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This sturdy American actor spent many years as an underused player, generally cast as kindly uncles and Western second leads, before turning to gruff, cranky character parts in features and on TV. Brian Keith may be best recalled as the architect Bill Davis who takes in his two orphaned nieces and a nephew on "Family Affair" (CBS, 1966-71), but his work as Theodore Roosevelt in "The Wind and the Lion" (1975), Dr. Alexei Dubov in "Meteor" (1979) and Mauritz Stiller in "Moviola" (NBC, 1980) has proven him to be a capable and strong actor....

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Filmography

Follow Your Heart - ( / 1997 / Released / )
Wind Dancer - ( Truman Richards / 1993 / Released / )
Welcome Home - ( Harry / 1989 / Released / )
After the Rain - ( Byron Monroe / 1988 / Released / )
Young Guns - ( Buckshot Roberts / 1988 / Released / Hoyts Distribution )
Death Before Dishonor - ( Colonel Halloran / 1987 / Released / Toei Classics )
Charlie Chan and the Curse of the Dragon Queen - ( Police Chief / 1981 / Released / )
Sharky's Machine - ( Papa / 1981 / Released / )
The Mountain Men - ( Henry Frapp / 1980 / Released / )
Meteor - ( Dubov / 1979 / Released / )
Moonraker - ( US Shuttle Captain / 1979 / Released / )
Hooper - ( Jocko / 1978 / Released / )
Joe Panther - ( Captain Harper / 1976 / Released / Artists Creation & Associates Inc )
Nickelodeon - ( H H Cobb / 1976 / Released / )
The Wind and the Lion - ( Theodore Roosevelt / 1975 / Released / United Artists Pictures Inc. )
The Yakuza - ( George Tanner / 1975 / Released / )
Scandalous John - ( John McCanless / 1971 / Released / )
Something Big - ( Colonel Morgan / 1971 / Released / )
Suppose They Gave a War and Nobody Came? - ( Nace / 1970 / Released / )
The McKenzie Break - ( / 1970 / Released / United Artists Pictures Inc. )
Gaily, Gaily - ( Francis X Sullivan / 1969 / Released / )
Krakatoa, East of Java - ( Connerly / 1969 / Released / )
With Six You Get Eggroll - ( Jake Iverson / 1968 / Released / National General Pictures )
Reflections in a Golden Eye - ( Lieutenant Colonel Morris Langdon / 1967 / Released / )
Nevada Smith - ( Jonas Cord / 1966 / Released / )
The Rare Breed - ( Bowen / 1966 / Released / )
The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming - ( Link Mattocks / 1966 / Released / )
Way... Way Out - ( General Hallenby / 1966 / Released / )
The Hallelujah Trail - ( Frank Wallingham / 1965 / Released / )
A Tiger Walks - ( Sheriff Pete Williams / 1964 / Released / )
The Pleasure Seekers - ( Paul Barton / 1964 / Released / )
Those Calloways - ( Cam Calloway / 1964 / Released / )
The Raiders - ( John G McElroy / 1963 / Released / Universal )
Moon Pilot - ( Maj General John Vanneman / 1962 / Released / )
The Deadly Companions - ( Yellowleg / 1961 / Released / )
The Parent Trap - ( Mitch Evans / 1961 / Released / )
Ten Who Dared - ( William Dunn / 1960 / Released / )
The Young Philadelphians - ( Mike Flanagan / 1959 / Released / )
Sierra Baron - ( Jack McCracken / 1958 / Released / Fox Films, Ltd. )
Villa! - ( Bill Harmon / 1958 / Released / Fox Films, Ltd. )
Violent Road - ( Mitch / 1958 / Released / Warner Bros. Pictures Distribution )
Chicago Confidential - ( Jim Fremont / 1957 / Released / United Artists Pictures Inc. )
Dino - ( Sheridan / 1957 / Released / Allied Artists )
Nightfall - ( John / 1957 / Released / Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group )
Run of the Arrow - ( Captain Clark / 1957 / Released / )
Storm Center - ( Paul Duncan / 1956 / Released / Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group )
Five Against the House - ( Brick / 1955 / Released / )
The Violent Men - ( Cole Wilkison / 1955 / Released / )
Tight Spot - ( Vince Striker / 1955 / Released / )
Alaska Seas - ( Jim Kimmerly / 1954 / Released / Paramount Pictures )
Jivaro - ( Tony / 1954 / Released / Paramount Pictures )
Arrowhead - ( Capt North / 1953 / Released / Paramount Pictures )
Boomerang - ( Demonstrator / 1947 / Released / )

TV Credits
Rough Riders ( 1997 / Released ): Actor
The Second Civil War ( 1997 / Released ): Actor
National Lampoon's Favorite Deadly Sins ( 1995 / Released ): Actor
Picture Windows ( 1995 / Released ): Actor
The Monroes ( 1995 / Released ): Actor
The Return of Hunter ( 1995 / Released ): Actor
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine ( 1993 / Released ): Actor
The Secrets of Lake Success ( 1993 / Released ): Actor
The Streets of Beverly Hills ( 1992 / Released ): Actor
The Luck of the Draw: The Gambler Returns ( 1991 / Released ): Actor
Walter and Emily ( 1991 / Released ): Actor
Heartland ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
Lady in a Corner ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
Perry Mason: The Case of the Lethal Lesson ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
All-Star Party For Joan Collins ( 1987 / Released ): Actor
The Alamo: 13 Days to Glory ( 1987 / Released ): Actor
The Pursuit of Happiness ( 1987 / Released ): Actor
All Star Party For Clint Eastwood ( 1986 / Released ): Actor
The B.R.A.T. Patrol ( 1986 / Released ): Actor
The ABC All-Star Spectacular ( 1985 / Released ): Actor
Ernest Hemingway's "The Sun Also Rises" ( 1984 / Released ): Actor
Hardcastle and McCormick ( 1983 / Released ): Actor
Cry For the Strangers ( 1982 / Released ): Actor
World War III ( 1982 / Released ): Actor
Moviola: The Silent Lovers ( 1980 / Released ): Actor
The Chisholms ( 1979 / Released ): Actor
The Seekers ( 1979 / Released ): Actor
Centennial ( 1978 / Released ): Actor
How the West Was Won ( 1977 / Released ): Actor
In the Matter of Karen Ann Quinlan ( 1977 / Released ): Actor
The Loneliest Runner ( 1976 / Released ): Actor
The Quest ( 1976 / Released ): Actor
Archer ( 1975 / Released ): Actor
The Zoo Gang ( 1975 / Released ): Actor
Second Chance ( 1972 / Released ): Actor
The Little People ( 1972 / Released ): Actor
Bristle Face ( 1964 / Released ): Actor
Profiles in Courage ( 1964 / Released ): Actor
The Nine Lives of Elfego Baca ( 1958 / Released ): Actor
Zane Grey Theater ( 1956 / Released ): Actor
Undercurrent ( 1955 / Released ): Actor
Climax! ( 1954 / Released ): Actor
Burke's Law ( Released ): Actor
Cybill ( Released ): Actor
Evening Shade ( Released ): Actor
Major Dad ( Released ): Actor
Murder, She Wrote ( Released ): Actor
The Commish ( Released ): Actor
The Marshal ( Released ): Actor
The Wild West ( Released ): Voice
Touched By an Angel ( Released ): Actor
Walker, Texas Ranger ( Released ): Actor

Full Biography (Back to top)


This sturdy American actor spent many years as an underused player, generally cast as kindly uncles and Western second leads, before turning to gruff, cranky character parts in features and on TV. Brian Keith may be best recalled as the architect Bill Davis who takes in his two orphaned nieces and a nephew on "Family Affair" (CBS, 1966-71), but his work as Theodore Roosevelt in "The Wind and the Lion" (1975), Dr. Alexei Dubov in "Meteor" (1979) and Mauritz Stiller in "Moviola" (NBC, 1980) has proven him to be a capable and strong actor.

The son of Broadway star, silent screen actor and talkie character player Robert Keith and his actress wife, Brian Keith made his first film appearance at age three in "Pied Piper Malone" (1924). After high school, he joined the Marines as an aerial gunner (serving from 1942-45). Upon his discharge, Keith headed to the theater and made his stage debut in "Heyday" in New Haven in 1946. He made his Broadway debut as Mannion in the renowned production of "Mister Roberts" (1948) and played Ilyich in "Darkness at Noon" (1951). Later, after years of film and TV work, he returned to Broadway, replacing Barnard Hughes in the title role of "Da".

Keith made his adult film debut as an army officer who is rescued by an Apache-hating scout (Charlton Heston) in "Arrowhead" (1953), a role that set the tone for many of his early roles. Keith was usually the stalwart, fair-minded, relatively sexless second lead. In his second film, "Alaska Seas" (1954), Keith was again the best friend of the hero (Robert Ryan) who nevertheless tries to muscle Keith's character out of the salmon business. And so it was in film after film in the 50s. Keith rarely lost his life in these Westerns and war sagas, but he never got the medal or the girl either. In the 60s, he went to work for Disney, playing a trapper who wants to make a sanctuary for geese in "Those Calloways" (1964). Keith was also in Norman Jewison's "The Russians Are Coming! The Russians Are Coming!" (1966), as the sheriff of a coastal community who eventually helps to lead an armada guiding a Russian submarine to safety.

Keith finally broke the mold with "Reflections in a Golden Eye" (1967), in which he played an army colonel and lover to Elizabeth Taylor, who in turn is married to latent homosexual Marlon Brando. Perhaps because he is a devout Roman Catholic and "Reflections" was condemned by the church, Keith teamed with Doris Day for the innocuous "With Six You Get Eggroll" (1968), as a widower and widow trying to blend families. In 1969, he was in the actioner "Krakatoa, East of Java". He had one of his best shots playing the macho wannabe President Teddy Roosevelt in John Milius' "The Wind and the Lion" and joined Natalie Wood speaking Russian in "Meteor". He also played the colorful Buckshot Roberts in "Young Guns" (1988) and Kris Kristofferson's father, who has lived to see his long-lost son return, in "Welcome Home" (1989). In 1996, Keith played a Roman Catholic cardinal dealing with a radical church activist in "Entertaining Angels: The Dorothy Day Story".

While Keith has had steady work in feature films and actually been in a position to pick and choose his roles, TV has always managed to provide steady work. He began making guest appearances in the medium in 1949, and by 1955 had his own series, "The Crusader" (CBS), a man who helped people escape Communist countries. As "The Westerner" (NBC, 1960), he was championing causes along the Southwest border. "Family Affair" (CBS, 1966-71) proved to be Keith's biggest hit, although he sometimes seemed uncomfortable playing the role of the caring, nurturing uncle. He also refused to pose for Christmas publicity shots connected with the family-oriented show, insisting they were exploitative of the holiday. Yet, he followed "Family Affair" with the even more sugary "The Little People/The Brian Keith Show" (NBC, 1972-74), in which he was a Hawaii-based pediatrician to a bunch of munchkins from Shirley Temple-land. He returned to series TV as a detective in "Archer" (NBC, 1975), as a sleuth who used his wits and analytical strengths, not his muscle. The show quickly left the airwaves, but Keith was back in 1977 on ABC's miniseries "How the West Was Won". When he had another go at the series grind, it was as macho Judge Milton C. Hardcastle in "Hardcastle & McCormick" (ABC, 1983-86). He returned to sitcoms in 1987 as the somewhat curmudgeonly historian and professor Roland G Duncan in "Pursuit of Happiness" (ABC), a Midwestern version of Archie Bunker on the short-lived "Heartland" (CBS, 1989) and as the curmudgeonly husband of Cloris Leachman in "Walter & Emily" (NBC, 1991-92).

TV longforms have also offered Keith a wide range of roles. He made his first TV-movie in 1972: "Second Chance" (ABC) portraying a stockbroker who buys a ghost town in Nebraska and turns it into a community for people who never really had a shot in life. Keith was the father of a comatose young woman in the based-on-real-life "In the Matter of Karen Ann Quinlan" (NBC, 1977). In 1980, he played a low-key, fatherly Mauritz Stiller overseeing Greta Garbo at MGM even as his own career falters in "Moviola: The Silent Lovers" (NBC) and he was a Davy Crockett with some warts in "The Alamo: Thirteen Days to Glory" (NBC, 1987). His miniseries credits include colorful roles in "Centennial" (NBC, 1978), and "The Chisholms" (CBS, 1979).


Profession(s):
Actor
Sometimes Credited As:
Robert Brian Keith Jr
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Family
daughter:Daisy Keith (born c. 1969; shot herself on April 16, 1997 and died April 17, 1997)
father:Robert Keith
mother:Helena Keith
wife:Victoria Lei Aloha Young (married 1968; survived him)
Milestones (Back to top)

1989 Played a lovable bigot on "Heartland" (CBS)
1987 Returned to sitcoms on "Pursuit of Happiness" (ABC)
1980 Played Mauritz Stiller in "Moviola: The Silent Lovers" (NBC)
1978 Returned to Broadway in the title role of "Da"
1977 Played General Stonecipher in the ABC miniseries "How the West Was Won"
1975 Returned to series TV in "Archer" (NBC)
1975 Played Theodore Roosevelt in the feature "The Wind and the Lion"
1972 Made TV-movie debut in "Second Chance" (ABC)
1960 Starred on NBC in "The Westerner" series
1959 Played Mike Flanagan in feature "The Young Philadelphians"
1953 Made feature film debut as adult, "Arrowhead"
1948 Made Broadway debut, "Mister Roberts"
1946 Made stage debut, "Heyday", in New Haven, CT
1942 - 1945 Was aerial gunner in the Marine Corps.
Appeared in three silent films as a child actor including "The Pied Piper of Malone" (1925)
Starred on TV as "The Crusader" (CBS)
Played 'Uncle Bill' to Cissy, Buffy and Jody on "Family Affair" (CBS)
Played a pediatrician on "The Little People/The Brian Keith Show" (NBC)
Was macho Judge Hardcastle on "Hardcastle & McCormick" (ABC)
Played a grandpa hubby to Cloris Leachman on "Walter & Emily" (NBC)

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