
Actor
Lloyd Nolan
Born 1902 · San Francisco, California, USA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Lloyd Benedict Nolan (August 11, 1902 – September 27, 1985) was an American film and television actor. Among his many roles, Nolan is remembered for originating the role of private investigator Michael Shayne in a series of 1940s B movies. Nolan was born in San Francisco, California, the son of Margaret and James Nolan, who was a shoe manufacturer of Irish descent. He attended Santa Clara Preparatory School and Stanford University, flunking out of Stanford as a freshman "because I never got around to attending any other class but dramatics." His parents disapproved of his choice of a career in acting, preferring that he join his father's shoe business, "one of the most solvent commercial firms in San Francisco." Nolan served in the United States Merchant Marine before joining the Dennis Players theatrical troupe in Cape Cod. He began his career on stage and was subsequently lured to Hollywood, where he played mainly doctors, private detectives, and policemen in many film roles. Nolan also contributed solid and key character parts in numerous other films. One, The House on 92nd Street, was a startling revelation to audiences in 1945. It was a conflation of several true incidents of attempted sabotage by the Nazi regime (incidents which the FBI was able to thwart during World War II), and many scenes were filmed on location in New York City, unusual at the time. Nolan portrayed FBI Agent Briggs, and actual FBI employees interacted with Nolan throughout the film; he reprised the role in a subsequent 1948 movie, The Street with No Name. Nolan appeared three times on NBC's Laramie Western series, as sheriff Tully Hatch in the episode "The Star Trail (1959), as outlaw Matt Dyer in the episode "Deadly Is the Night" (1961)[5] and then as former Union Army General George Barton in the episode "War Hero" (1962).[6] On December 8, 1960, Nolan was cast as Dr. Elisha Pittman, in "Knife of Hate" on Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre. In the story line, Dr. Pittman removed one of the legs of Jack Hoyt (Robert Harland) after Hoyt sustained a gunshot wound from which infection was developing. Hoyt wants to marry Susan Pittman (Susan Oliver), but her father is at first unyielding on the matter. Nolan starred in The Outer Limits episode "Soldier" written by Harlan Ellison. He appeared in the NBC Western Bonanza as LaDuke, a New Orleans detective. In 1967, Strother Martin and he guest-starred in the episode "A Mighty Hunter Before the Lord" of NBC's The Road West series, starring Barry Sullivan. Also in 1967, Nolan was a guest star in the popular Western TV series The Virginian, in the episode "The Masquerade" and in the first episode of Mannix. A long-time cigar and pipe smoker, Nolan died of lung cancer on September 27, 1985, at his home in Brentwood, California; he was 83. He is interred at the Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery in Westwood, Los Angeles, California. CLR Description above from the Wikipedia article Lloyd Nolan, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Acting

Hannah and Her Sisters
Evan · 1986

Bonanza
Inspector Charles Leduque · 1959

Murder, She Wrote
Julian Tenley · 1984

The Outer Limits
Tom Kagan · 1963

Airport
Harry Standish · 1970

Earthquake
Dr. James Vance · 1974

A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
Officer McShane · 1945

Remington Steele
Lloyd Nolan · 1982

The Waltons
Cyrus Guthrie · 1972

Ice Station Zebra
Admiral Garvey · 1968

Los Angeles Plays Itself
Dr. Vance in Earthquake (archive footage) · 2004

Peyton Place
Dr. Matthew Swain · 1957

'G' Men
Hugh Farrell · 1935

Somewhere in the Night
Police Lt. Donald Kendall · 1946

Lady in the Lake
Lieutenant DeGarmot · 1946

Circus World
Cap Carson · 1964

Island in the Sky
Captain Stutz · 1953

Mannix
Sam Dubrio · 1967

The Last Hunt
Woodfoot · 1956

Seven Waves Away
Frank Kelly · 1957

The House on 92nd Street
Agent George A. Briggs · 1945

Daniel Boone
Ben Hanks · 1964

The Street with No Name
Inspector George A. Briggs · 1948

What's My Line?
Self · 1950