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Prolific Character Actor Harold Stone, 92, Dies.....

venray

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Saturday, November 19, 2005 By Valerie J. Nelson Los Angeles Times

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LOS ANGELES -- Harold Stone, a character actor with sculpted features who worked steadily from the 1950s through the 1970s, often portraying the villain on television shows, has died. He was 92.

Stone died Friday of natural causes at the Motion Picture and Television Country House and Hospital in Los Angeles, said his son, Michael.

In 1964, Stone received an Emmy nomination for playing an Army medic who becomes a male nurse at great personal cost in an episode of “The Nurses,” an hourlong drama that aired on CBS.

One of his favorite roles was playing Sam Steinberg, the father of David Birney’s character on “Bridget Loves Bernie,” the ethnic comedy about a mixed marriage that aired for a season on CBS beginning in 1972. He also enjoyed playing the publisher on “My World and Welcome to It,” the NBC series loosely based on the works of James Thurber that ran from 1969 to 1970, his son said.

He kept so busy as an actor -- averaging by one estimate about 20 television appearances a year -- that he recently told his granddaughter, Laura Bosserman: “I don’t think there are any roles I haven’t played.”

His appearance with Humphrey Bogart in “The Harder They Fall” (1956) was a turning point in Stone’s career. Bogart took a liking to him and spread the word around Hollywood that he was a good actor, Stone recalled in 2000.

An only child, he was born Harold Hochstein on March 3, 1913, in New York City. The third-generation actor made his stage debut at 6 with his father, Jacob Hochstein, in the Yiddish play “White Slaves.” He had one line -- “mama” -- that he failed to remember on opening night.

After graduating from New York University, he studied medicine at the University of Buffalo during the Depression but was forced to drop out to support his mother and fell back on acting.

On Broadway, he debuted in 1939 in “The World We Make” and appeared in four more plays there before making his uncredited film debut in “The Blue Dahlia” (1946).

Until he retired in 1980, he was an often-menacing presence on TV crime shows and police dramas. He also appeared in about 30 films, including Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Wrong Man” (1956), “Spartacus” (1960) and “The Greatest Story Ever Told” (1965).

In 1960, his first wife, Jean, died, leaving him with two children, who were 8 and 11. He remarried the same year and had another son. He and his second wife, Miriam, legally separated four years later but never divorced.

In addition to his son Michael of Tarzana and his granddaughter Laura, Stone is survived by another son, Robert of Los Angeles; a daughter, Jennifer Bosserman of Tarzana; and three other grandchildren.
 
This was a life to be envied. The man had a more successful career than a lot of so-called stars who burned out or faded away. Lord, he was all over television when I was growing up; you'd see him on Twilight Zone one week and Gunsmoke the next. I remember well his favorite series, cited above, and I was especially fond of My World and Welcome To It, which starred William Windom as the Thurberesque main character. Unfortunately, it only lasted a season and therefore has too few episodes to make it worth syndicating. Some enterprising company should issue DVD's of shows like that, high-quality endeavors that, for one reason or another, failed to catch on with the public...or better yet, rebroadcast them on an anthology series. (TVLAND, are you listening?) Shows like Lew Archer, Heartland, The Zoo Gang, Once a Hero, and Davis Rules.
 
The Windom/Thurber series was on when I was eight...I guess my tastes were very, very advanced for someone my age, I thought it was a great show. Shame it didn't last long.
 
Knox The Hatter said:
The Windom/Thurber series was on when I was eight...I guess my tastes were very, very advanced for someone my age, I thought it was a great show. Shame it didn't last long.
Well, it was over most people's heads. I was fifteen and I loved it, but I can only remember one line of dialogue now. In a daydream sequence, Windom has just been trounced in a humor duel with a folksy old cracker-barrel philosopher, who tells him quietly afterwards, "If a man can't even win in his own fantasy, he might as well give up."
 
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