Robert Kellard
Birthday:
April 23, 1915 in Los Angeles, California, USA
Birth Name:
Robert Dorsey Kellard
Tall, dark and very handsome-looking Robert Kellard remains a little known lead and support player of late 30s and 40s "B" action and multi-chapter cliffhangers. Born the younger of two boys in Los Angeles on April 23, 1915, initial interest was triggered by his actor father, Ralph Kellard. An aunt, Virginia Harned Courtenay, was also an ...
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Tall, dark and very handsome-looking Robert Kellard remains a little known lead and support player of late 30s and 40s "B" action and multi-chapter cliffhangers. Born the younger of two boys in Los Angeles on April 23, 1915, initial interest was triggered by his actor father, Ralph Kellard. An aunt, Virginia Harned Courtenay, was also an actress and helped steer him for a short time. Attending Hollywood High School, Robert made his minor movie debut as a teenager in the film Le fils de l'oncle Sam chez nos aïeux (1931), which was directed by a family friend. Following graduation, he supported himself in various menial jobs -- from cashier to carpenter and from lifeguard to seaman -- while waiting for his break, which wound up being a 1934 Broadway stage role in "Mother Lode" handed to him by another friend of the family, star actress Beulah Bondi.Kellard remained in New York following this acting stint and became a member of the Stagecraft Theater while continuing to look for other employment. He finally returned to Broadway with a role in "Hitch Your Wagon" in 1937, which earned him a 5-year contract with 20th Century-Fox. Older brother Thomas Kellard also found some unbilled bit roles earlier at Fox in such films as Le petit colonel (1935). Robert himself started out just as uneventfully with uncredited bits in J'ai deux maris (1937) and Annapolis Salute (1937). From there he progressed to more interesting parts in Island in the Sky (1938) and Time Out for Murder (1938) starring Michael Whalen and Gloria Stuart in which he played murder suspects. He rose in rank to Jean Rogers' love interest in the films Always in Trouble (1938), While New York Sleeps (1938) and Stop, Look and Love (1939), but his career soon stalled with more bit parts mixed in.Kellard freelanced in 1940, working for Republic in the serials Drums of Fu Manchu (1940) in which he played adventure hero Allan Parker, and in King of the Royal Mounted (1940) in support to Allan Lane as ill-fated aide-de-camp Corporal Tom Merritt. He then went on to serviceable secondary supports in Phantom of Chinatown (1940), _Prairie Pioneers (1941) and Gentleman from Dixie (1941), in addition to a square-jawed lead in Escort Girl (1941). He appeared for a time on the stage until signing with Columbia in 1942. The studio changed his name to Robert Stevens but it didn't help things. Primarily in second-string parts, his sole lead was in another stalwart serial, Perils of the Royal Mounted (1942), as Sgt. Mack MacLane.Robert joined the Navy during WWII and stayed for nearly four years. He returned to Columbia in late 1945 but, again, found little except for unbilled parts in such "B" fare as The Return of Rusty (1946) and The Millerson Case (1947) and a few Three Stooges shorts. Although he managed to earn one more rugged lead with the serial Tex Granger: Midnight Rider of the Plains (1948), the writing was on the wall. He turned to TV in the 1950s and served as an actor/writer and dialogue director on The Lone Ranger (1949) series, before leaving acting permanently and joining the Merchant Marines. He later moved into sales work as a rep for Showcase Films and also did some writing. He suffered from prostate cancer in later years and died at age 65 of complications from pneumonia on January 13, 1981. Show less «
Actors must realize their prime passers. Some don't and today they live in a yesterday of memories, standing on the corner, telling some tou...Show more »
Actors must realize their prime passers. Some don't and today they live in a yesterday of memories, standing on the corner, telling some tourist how great they once were and hoping for a five-cent handout. Show less «