Hugh
O'Brian, who helped tame the Wild West as the star of TV's “The Life
and Legend of Wyatt Earp” and was the founder of a long-running youth
leadership development organization, has …
Hugh O'Brian, actor who played Wyatt Earp, dies at 91
Dennis McLellan
Hugh O'Brian, who helped tame the Wild West as the star of TV's
“The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp” and was the founder of a
long-running youth leadership development organization, has died. He was
91.
O'Brian, who had several health issues, died Monday morning
with his wife nearby at their Beverly Hills home, his publicist Harlan
Boll said.
Handsome, square-jawed and athletically fit, the dark-haired
O'Brian appeared in a string of movies and TV anthology series in the
years before he became a star portraying the real-life Old West peace
officer on “The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp,” which ran on ABC from
1955 to 1961.
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TV's first adult western, “Wyatt Earp” became a top 10-rated series and made O'Brian a household name.
Portraying what the show's theme song described as the
“brave, courageous and bold” frontier lawman, O'Brian wore a black frock
coat, a gold brocade vest, a string tie and a flat-brimmed black hat —
and he kept the peace with the help of a “Buntline Special”: a .45
revolver with an extra-long barrel.
In portraying Earp, O'Brian became known for his fast quick-draw.
“I
didn't want to force them into having to cut away whenever that
happened; I wanted it to be realistic,” the actor said in a 2005
“Archive of American Television” interview.
He spent hundreds of
hours practicing the quick draw, the result of which, he said, “became a
very big promotional tool ... and everybody talked about the quick
draw.”
During the series' run, O'Brian received an Emmy nomination
and became so identified with his dead-shot TV character that he did
his best to keep the name O'Brian separated from Earp.
He did it
by doing a lot of outside acting — on anthology series such as
“Playhouse 90” and “Desilu Playhouse” — as well guest appearances on TV
variety shows and a stint on Broadway starring in the musical comedy
“Destry Rides Again.”
Decades later, O'Brian showed up as Earp in
two 1989 episodes of the TV western “Paradise.” He also appeared as Earp
in the 1991 Kenny Rogers TV miniseries “The Gambler Returns: The Luck
of the Draw”. And he starred in “Wyatt Earp: Return to Tombstone,” a
1994 TV movie that included flashbacks to scenes from his old series.
As O'Brian once said of the TV western that made him a star: “It's been a great horse, and she keeps coming around the corral.”
Among
his post-”Wyatt Earp” movie credits were “Come Fly With Me,” “Africa —
Texas Style,” “The Shootist” and “Twins.” He also starred in the 1972-73
NBC adventure series “Search,” did more stage work and made guest
appearances on series such as “Fantasy Island” and “The Love Boat.”
But O'Brian's most enduring legacy is off-screen.
More
than 375,000 high school sophomores selected by their schools have gone
through his Hugh O'Brian Youth Leadership organization, which was
founded “to inspire and develop our global community of youth and
volunteers to a life dedicated to leadership, service and innovation.”
The nonprofit organization grew out of an invitation to
O'Brian from Dr. Albert Schweitzer to visit the medical missionary, a
1952 Nobel Peace Prize recipient, at his famed hospital in Africa.
O'Brian
spent nine days working as a volunteer at the hospital on the banks of
the Ogooue River in Gabon during the summer of 1958.
For O'Brian, it was a life-changing experience.
After dinner each evening, he and Schweitzer would spend hours talking.
As
O'Brian was getting ready to depart down river, he later recalled,
Schweitzer took his hand and asked, “Hugh, what are you going to do with
this?”
On his flight back to the United States, O'Brian reflected
on Schweitzer's comment that “the most important part of education is
teaching young people to think for themselves.”
“While the entertainment industry has lost one of its own and the baby boomers have lost their Wyatt Earp,” a statement on the HOBY website said Monday, “we
will remember Hugh as a person who dedicated his life to inspiring a
global community of youth and volunteers committed to leadership,
service and innovation.”
O’Brian was born Hugh Krampe in
Rochester, N.Y., on April 19, 1925. He enlisted in the Marine Corps in
1943 and was assigned as a drill instructor in San Diego.
With
hopes of becoming a lawyer, O'Brian was scheduled to begin attending
Yale University on the G.I. Bill in the fall of 1947. He spent the
spring and summer in Los Angeles, working to earn enough money to buy a
car to drive East, but had an unexpected change of plans when the
actress he was dating began rehearsals for the Somerset Maugham play
“Home and Beauty” at the Wilshire Ebell Theatre.
“If I wanted to see her, I had to go to rehearsals,” he recalled in a 2009 interview with The Times.
When the leading man didn't show up on the
second or third night of rehearsals, O'Brian was asked to read the
leading man's role.
“After about four days, they realized the guy
wasn't going to come back ... so the director asked me if I would do the
role.... We did the show and a reporter for the L.A. Times came down to
see it and the next day, he wrote a tremendous review ... That's how I
got started.”
The show's playbill, however, misspelled his name.
“They
left the 'm' out of Krampe,'“ he said in a 2013 Times interview. “I
decided right then I didn't want to go through life being known as Huge
Krape, so I decided to take my mother's family name, O'Brien. But they
misspelled it as 'O'Brian' and I just decided to stay with that.”
A
third-billed starring role as a wheelchair-bound paraplegic in the Ida
Lupino-directed 1950 movie drama “Never Fear” marked what O'Brian later
described as his “real beginning” as an actor. A contract with Universal
followed.
O'Brian was a one of the founders of the Thalians, a
show-business charitable organization formed in 1955 to raise money for
children with mental health problems. In 1964, he established the Hugh
O'Brian Acting Awards competition at UCLA.
In 2006, O'Brian married for the first time.
In
what was described as “the wedding to die for,” he and his longtime
girlfriend, the former Virginia Barber, were married at Forest Lawn
Memorial-Park in Glendale.
O’Brian is survived by his wife, Virginia, brother Don Krampe and seven nieces and nephews.
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