Actor
Richard Anderson, boss of 'Six Million Dollar Man,' dies
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[September 01, 2017]
By Peter Cooney
Richard Anderson, who
played the boss of both "The Six Million Dollar Man" and
"The Bionic Woman" in an on-screen career stretching
some 50 years, died on Thursday, a family spokesman
said. He was 91.
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Anderson died from natural causes at his home
in Beverly Hills, California, surrounded by his family,
publicist Jonathan Taylor said. Memorial services will be
private, Taylor added.
The imposing 6-foot-3-inch (190-cm) actor often appeared on
screen as an authority figure - politicians, government
officials and policemen - but also played his share of cowboys
and criminals. His roster of guest appearances included many
popular shows still airing in syndication such as "The Big
Valley," "Ironside," "Murder She Wrote" and "Dynasty."
Anderson played the police chief in the Burt Reynolds' detective
series "Dan August" (1970-1971), and a police lieutenant in the
last season of the long-running legal drama "Perry Mason." Two
decades later, he had a prominent guest role in the 1985 TV
movie "Perry Mason Returns," which reunited original series cast
members Raymond Burr and Barbara Hale.
In the 1967 two-part finale of "The Fugitive," Anderson played
the husband of Dr. Richard Kimble's sister. The climactic
episode in which Kimble, played by David Janssen, finally
cleared his name in the killing of his wife after four seasons
on the run, was at the time the most-watched series program in
TV history.
But it was as U.S. intelligence official Oscar Goldman that
Anderson left his most lasting mark on television. Goldman was
the chief of Steve Austin, a secret agent with enhanced bionic
powers after reconstructive surgery in the 1974-1978 hit series
"The Six Million Dollar Man," starring Lee Majors.
Anderson became one of the first actors to play the same
character simultaneously on two shows on different networks when
he reprised his Goldman role in the 1976-1978 spinoff "The
Bionic Woman," starring Lindsay Wagner.
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"It was a time when everything was down. The Vietnam War had just
ended and everybody was down and we came in with a hero," Anderson
told "Hollywood Exclusive" in 2009 when asked about the shows'
popularity.
In the late 1980s, Anderson persuaded studio executives to reunite
the two bionic heroes, which led to three television movies in which
he reprised his Goldman role and helped produce.
"I'm very grateful to Oscar Goldman. He's been very good to me,"
Anderson told a Montreal radio show in 1994.
Born in Long Branch, New Jersey, on Aug. 8, 1926, Anderson began his
acting career as an MGM contract player in the last days of the
studio system. Among his many film credits were "Forbidden Planet"
(1956), Stanley Kubrick's "Paths of Glory" (1957), and "The Long Hot
Summer" (1958).
He made the leap into television in the early 1950s, becoming one of
the medium's most familiar faces through a stream of character roles
over five decades.
"When I went into television, that's where the audience was. And in
my opinion, still is," Anderson said in the Canadian radio
interview.
(Reporting and writing by Peter Cooney in Washington; Additional
reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy in Los Angeles; Editing by Bill Trott
and Bill Rigby)
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