • Chisum (1970) as Alex McSween
  • Lost Flight (1970) (TV movie) as Jonesy
  • Night Slaves (1970) (TV movie) as Fess Beany / Noel
  • Simon, King of the Witches (1971) as Simon Sinestrari
  • Squares a.k.a. Honky Tonk Cowboy, Riding Tall (1972) as Austin Ruth
  • Another Part of the Forest (1972, TV movie) as Oscar Hubbard
  • Crypt of the Living Dead a.k.a. La tumba de la isla maldita, Vampire Women (1973) as Chris Bolton
  • One Little Indian (1973) as Chaplain
  • Wonder Woman (1974) (TV movie) as George Calvin
  • Nightmare Circus (1974) as Andre
  • Centerfold Girls (1974) as Clement Dunne
  • Rooster Cogburn (1975) as Fiona's Husband (uncredited)
  • The Deputies a.k.a. The Law of the Land (1976) (TV movie) as Travis Carrington
  • Grizzly (1976) as Don Stober
  • The Winds of Autumn (1976) as Wire Hankins
  • The Town That Dreaded Sundown (1976) as Deputy Norman Ramsey
  • Tail Gunner Joe (1977) (TV movie) as Peter Parker McNair Gates
  • The Last of the Mohicans (1977) (TV movie) as Major Heyward
  • Christmas Miracle in Caufield, U.S.A. a.k.a. The Christmas Coal Mine Miracle (1977) (TV movie) as Arthur
  • The Evil (1978) as Professor Raymond Guy
  • Abe Lincoln: Freedom Fighter (1978) as Luke
  • Donner Pass: The Road to Survival (1978) (TV movie) as Lewis Keyser
  • Mind Over Murder (1979) (TV movie) as Bald Man
  • M Station: Hawaii (1980) (TV movie) as Captain Ben Galloway
  • Callie & Son a.k.a. Callie and Son a.k.a. Rags to Riches (1981) (TV movie) as Kimball Smythe
  • A Small Killing (1981) (TV movie) as Lieutenant Ward Arlen
  • Amityville II: The Possession (1982) as Father Tom
  • They're Playing with Fire (1984) as Michael Stevens
  • No Earthly Reason (1984) (TV movie) as Mr. Morrison
  • And the Children Shall Lead a.k.a. Wonderworks: And the Children Shall Lead (1985) (TV movie) as Sheriff Connelly
  • Eliminators (1986) as Harry Fontana
  • Chill Factor (1989) as Kioshe Jones
  • Mission of the Shark: The Saga of the U.S.S. Indianapolis (1991) (TV movie) as Henshaw
  • Life on the Edge (1992) as Dr. Roger Hardy
  • Deadly Exposure (1993) as Richard Anthony
  • Scattered Dreams a.k.a. Scattered Dreams: The Kathryn Messenger Story (1993) as Sandstrom
  • Gettysburg (1993) as Brigadier General Richard B. Garnett
  • Wolfridge (1994) as Jack Haig
  • Without Evidence (1995) as John Nelson
  • Serial Killer (1995) as Perry Jones
  • The Dark Dancer (1995) as Dr. Paul Orenstein
  • The Avenging Angel (1995) (TV movie) as Andrew Pike
  • The Shadow Men (1998) as MIB #1
  • Possums (1998) as Mayor Charlie Lawton
  • The Boy with the X-Ray Eyes a.k.a. X-Ray Boy, X-treme Teens (1999) as Malcolm Baker
  • Witchouse 2: Blood Coven (2000) as Sheriff Jake Harmon / Angus Westmore
  • James Dean (2001) (TV movie)
  • Critical Mass (2001) as Senator Cook
  • Sweet Home Alabama (2002) as Sheriff Holt (uncredited)
  • Gods and Generals (2003) as Brigadier General Richard B. Garnett (uncredited)
  • Glass Trap (2005) as Sheriff Ed
  • The Dukes of Hazzard (2005) as Angry Man
  • Hell to Pay (2005) as Matt Elden
  • Daltry Calhoun (2005) as Sheriff Cabot
  • Hollis & Rae (2006) (TV movie) as Percy Chandler
  • Sutures (2009) as Dr. Hopkins
  • Treasure of the Black Jaguar (2010) as Andrew Prine
  • Lords of Salem (2012) as Reverend Jonathan Hawthorne
  • Beyond the Farthest Star (2015) as Senator John Cutter

Television

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  • The United States Steel Hour (1957) (Season 5 Episode 8: "Little Charlie Don't Want a Saddle") as Elmo Hare
  • Playhouse 90 (1960) (Season 4 Episode 12: "Tomorrow") as Isham
  • Tombstone Territory (1960) (Season 3 Episode 25: "Revenge is a Lady") as Noah Bell
  • Alcoa Presents: One Step Beyond (1960) (Season 2 Episode 31: "The Peter Hurkos Story: Part 2") as Walter Bird
  • Overland Trail (1960) (Season 1 Episode 13: "Sour Annie") as Hank Paulson
  • Peter Gunn (1960) (Season 2 Episode 35: "Letter of the Law") as Neil Lockwood
  • The DuPont Show of the Month (1961) (Season 4 Episode 6: "The Lincoln Murder Case")
  • Have Gun — Will Travel (1960–1961) (2 episodes)
    • (Season 4 Episode 11: "The Marshal's Boy") (1960) as Billy Lamport
    • (Season 4 Episode 24: "Fandango") (1961) as Bobby Olson
  • Alcoa Premiere (1961–1962) (2 episodes)
    • (Season 1 Episode 9: "The End of a World") (1961) as Gavril Princip
    • (Season 1 Episode 18: "Second Chance") (1962) as Andy Guthrie
  • Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1962) (Season 7 Episode 17: "The Faith of Aaron Menefee") as Aaron Menefee
  • The Defenders (1962) (Season 1 Episode 20: "The Point Shaver") as Jim Wilkinson
  • The New Breed (1962) (Season 1 Episode 27: "Echoes of Hate") as Werner Muelich
  • Ben Casey (1962) (Season 1 Episode 30: "An Uncommonly Innocent Killing") as Jeff Billstrom
  • The Wide Country (1962–1963) (28 episodes) as Andy Guthrie
  • Vacation Playhouse (1963) (Season 1 Episode 9: "Come a-Runnin'") as Ernie Watson
  • Gunsmoke (1962-1963) (3 episodes)
    • (Season 7 Episode 33: "The Prisoner") (1962) as Billy Joe
    • (Season 8 Episode 5: "False Front") (1962) as Clay Tatum
    • (Season 9 Episode 5: "Easy Come") (1963) as Elmo Sippy
  • The Lieutenant (1963) (Season 1 Episode 11: "Fall from a White Horse") as Lieutenant Gerald Allison
  • The Great Adventure (1963) (Season 1 Episode 9: "The Outlaw and the Nun") as Billy the Kid
  • Dr. Kildare (1963–1965) (7 episodes)
    • (Season 3 Episode 5: "A Game for Three") (1963) as Dr. Louis Miller
    • (Season 4 Episode 12: "Catch a Crooked Mouse") (1964) as John Bardeman
    • (Season 5 Episode 5: "The Bell in the Schoolhouse Tolls for Thee, Kildare") (1965) as Dr. Roger Helvick
    • (Season 5 Episode 6: "Life in the Dance Hall") (1965) as Dr. Roger Helvick
    • (Season 5 Episode 7: "Some Doors are Slamming") (1965) as Dr. Roger Helvick
    • (Season 5 Episode 8: "Enough La Boheme for Everybody") (1965) as Dr. Roger Helvick
    • (Season 5 Episode 9: "Now the Mummy") (1965) as Dr. Roger Helvick
  • Profiles in Courage (1964) (Season 1 Episode 7: "John Adams") as Josiah Quincy
  • Wagon Train (1964-1965) (2 episodes)
    • (Season 8 Episode 1: "The Bob Stuart Story") (1964) as Felix Colton
    • (Season 8 Episode 17: "The Isaiah Quickfox Story") (1965) as Eric Camden
  • Twelve O'Clock High (1964–1965) (2 episodes)
    • (Season 1 Episode 2: "Follow the Leader") (1964) as Lieutenant Robert Mellon
    • (Season 2 Episode 13: "The Jones Boys") (1965) as Lieutenant Jaydee Jones
  • The Fugitive (1964–1965) (2 episodes)
    • (Season 1 Episode 15: "Home is the Hunted") (1964) as Ray Kimble
    • (Season 3 Episode 14: "End of the Line") (1965) as Neil Hollis
  • Combat! (1965) (Season 3 Episode 29: "Billy the Kid") as Lieutenant William Benton
  • Kraft Suspense Theatre (1965) (Season 2 Episode 24: "The Long Ravine") as Chris Sandee
  • Bonanza (1965) (Season 6 Episode 32: "Jonah") as George Whitman
  • Convoy (1965) (Season 1 Episode 8: "Admiral Do-Right") as Tillman
  • The Virginian (1965–1969) (5 episodes)
    • (Season 3 Episode 18: "Hideout") (1965) as Clint Evers
    • (Season 4 Episode 1: "The Brothers") (1965) as Will Denning
    • (Season 4 Episode 29: "A Bald-Faced Boy") (1966) as Brett Benton
    • (Season 5 Episode 29: "The Strange Quest of Claire Bingham") (1967) as Chuck Larson
    • (Season 8 Episode 4: "The Power Seekers") (1969) as Tobe Larkin
  • Tarzan (1966) (Season 1 Episode 2: "The Ultimate Weapon") as Peter Haines
  • The Road West (1966-1967) (all 29 episodes) as Timothy Pride
  • The Invaders (1967) (Season 2 Episode 8: "Dark Outpost") as Vern Corbett
  • Insight (1967-1970) (5 episodes)
    • (Episode 156: "Stranger in My Shoes") (1967) as Jim
    • (Episode 160: "All the Plumes in Pain") (1967) as Printer
    • (Episode 193: "The World, the Campus and Sister Lucy Ann") (1967) as Matt
    • (Episode 205: "All the Things I've Never Liked") (1969) as Eliot
    • (Episode 323: "Cry of Terror") (1970) as Tuesday
  • Daniel Boone (1968) (Season 4 Episode 25: "Thirty Pieces of Silver") as Amos Fargo
  • The Felony Squad (1968) (Season 3 Episode 3: "Underground Nightmare") as Benjy Panosian
  • Ironside (1968) (2 episodes) as Ernie Norton
    • (Season 2 Episode 2: "Split Second to an Epitaph: Part 1")
    • (Season 2 Episode 3: "Split Second to an Epitaph: Part 2")
  • Lancer (1968–1970) (2 episodes)
    • (Season 1 Episode 11: "The Heart of Pony Alice") (1968) as Wilf Guthrie
    • (Season 2 Episode 17: "The Lion and the Lamb") (1970) as Gabe Lincoln
  • The Name of the Game (1968–1970) (2 episodes)
    • (Season 1 Episode 14: "Pineapple Rose") (1968) as Jigger
    • (Season 2 Episode 23: "Echo of a Nightmare") (1970) as Victor Bailey
  • The F.B.I. (1968–1973) (3 episodes)
    • (Season 3 Episode 24: "The Mechanized Accomplice") (1968) as Spencer Lang
    • (Season 7 Episode 1: "Death on Sunday") (1971) as Irwin Lynch
    • (Season 8 Episode 23: "Sweet Evil") (1973) as Beau Parker
  • Love, American Style (1969) (Season 1 Episode 11 (Segment: "Love and the Divorce Sale") as Biff Harrison
  • Matt Lincoln (1970) (Season 1 Episode 7: "Lori")
  • The Most Deadly Game (1970) (Season 1 Episode 5: "Who Killed Kindness") as Clint
  • Dan August (1970) (Season 1 Episode 8: "The Union Forever") as Terry Young
  • The Courtship of Eddie's Father (1971) (Season 2 Episode 16: "The Hospital") as Dr. Hal 'Speed' Gould
  • Dr. Simon Locke a.k.a. Police Surgeon (1971) (1 episode)
  • Cannon (1971–1974) (2 episodes)
    • (Season 1 Episode 7: "Girl in the Electric Coffin") (1971) as Paul Whitney
    • (Season 4 Episode 11: "The Sounds of Silence") (1974) as Coy
  • The Delphi Bureau (1973) (Season 1 Episode 6: "The Day of Justice Project") as George-0
  • Barnaby Jones (1973–1974) (2 episodes)
    • (Season 2 Episode 4: "Day of the Viper") (1973) as Jim Howard / Jim Hague
    • (Season 3 Episode 9: "Dark Homecoming") (1974) as Shine Stanfield
  • Kung Fu (1974) (Season 2 Episode 12: "The Gunman") as White
  • Banacek (1974) (Season 2 Episode 6: "Rocket to Oblivion") as Tom Wardlow
  • Hawkins (1974) (Season 1 Episode 7: Candidate for Murder") as Peter Vall
  • Amy Prentiss (1974) (Season 1 Episode 2: "The Desperate World of Jane Doe") as Mel Kay
  • Kolchak: The Night Stalker (1975) (Season 1 Episode 16: "Demon in Lace") as Professor C. Evan Spate
  • Barbary Coast (1975) (Season 1 Episode 2: "Crazy Cats") as Fitzgerald
  • The Family Holvak (1975) (2 episodes) as Harve Jennings
    • (Season 1 Episode 5: "First Love: Part 1")
    • (Season 1 Episode 6: "First Love: Part 2")
  • Baretta (1975–1976) (2 episodes)
    • (Season 1 Episode 1: "He'll Never See Daylight") (1975) as Andy
    • (Season 3 Episode 12: "Look Back in Terror") as Tommy Bishop
  • Hawaii Five-O (1975-1978) (2 episodes)
    • (Season 8 Episode 4: "Target? The Lady") (1975) as Wally Hatch
    • (Season 10 Episode 23: "A Stranger in His Grave") (1978) as Richard Chadway
  • Riding With Death (1976) (Season 1 Episode 1: "Smithereens") as Luther Stark
  • Quincy, M.E. (1977) (Season 1 Episode 4: "Hot Ice, Cold Hearts") as Alex Kale
  • Hunter (1977) (Season 1 Episode 4: "The Hit") as Arthur Hillman
  • The Bionic Woman (1977) (Season 3 Episode 5: "Rodeo") as Dr. Billy Cole
  • W.E.B. (1978) (all 5 episodes) as Dan Costello
  • Flying High (1979) (Season 1 Episode 16: "The Challenges") as Marshall
  • The Littlest Hobo (1979) (2 episodes) as Tom Malone
    • (Season 1 Episode 2: "Manhunt: Part 1")
    • (Season 1 Episode 3: "Manhunt: Part 2")
  • One Day at a Time (1980) (Season 5 Episode 24: "Grecian Yearn") as Professor Kaufman
  • Darkroom (1982) (Season 1 Episode 12: "Lost in Translation") as Dr. Paul Hudson
  • Hart to Hart (1982) (Season 3 Episode 18: "Deep in the Heart of Dixieland") as Russell Robinson
  • The Fall Guy (1983) (Season 2 Episode 19: "One Hundred Miles a Gallon") as Ed Clarke
  • Boone (1983) (Season 1 Episode 7: "The Graduation") as A.W. Holly
  • V a.k.a. V: The Original Miniseries (1983) (2 episodes: "Season 1 Episode 1: Part 1" and "Season 1 Episode 2: Part 2") as Steven
  • V: The Final Battle (1984) (3 episodes: "Season 1 Episode 1: Part One"; "Season 1 Episode 2: Part Two"; "Season 1 Episode Three") as Steven
  • Trapper John, M.D. (1984) (Season 5 Episode 14: "A Little Knife Music") as Dr. Aubrye 'Neil' Neilson
  • Matt Houston (1984) (2 episodes)
    • (Season 2 Episode 22: "On the Run") as Truman Masters
    • (Season 3 Episode 1: "Wanted Man") as Peter Martin Delaney
  • Cover Up (1984) (Season 1 Episode 2: "The Million Dollar Face") as Michael Dante
  • Murder, She Wrote (1984–1991) (4 episodes)
    • (Season 1 Episode 5: "Lovers and Other Killers") (1984) as Professor Todd Lowery
    • (Season 3 Episode 8: "Magnum on Ice") (1986) as Victor Salyer
    • (Season 5 Episode 16: "Truck Stop") (1989) as Roscoe
    • (Season 7 Episode 17: "The Prodigal Father") (1991) as Gil Blocker
  • Danger Bay (1986) (2 episodes) as Perkins
    • (Season 2 Episode 1: "A New Beginning: Part 1")
    • (Season 2 Episode 2: "A New Beginning: Part 2")
  • The Law & Harry McGraw (1987) (Season 1 Episode 10: "Yankee Boodle Dandy") as Flagg
  • Paradise a.k.a. Guns of Paradise (1988) (Season 1 Episode 4: "The Ghost Dance") as Brenner
  • Dallas (1989) as Harrison Van Buren III
    • (Season 12 Episode 26: "Reel Life")
    • (Season 13 Episode 2: "The Leopard's Spots")
  • Freddy's Nightmares a.k.a. Freddy's Nightmares - A Nightmare on Elm Street: The Series (1989) (2 episodes)
    • (Season 1 Episode 12: "The End of the World") as Agent Stears
    • (Season 2 Episode 5: "Memory Overload") as Professor Charles Windom
  • In the Heat of the Night (1990) (Season 3 Episode 14: "December Days") as Richard Pooley
  • Parker Lewis Can't Lose (1991) (Season 2 Episode 4: "Future Shock") as Rex Huston
  • Matlock (1991) (Season 6 Episode 4: "The Nightmare") as Gil Briscoe
  • FBI: The Untold Stories (1992) (Season 1 Episode 18: "Operation Lemonade") as Agent John Keary-Taylor
  • Room for Two (1992) (Season 1 Episode 2: "Not Quite...Room for Two") as Reid Ellis
  • Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman (1993) (Season 1 Episode 9: "Running Ghost") as Thaddeus Birch
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation (1993) (Season 6 Episode 21: "Frame of Mind") as Administrator Suna
  • Married... with Children (1994) (Season 9 Episode 12: "I Want My Psycho Dad Part 1") as Psycho Dad
  • Weird Science (1994–1998) (11 episodes) as Wayne Donnelly
    • (Season 2 Episode 6: "Nightmare on Chett Street") (1994)
    • (Season 3 Episode 2: "Horseradish") (1995)
    • (Season 3 Episode 5: "Lucky Suit") (1995)
    • (Season 3 Episode 7: "Hot Wheels") (1995)
    • (Season 4 Episode 10: "Chett World") (1996)
    • (Season 4 Episode 15: "It's a Wonderful Life... Without You") (1996)
    • (Season 4 Episode 19: "Gary & Wyatt's Bloodsucking Adventure") (1996)
    • (Season 4 Episode 20: "It's a Mob, Mob, Mob, Mob World") (1996)
    • (Season 4 Episode 26: "Strangers in Paradise") (1996)
    • (Season 5 Episode 8: "Bee in There") (1997) as Wayne Donnelly / Wyatt Donnelly
    • (Season 5 Episode 15: "Wicked Wish") (1998)
  • Night Stand with Dick Dietrick (1995) (1 episode)
  • Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1995) (Season 3 Episode 13: "Life Support") as Legate Turrel
  • University Hospital (1995) (Season 1 Episode 6: "Crisis in Unit 2-E") as Mr. Pryor
  • Pointman (1995) (Season 2 Episode 6: "Going Home") as Mr. Percy
  • Baywatch Nights (1996) (Season 1 Episode 13: "Payback") as Carlos Gordon
  • Melrose Place (1996) (Season 4 Episode 30: "Peter's Excellent Adventure") as Dr. Tucker
  • Walker, Texas Ranger a.k.a. Walker (1997) (Season 5 Episode 16: "Full Contact") as Tim Kingston
  • Silk Stalkings (1997) (Season 7 Episode 2: "Ladies Man") as Conrad Malone
  • JAG (1999) (Season 5 Episode 6: "Psychic Warrior") as Admiral Linden Miles
  • Six Feet Under (2004) (2 episodes) as Ed Kimmel
    • (Season 4 Episode 1: "Falling into Place")
    • (Season 4 Episode 10: "The Black Forest")
  • CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (2005) (2 episodes) as Rodger Stokes
    • (Season 5 Episode 24: "Grave Danger (1)")
    • (Season 5 Episode 25: "Grave Danger (2)")
  • Boston Legal (2006) (Season 2 Episode 20: "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang") as Sam Wolfson
  • Saving Grace (2008) (Season 2 Episode 5: "Do You Love Him?") as Everett Marshall

References

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  1. ^ a b c d WesternsOnTheWeb (January 21, 2022). "Andrew Prine special guest on Along The Trail - Cheryl Rogers Barnett's tv show full episode". YouTube. Retrieved May 16, 2024.
  2. ^ "Little Charlie Don't Want a Saddle". IMDb. The United States Steel Hour. December 18, 1957. Retrieved May 16, 2024.
  3. ^ Parkway Playhouse Archived June 23, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ New York Times, Nov. 29, 1957, "The Theatre: 'Look Homeward, Angel' --- Luminous Adaptation of Wolfe Novel Opens," by Brooks Atkinson, p. 33.
  5. ^ a b c Barnes, Mike. "Andrew Prine, Actor in Westerns Including 'Chisum' and 'Wide Country,' Dies at 86". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved November 3, 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d A Word on Westerns (February 15, 2021). "R.I.P. Andrew Prine (Feb 14, 1936-Oct 31, 2022). Andy rides hard in CHISUM. Dean Martin! Slim! Earl!". YouTube. Retrieved May 16, 2024.
  7. ^ "Look Homeward, Angel". Playbill. Retrieved May 16, 2024.
  8. ^ a b "Andrew Prine". IMDb. Retrieved May 16, 2024.
  9. ^ Penn, Arthur (July 28, 1962), The Miracle Worker (Biography, Drama), Anne Bancroft, Patty Duke, Victor Jory, Playfilm Productions, retrieved May 16, 2024
  10. ^ a b c Brode, Douglas (October 15, 2009). Shooting Stars of the Small Screen: Encyclopedia of TV Western Actors, 1946–Present. University of Texas Press. pp. 266–267. ISBN 978-0-292-71849-4.
  11. ^ Hopper, Jerry (January 7, 1964), Home Is the Hunted, The Fugitive, David Janssen, Andrew Prine, Jacqueline Scott, retrieved May 16, 2024
  12. ^ "The Classic Horror Film Board-ANDREW PRINE". The Classic Horror Film Board. May 23, 2020. Retrieved May 15, 2024.
  13. ^ Garfield, David (1980). "Appendix: Life Members of The Actors Studio as of January 1980". A Player's Place: The Story of The Actors Studio. New York: MacMillan Publishing Co., Inc. p. 279. ISBN 0-02-542650-8.
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  19. ^ a b [Felsenthal, Carol (June 2004). "The Lost World of Kup". Chicago Magazine.]
  20. ^ Felsenthal, Carol (June 2004). "The Lost World of Kup". Chicago Magazine. p. 7. Archived from the original on April 3, 2016. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
  21. ^ Stephan Benzkofer (November 24, 2013). "Karyn Kupcinet 1963 death still unsolved". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved July 7, 2015.
  22. ^ Phil Potempa (November 29, 2013). "OFFBEAT: Chicago gossip columnist Kup never forgot beloved daughter". Northwest Indiana Times. Retrieved July 7, 2015.
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