Paul Fix

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Paul Fix
Fix in a dual role in a 1962 episode of The Rifleman as "Charming Billy" Carraway
Born
Peter Paul Fix

(1901-03-13)March 13, 1901
DiedOctober 14, 1983(1983-10-14) (aged 82)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
OccupationActor
Years active1925–1981
Spouses
Frances Harvey
(m. 1922; div. 1945)
Beverly Pratt
(m. 1949; died 1979)
Children1
RelativesHarry Carey Jr. (son-in-law)

Peter Paul Fix (March 13, 1901 – October 14, 1983) was an American film and television character actor who was best known for his work in Westerns. Fix appeared in more than 100 movies and dozens of television shows over a 56-year career between 1925 and 1981. Fix portrayed Marshal Micah Torrance, opposite Chuck Connors's character in The Rifleman from 1958 to 1963. He later appeared with Connors in the 1966 Western film Ride Beyond Vengeance.

Early life and military service

Fix was the son of Wilhelm Fix and Louise Walz, and was born born March 13, 1901, in Dobbs Ferry, NY. His father was a brewer from Germany.[1]

Following the United States' entry into

Fort Slocum for three months, he again went AWOL and then enlisted in the U.S. Navy, and was stationed in Providence, Rhode Island. While serving in the Navy, Fix was recruited to perform on stage in a Navy Relief Organization production of the comic opera H.M.S. Pinafore. Later, he served as a hospital corpsman aboard ships transporting American troops to and from Europe, and continued that assignment until he was officially discharged from military service on September 5, 1919.[2]

Stage and films

Following the war, Fix became a busy character actor, who got his start in local productions in New York. By the 1920s, he had moved to Hollywood, and performed in the first of almost 350 movie and television appearances. In the 1930s, he became friends with John Wayne. He was Wayne's acting coach and eventually appeared as a featured player in about 27 of Wayne's films.[3][4]

Fix worked in early films such as Lucky Star (1929) with Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell and Ladies Love Brutes (1930), and became a regular performer for the film's director, Frank Borzage, on a further eight occasions. Fix later appeared as Richard Bravo in the 1950s cult classic, The Bad Seed (1956) with Nancy Kelly, The Sea Chase (1955) with John Wayne and Lana Turner, playing Heinz the cook, and in George Stevens' Giant (1956) with James Dean, portraying Elizabeth Taylor's father.

Fix appeared as the presiding judge in To Kill a Mockingbird (1962) with Gregory Peck. He played the sheriff in The Sons of Katie Elder (1965) with John Wayne and Dean Martin. In 1966, he appeared in the film El Dorado with Wayne and Robert Mitchum. In 1972, he was cast in the film Night of the Lepus, and the following year, he portrayed the New Mexico rancher Pete Maxwell in Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid with James Coburn. In 1979, he appeared in Wanda Nevada. Fix co-wrote the screenplay for the John Wayne film Tall in the Saddle.[5]

Television

Fix had a recurring role as Marshal Micah Torrance on ABC's Western series The Rifleman, which was broadcast from 1958 to 1963.[6]

Fix in The Rifleman as his regular character in the series, Marshal Torrance.

On Christmas Day 1958, Fix appeared in the episode "Medal for Valor" on CBS's Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre. Fix plays a businessman who hires a desperate man to substitute for his son in the draft, later to interfere with the man's homesteading rights when it threatens his son's political aspirations.

Fix guest-starred on the short-lived detective series, Meet McGraw;[citation needed] on Rory Calhoun's Western series The Texan on CBS; and on John Payne's Western series The Restless Gun on NBC.

Fix played the historical role of

U.S. President Zachary Taylor in the 1960 episode "That Taylor Affair" of the NBC Western series, Riverboat, with Darren McGavin. Arlene Dahl was cast in this episode as Lucy Belle.[7]

In 1961, Fix appeared as Ramsey Collins in the series finale, "Around the Dark Corner", of the NBC

crime drama Dante. That same year, he played Dr. Abel in the episode "The Haven" on The DuPont Show with June Allyson. His other television credits include Adventures of Superman (1953–1954, with Anthony Caruso and Elisha Cook Jr.) and the adventure series, Northwest Passage
.

Fix played Dr. Mark Piper in the second pilot episode of Star Trek, "Where No Man Has Gone Before". When the first season was filmed, his character was replaced by Leonard McCoy, played by DeForest Kelley.[8][9]

Fix made five appearances as District Attorney Hale on

Owen Marshall: Counselor at Law (1971), The Rockford Files episode "The House on Willis Avenue" (as Joe Tooley), and two episodes of The Streets of San Francisco, one in 1973 and again in 1975, each a different character/storyline. He appeared on the NBC series Kentucky Jones (1964) as Judge Perkins in the episode "Spare the Rod". He played an aging suicidal novelist named Maxwell Hart on the Emergency! fourth-season episode "Kidding", where paramedic John Gage, played by Randolph Mantooth, was in charge of a small group of intellectual 10- and 11-year-old school children on a tour of Rampart General Hospital. In 1974, he made an appearance as an old friend of Steve Austin's in the TV series The Six Million Dollar Man in the episode "Population Zero". He also appeared as Kronus, a retired fleet commander on the original Battlestar Galactica
.

Fix played the hardy pioneer James Briton "Brit" Bailey in the 1969 episode "Here Stands Bailey" of Death Valley Days.

Personal life and death

In 1922 Fix married Frances Harvey, and the couple had one daughter. They divorced in 1945. He married his second wife, Beverly Pratt, on August 20, 1949. She died November 13, 1979.[1]

His daughter Marilyn married actor Harry Carey Jr., in 1944, and they had four children.[3][10][11]

Fix died of kidney failure in Los Angeles at the age of 82.[10] He is buried beside his second wife at Woodlawn Cemetery, Santa Monica.[1]

Selected filmography

Film writer

Television

  • The Lone Ranger – episode – Million Dollar Wallpaper – Silk (1950)
  • Adventures of Superman (Credits Paul Fix) – Episode Season 1 Episode 22 – Czar of the Underworld (1953)
  • Adventures of Superman (Credits Peter Fix) – Episode Season 2 Episode 18 – Semi-Private Eye (1954)
  • Perry Mason – episode - The Case of the Angry Mourner - District Attorney Hale (1957)
  • The Restless Gun - episode - Jody - as Jake Burnett (1957)
  • The Rifleman – 123 episodes appeared in, and credit only for 27 episodes – Marshall Micah Torrance, and Charming Billy for 1 episode (1958–1963)
  • Wagon Train – episode – The Mark Hanford Story – Jake (1958)
  • Perry Mason – Season 2 Episode 6 - The Case of the Buried Clock - District Attorney Hale (1958)
  • Wagon Train – episode – The Amos Billings Story – Amos Billings (1962)
  • Wagon Train – episode – The Brian Conlin Story – Sean Bannon (1964)
  • Lassie – episode – The Sulky Race – Sam Snow (1959)
  • Ripcord – episode – Jump to a Blind Alley – Josh Parker (1963)
  • I Am the Night Color Me Black
    "
  • The F.B.I. – episode – How to Murder an Iron Horse – Willard Oberley (1965)
  • Lily Langtry
    (1965)
  • Star Trek: The Original Series (1966) – Dr. Mark Piper in S1:E3, "Where No Man Has Gone Before"
  • Daniel Boone – Quonab - S3/E2 "The Allegiances" (1966)
  • A Man Called Shenandoah – episode – Plunder – Sam Winters (1966)
  • The Wild Wild West - episode - Night of the green terror - Old Chief (1966)
  • Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea - S3/E5 - The Terrible Toys - Burke (1966)
  • Bonanza
    – episode – The Gold Detector – Barney (1967)
  • Gunsmoke
    - episode - Fandango - Doc Lacey (1967)
  • Gunsmoke
    – episode – Vengeance Part 1 – Sheriff Sloan (1967)
  • The Big Valley – episode – The Stallion – Brahma (1967)
  • The Guns of Will Sonnett – episode #1 – Ride the Long Trail – Olenhaussen - Stableman (1967)
  • The Wild Wild West - S3 E7 "The Night of the Hangman" - Judge Blake (1967)
  • Land of the Giants – episode #9 "The Creed" Doctor Brule (1968)
  • Land of the Giants – episode #17 "Deadly Lodestone" Doctor Brule (1969)
  • The Andy Griffith Show – episode – Barney Hosts a Summit Meeting – Mr. McCabe (1968)
  • Daniel Boone (1964 TV series) – Chief Great Bear - S5/E16 "Three Score and Ten" (1969)
  • The F.B.I. – episode – The Prey – Chester Cranford (1969)
  • Death Valley Days season 17 episode 18 Here Stands Bailey - Brit Bailey (1969)
  • The F.B.I. – episode – Incident in the Desert – Matt Williams (1970)
  • Ironside – episode – The Laying on of Handy – Cripple (1970)
  • Alias Smith and Jones – episode – The Day They Hanged Kid Curry – Tom Hansen (1971)
  • Owen Marshall: Counselor at Law
    – episode – Make No Mistake – Dr. Mel Woodruff (1971)
  • Alias Smith and Jones – episode – Night of the Red Dog – Clarence Bowles (1971)
  • Bonanza
    – episode – For a Young Lady – Bufford Sturgis (1971)
  • Mannix – episode – Scapegoat – Johnny Gunnarson (1972)
  • Emergency!
    – episode – Fuzz Lady – Gus 'Pop' William (1972)
  • Alias Smith and Jones – episode – Three to a Bed – Bronc (1973)
  • The F.B.I. – episode – The Big Job – G.G. Farrell (1973)
  • The Six Million Dollar Man – episode – Population: Zero – Joe Taylor (1974)
  • Barnaby Jones – episode – Dark Legacy – Amos Barringer (1974)
  • Doc Elliot – episode – The Pharmacist – Gus Turners (1974)
  • The Waltons - episode - The Conflict - Senator Lucas Avery (1974)
  • Barnaby Jones – episode – Death on Deposit – Alfred Stermer (1974)
  • Barnaby Jones – episode – Double Vengeance – Jack Tatthal (1975)
  • Emergency!
    – episode – Kidding – Maxwell Hart (1975)
  • Lincoln – mini-series – episode – Prairie Law – Judge Thomas (1975)
  • Ellery Queen – episode – The Adventure of the Sinister Scenario – Captain Benjamin Blake (1976)
  • How The West Was Won – Mini series – episodes #1.2–1.4 – Portagee (1977–1978)
  • The Rockford Files – episode – The House On Willis Avenue – Joseph Tooley (1978)
  • Battlestar Galactica – episode – Take The Celestra – Commander Kronus (1979)
  • Quincy M.E. – episode – For Want of A Horse – Jason Randall (1981) (final appearance)

References

  1. ^ a b c Aaker, Everett, Television Western Players, 1960-1975: A Biographical Dictionary, page 163, McFarland, Inc., 2017
  2. ^ "Paul Peter Fix collection: Veterans History Project (Library of Congress". memory.loc.gov. Retrieved May 10, 2017.
  3. ^ .
  4. .
  5. ^ Eyman 2015, p. 147.
  6. ^ Brooks, Tim and Marsh, Earle, The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network TV Shows 1946 – Present, Ballantine Books, 1979, page 528.
  7. .
  8. ^ Zoglin, Richard (July 21, 2016). "A Bold Vision: How Star Trek First Made It to the Screen". Time. Retrieved July 21, 2016.
  9. ^ "9 fascinating facts about 'The Rifleman'". MeTV. March 10, 2016. Retrieved March 10, 2016.
  10. ^ a b "Paul Fix, Actor, Is Dead; In 300 Movies Since 1926". The New York Times. October 19, 1983. Retrieved September 11, 2017.
  11. ^ Byrge, Duane (December 28, 2012). "Western Character Actor Harry Carey Jr. Dies". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved December 28, 2012.

External links