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Ben Wright (English actor)

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Ben Wright
File:Ben Wright in Perry Mason 1958.jpg
Wright in Perry Mason (1958)
Born
Benjamin Huntington Wright

(1915-05-05)5 May 1915
London, England
Died2 July 1989(1989-07-02) (aged 74)
OccupationActor
Years active1936–1989
Spouses
  • (m. 1936; div. 1946)
  • Muriel Louise Roberts
    (m. 1951)
Children2

Benjamin Huntington Wright[1] (5 May 1915 – 2 July 1989) was an English actor.

Early life

Ben Wright was born on 5 May 1915 in London to an American father and an English mother. At the age of 16, he entered the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. Upon graduating, he acted in several West End stage productions. When World War II broke out, he enlisted and served in the Kings Royal Rifle Corps. He came to the U.S. in 1946 to attend a cousin's wedding and settled in Hollywood.

Radio

Wright worked extensively in American radio, supplying crisp, erudite diction as the radio incarnation of Sherlock Holmes[2]: 302  (1949–1950) and Inspector Peter Black on Pursuit (1951–1952).[2]: 277–78  He played Indian servant Tulku on The Green Lama,[2]: 139  Chinese bellhop Hey Boy on the radio version of Have Gun Will Travel,[2]: 146  various dialect roles on the U.K. radio program Nightbeat, and the anthology series, Escape,[2]: 110  on which his roles ranged from the Cockney protagonist of The Man Who Worked Miracles to the famed Arabian hero of The Voyages of Sinbad. His other radio credits included Gunsmoke, Crime Classics,[2] and Suspense.

Film and television

He achieved worldwide attention when he was seen as the Nazi Herr Zeller in The Sound of Music (1965), and he had small roles in Judgment at Nuremberg (1961), My Fair Lady (1964), and Billy Wilder's The Fortune Cookie (1966). On television, he was a guest star on such series as My Three Sons, Hogan's Heroes (as various Nazi officers), McHale's Navy, Combat!, Get Smart, Bonanza, Gunsmoke (in a recurring role as billiard parlor owner “Dan Binney”, later as town barber “Birger Engdohl” & as “Sgt. Pickens in “Wagon Girls”), The Wild Wild West, The Twilight Zone, Mr. Adams and Eve, The Tab Hunter Show, Straightaway, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, It Takes a Thief, Mission: Impossible, as Mr. Rudolpho on the final episode of the 1964 series The Addams Family, and The Rockford Files. Wright made three guest appearances on Perry Mason, starring Raymond Burr. He played Walter Lumis in the 1958 episode "The Case of the Terrified Typist", in the 1960 episode, "The Case of the Bashful Burro", he played assay agent and murderer Crawford Wright, who speaks with a Welsh-sounding accent and he played Clarence Keller in the 1961 episode "The Case of the Guilty Clients".

Wright played Governor José María de Echeandía in the 1960 episode "Forbidden Wedding" of the syndicated anthology series Death Valley Days, hosted by Stanley Andrews.

Wright made a guest appearance on the television series The Monkees, in the episode "The Success Story". He had appearances on Alfred Hitchcock Presents and Dragnet 1967. In 1971 Wright appeared as the desk clerk on "The Men From Shiloh" (rebranded name of the TV western The Virginian) in the episode titled "The Town Killer." Ben Wright also appeared in the first season of Barnaby Jones; episode titled, "Twenty Million Alibis" (6 May 1973).

Wright also worked as a voice actor. He was often heard on The Outer Limits as various alien voices, and he also appeared on camera. Other voice work included the narrator in Cleopatra (1963) with Elizabeth Taylor, the BBC announcer in the film version of The Diary of Anne Frank (1959) and featured animation roles in several Disney films: One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961) as songwriter Roger Radcliff, The Jungle Book (1967) as Mowgli's wolf father, Rama, and The Little Mermaid (1989) as Grimsby, which was his final role.[3]

Death

On 2 July 1989, Wright died in Saint Joseph Medical Center in Burbank, California, after undergoing heart surgery.[3] His body was cremated.[citation needed]

Selected filmography

References

  1. ^ "Ben Wright". Turner Classic Movies.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Terrace, Vincent (1999). Radio Programs, 1924–1984: A Catalog of More Than 1800 Shows. McFarland & Company, Inc. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-7864-4513-4.
  3. ^ a b "Ben Wright, 74; Veteran Radio, Movie and TV Character Actor". Los Angeles Times. 3 July 1989. Archived from the original on 26 January 2018. Retrieved 26 January 2018.