George Peppard
Born: Oct 1, 1928
A fairhaired, blue-eyed, handsome leading man who was groomed for stardom in the waning years of the studio system, George Peppard started as a radio performer and stock player, and studied at New York's Actors' Studio while working on Broadway and in TV. A role in The Strange One (1957) gave Peppard a serviceable screen debut, and after good parts in Pork Chop Hill (1959) and Home From the Hill (1960), he was signed to star opposite Audrey Hepburn in the popular Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961). Established as a leading man, Peppard subsequently played tough guys, though he was buried in the large, prestigious casts of How the West Was Won (1962) and The Victors (1963). He was the charismatic lead in the Harold Robbins saga The Carpetbaggers (1964, with Elizabeth Ashley as one of his wives, a role she played offscreen as well). The remainder of Peppard's films were mostly action, Westerns, or thrillers. Peppard spent much of the 1970s and 1980s on TV, where he starred in many TV movies but achieved greater success in the series "Banacek" (1972-74), "Doctors Hospital" (1975-76), and, as the tongue-in-cheek, cigarchomping star of "The A-Team" (1983-87). In 1978 he wrote, directed, produced, and starred in a heart-tugging vehicle, Five Days From Home OTHER FILMS INCLUDE: 1960: The Subterraneans 1965: Operation Crossbow, The Third Day 1966: The Blue Max 1967: Tobruk, Rough Night in Jericho 1968: P.J., What's So Bad About Feeling Good? 1969: House of Cards, Pendulum 1970: The Exe...[MORE]
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