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Robert Blake (actor)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American actor (1933–2023)

Robert Blake
Blake in 1977
Born
Michael James Gubitosi

(1933-09-18)September 18, 1933
DiedMarch 9, 2023(2023-03-09) (aged 89)
Other names
  • Bobby Blake
  • Lyman P. Docker
  • Mickey Gubitosi
OccupationActor
Years active1939–1997
Spouses
Children3

Robert Blake (bornMichael James Gubitosi; September 18, 1933 – March 9, 2023), billed early in his career asMickey Gubitosi andBobby Blake, was an American actor. He was best known for starring in the 1967 filmIn Cold Blood, and playing the title role in the late 1970s television seriesBaretta, and playing the Mystery Man in the 1997 filmLost Highway.

Blake began his career in the 1930s performing as a child alongside his family as a singer and dancer but became famous as achild actor, with his lead role in the final years of theMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer-era of theOur Gang (Little Rascals) short film series from 1939 to 1944. He also appeared as a child actor in 22 entries of theRed Ryder film franchise. In theRed Ryder series and many of his adult roles, the Italian-American actor was often cast as an American Indian ormestizo character. After a stint in theU.S. Army, Blake returned to acting in both television and movie roles. Blake continued acting until 1997'sLost Highway. Blake was one of the first child actors to successfully transition to mature roles as an adult. AuthorMichael Newton called Blake's career "one of the longest in Hollywood history".[1]

Blake was arrested in 2002 for the 2001 murder of his second wife,Bonny Lee Bakley. Blake was acquitted of the murder in criminal court in 2005,[2][3] but he was found liable in civil court for herwrongful death.[4]

Early life

[edit]

Blake was born Michael James Gubitosi inNutley, New Jersey, on September 18, 1933.[5] His parents were Giacomo (James) Gubitosi and his wife, Elizabeth Cafone.[6] In 1930, James worked as a die setter for a can manufacturer. Eventually, Blake's parents began a song-and-dance act.[1] In 1936, their three children began performing, billed as "The Three Little Hillbillies".[1] They moved toLos Angeles, California, in 1938, where the children began working as movieextras.[6]

Blake’s parents were fromCampania, Italy: his father was from the town of Montella in the province ofAvellino and his mother from the town of Polla.

Blake had an unhappy childhood in which he was abused by his alcoholic father. When he entered public school at age 10, he was bullied and had fights with other students, which led to hisexpulsion. Blake later said he wasphysically andsexually abused by both his parents and was often locked in a closet and forced to eat off the floor as punishment.[1] At age 14, he ran away from home, leading to several more difficult years.[7] His father died by suicide in 1956.[1] He refused to attend his father's funeral.[8]

Child actor

[edit]
Blake in 1944
Blake as "Little Beaver" in aRed Ryder film serial chapter, ca. 1946

Then known as Mickey Gubitosi, Blake began his acting career as Toto in theMGM movieBridal Suite (1939), starringAnnabella andRobert Young. He then began appearing in MGM'sOur Gangshort subjects (a.k.a.The Little Rascals) under his real name, replacingEugene "Porky" Lee. He appeared in 40 of the shorts between 1939 and 1944, eventually becoming the series' final lead character. Blake's parents also made appearances in the series as extras. InOur Gang, Blake's character, Mickey, was often called upon to cry, for which he was criticized as unconvincing. He was also criticized for being obnoxious and whiny.[9]

In 1942, he acquired the stage name Bobby Blake and scored his first starring role in a feature film, playing the title role in the MGM featureMokey.Donna Reed starred as Mokey's mother, andBillie "Buckwheat" Thomas, who co-starred inOur Gang alongside Blake, played Mokey's friend Brother Cumby.[10] After Blake took his stage name, hisOur Gang character was renamed "Mickey Blake". Blake also appeared as "Tooky" Stedman in the 1942 filmAndy Hardy's Double Life.

In 1944, MGM discontinuedOur Gang, releasing the final short in the series,Dancing Romeo. In 1995, theYoung Artist Foundation honored Blake with itsFormer Child Star "Lifetime Achievement" Award for his role inOur Gang.[11]

In 1944, Blake began playing a Native American boy, "Little Beaver", in theRed RyderWestern series at the studios ofRepublic Pictures (now CBS Radford Studios), appearing in 23 of the movies until 1947. He also had roles in one ofLaurel and Hardy's films,The Big Noise (1944), and theWarner Bros. moviesHumoresque (1946), playingJohn Garfield's character as a child, andThe Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948), playing the Mexican boy who sellsHumphrey Bogart a winning lottery ticket. In 1950, at age 17, Blake appeared as Mahmoud inThe Black Rose and as Enrico, Naples Bus Boy (uncredited) inBlack Hand.[12][13]

Career as an adult

[edit]

In 1950, Blake was drafted into theU.S. Army during theKorean War. Upon leaving at age 21, he found himself without job prospects and fell into a deep depression. This led to a two-year addiction to heroin and cocaine. He also sold drugs.[14] Blake enteredJeff Corey's acting class and began working on improving his personal and professional life. He eventually became a seasonedHollywood actor, playing notable dramatic roles in movies and on television. In 1956, he was billed as Robert Blake for the first time.[15]

Paul Burke and Blake inNaked City (1961)

In 1959, Blake turned down the role ofLittle Joe Cartwright, a character ultimately portrayed byMichael Landon, inNBC's Western television seriesBonanza.[citation needed] He did appear that year as Tobe Hackett in the episode "Trade Me Deadly" of thesyndicated Western series26 Men, which dramatized true stories of theArizona Rangers. Blake also appeared twice as "Alfredo" in the syndicated WesternThe Cisco Kid and starred in "The White Hat" episode ofMen of Annapolis, another syndicated series. He appeared in three distinctive guest lead roles in theCBS seriesHave Gun Will Travel, as well as one-time guest roles onJohn Payne's NBC WesternThe Restless Gun,Nick Adams'sABC WesternThe Rebel, and in season 3, episode 25 ofBat Masterson, the NBC Western seriesThe Californians, the short-lived ABC adventure seriesStraightaway, and the NBC Western television seriesLaramie.

Blake performed in numerous motion pictures as an adult, including the starring role inThe Purple Gang (1960), a gangster movie, and featured roles inPork Chop Hill (1959) and, as one of four U.S. soldiers participating in a gang rape inoccupied Germany, inTown Without Pity (1961). He appeared in theJohn F. Kennedy war biopicPT 109 as Charles "Bucky" Harris (1963). He was also inEnsign Pulver (1964),The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965), and other films. Blake garnered further exposure as a member of the ensemble cast of the 1963 acclaimed but short-livedThe Richard Boone Show, appearing in 15 of its 25 episodes.

Boone introduced Blake to entertainment attorneyLouis L. Goldman, whom Blake credited with putting him on a successful career path:

Lou wasCus D'Amato. He took me under his wing. He said, "Robert, you have to listen to me. Otherwise you're never going to make it." And somehow he had the emotional and the psychological wherewithal to get me to respect and love him. And he kept me out of the courtrooms. Many's the time he went back in the judge's chambers and drug me back there and solved the problem that was going to turn into a nightmare. [He'd] [c]ome on the set and handle things; once [he went] toLew Wasserman's office and said, "Don't worry, I'll handle it, I'll fix it"... For some reason or other, I listened to him. When I was with him I was like a little boy. And I would apologize. I'd say "God, Lou, I'm sorry." He had a way of getting to your heart so that the junkyard dog was not there with him. And he took care of all of us in that way. I was very lucky.[16]

In 1967, Blake had a career breakthrough with the filmIn Cold Blood.[17][18] He played real-life murdererPerry Smith, whom he physically resembled.Richard Brooks received two Oscar nominations for the film: one for his direction, and one for his adaptation ofTruman Capote's book.[19] WithIn Cold Blood, Blake was the first actor to utter the expletive "bullshit" in a mainstream American motion picture.[20]

As Baretta with Fred, 1976

Blake played a Native American fugitive inTell Them Willie Boy Is Here (1969), starred in a TV movie adaptation ofOf Mice and Men (1981), and played a motorcycle highway patrolman inElectra Glide in Blue (1973). He played a small-town stock car driver with ambitions to join theNASCAR circuit inCorky,which MGM produced in 1972. The film featured realNASCAR drivers, includingRichard Petty andCale Yarborough as themselves.

Blake may be best known for his Emmy Award–winning role of Tony Baretta in the popular television seriesBaretta[21] (1975–78), playing a streetwise plainclothes police detective. The show's trademarks included Baretta's petcockatoo "Fred" and his signature phrases—notably "That's the name of that tune", and "You can take that to the bank."

AfterBaretta ended, NBC offered to produce several pilot episodes of a proposed series titledJoe Dancer, in which Blake would play the role of a hard-boiled private detective.[22] In addition to starring, Blake also was credited as the executive producer and creator.[22] Three television films aired onNBC in 1981 and 1983, but a "Joe Dancer" TV series never materialized.[22]

Blake had starring roles in a couple of films forParamount Pictures,Coast to Coast (1980) andSecond-Hand Hearts (1981). He continued to act through the 1980s and 1990s, mostly in television, in such roles asJimmy Hoffa in the miniseriesBlood Feud (1983) andJohn List in the murder dramaJudgment Day: The John List Story (1993), which earned him a third Emmy nomination. Blake starred in the 1985 television seriesHell Town, playing a priest working in a tough neighborhood, and wrote the screenplay for the pilot as Lyman P. Docker.[23] He also had character parts in the theatrical moviesMoney Train (1995) and played the Mystery Man inDavid Lynch'sLost Highway (1997), his last film role.

Marriages and children

[edit]

Blake and actress Sondra Kerr were married in 1961 and divorced in 1983. It was his first marriage, from which came two children: actor Noah Blake (born 1965) and Delinah Blake (born 1966).[24]

In 1999, eight years after his attorneyLouis L. Goldman's death, Blake metBonny Lee Bakley, formerly ofWharton, New Jersey, who had already been married nine times and reportedly had a history of exploiting older men, especially celebrities, for money.[25] She was datingChristian Brando, the son ofMarlon Brando, during her relationship with Blake. Bakley became pregnant and told both Brando and Blake that her baby was theirs. Initially, Bakley named the baby "Christian Shannon Brando" and said Brando was the father.[26] Bakley wrote Blake letters describing her dubious motives.[27] Blake insisted that she take aDNA test to prove paternity.[26] He became Bakley's tenth husband on November 19, 2000, after DNA tests proved that Blake was the biological father of Bakley's youngest child.[28] After paternity was established, the child's name was legally changed to Rose Lenore Sophia Blake; after the murder, the child was designated to be raised by Blake's daughter, Delinah.[29][30] Blake remained married to Bakley until she was murdered on May 4, 2001.

In a March 2016 interview at age 82, Blake said he had a new woman in his life, who remained unnamed.[31] In 2017, Blake applied for a marriage license for his fiancée, Pamela Hudak, an event planner whom he had known for decades and who had testified on his behalf at his trial.[32] On December 7, 2018, it was announced that Blake had filed for divorce.[33]

Murder of Bonny Lee Bakley

[edit]

On May 4, 2001, Blake took Bakley out for dinner at Vitello's Italian Restaurant inStudio City, California. Bakley was fatally shot in the head while sitting in Blake's vehicle, which was parked on a side street around the corner from the restaurant. Blake said he had returned to the restaurant to collect a pistol he had left there and had not been present when the shooting took place. The pistol Blake left in the restaurant was found and determined by police not to be the murder weapon.[34]

Arrest

[edit]
Blake's 2002 mug shot

On April 18, 2002, Blake was arrested and charged with Bakley's murder. His longtime bodyguard, Earle Caldwell, was also arrested and charged withconspiracy in connection with the murder. A key event that gave theLos Angeles Police Department the confidence to arrest Blake came when a retiredstuntman, Ronald Hambleton, agreed to testify against him.[35] Hambleton said that Blake tried to hire him to kill Bakley. Another retired stuntman and an associate of Hambleton's,Gary McLarty, came forward with a similar story.[36] According to author Miles Corwin, Hambleton agreed to testify against Blake only after being told that he would be subject to agrand jurysubpoena and a misdemeanor charge.[37][38]

On April 22, 2002, Blake was charged with one count of murder withspecial circumstances, an offense that carried a possibledeath penalty. He was also charged with two counts of solicitation of murder and one count of conspiracy to commit murder. Blake pleaded not guilty.[39] On March 13, 2003, after almost a year in jail, Blake was granted bail, which was set at $1.5 million. He was then placed under house arrest while awaiting trial. On October 31, in a major reversal for the prosecution, the judge dismissed the conspiracy charges against Blake and Caldwell during a pre-trial hearing.[40] The junior prosecutor who handled the case, Shellie Samuels, was interviewed by CBS reporterPeter Van Sant for the CBS program48 Hours Investigates. During the interview, broadcast in November 2003, she admitted that the prosecutors had noforensic evidence implicating Blake in the murder and that they could not tie him to the murder weapon.[40]

Trial and acquittal

[edit]

Blake's criminal trial for murder began on December 20, 2004, withopening statements by the prosecution. The defense gave its opening statements the next day.[40] The prosecution contended that Blake intentionally murdered Bakley to free himself from a loveless marriage, while the defense claimed that Blake was an innocent victim of circumstantial and fabricated evidence. McLarty and Hambleton each testified that Blake had asked them to murder Bakley. On cross-examination, the defense brought up McLarty's mental health problems and Hambleton's criminal history. The lack of gunshot residue on Blake's hands was a key part of the defense's case that Blake was not the shooter. Blake chose not to testify.[41]

On March 16, 2005, Blake was found not guilty of murder and not guilty of one of the two counts of solicitation of murder. The other count, for solicitation to commit murder, was dropped after it was revealed that the jury was deadlocked 11–1 in favor of acquittal.Los Angeles County District AttorneyStephen Cooley, commenting on this ruling, called Blake "a miserable human being" and the jurors "incredibly stupid" to fall for the defense's claims.[42][43] Public opinion about the verdict was mixed, with some believing Blake guilty but many feeling that there was insufficient evidence to convict him.[44] On the night of his acquittal several fans celebrated at Blake's favorite haunt—Vitello's, the scene of the crime.[45]

Civil case

[edit]

Bakley's three children filed acivil suit against Blake, asserting that he was responsible for their mother's death. During the trial, the girlfriend of Blake's co-defendant Earle Caldwell said she believed Blake and Caldwell were involved in the crime.[46] On November 18, 2005, a jury found Blake liable for thewrongful death of his wife and ordered him to pay $30 million.[47] On February 3, 2006, Blake filed for bankruptcy. Blake's attorney,M. Gerald Schwartzbach, appealed the court's decision on February 28, 2007.[48] On April 26, 2008, an appeals court upheld the civil case verdict, but cut Blake's penalty to $15 million.[49]

Aftermath

[edit]

Blake maintained a low profile after his acquittal and filing for bankruptcy, with debts of $3 million for unpaid legal fees as well as state and federal taxes.[50] On April 9, 2010, the state of California filed atax lien against him for $1.1 million in unpaid back taxes.[51]

On July 16, 2012, Blake was interviewed onCNN'sPiers Morgan Tonight. When asked about the night of Bakley's murder, he became defensive and angry, saying he resented the questions and felt he was being interrogated. Morgan said he was only asking questions he felt people were eager to have answered.[52]

In January 2019, Blake was interviewed by20/20. Initially, he seemed to decline the interview and instead delegated it to a friend, but then he began to participate, discussing the murder and the behavior of the police officers who dealt with him, the culture ofHollywood and its reaction to the event, and his early life and difficulties with his parents.[53][54][55]

In September 2019, Blake started aYouTube channel titled "Robert Blake: I ain't dead yet, so stay tuned", on which he discussed his life and career.[56]

In October 2019, Blake's daughter Rose Lenore opened up about her childhood and how the trial affected her. She discussed reuniting with her father, visiting her mother's grave, and her own desire to get into acting. She disclaimed knowledge of the truth about her mother's murder and said she was open to learning the truth "if it's ever an option".[57]

In 2021, Blake started a website, "Robert Blake's Pushcart", where scripts, memorabilia, and books including his autobiographyTales of a Rascal are available to read and in the case of the latter can be ordered.[58]

Quentin Tarantino's novelOnce Upon a Time in Hollywood, based on hisfilm of the same name, is dedicated to Blake.Brad Pitt's character in the film, Cliff Booth, is also accused of murdering his wife.[59]

Death

[edit]

Blake died fromheart disease in Los Angeles on March 9, 2023, aged 89.[60][61][62]

At the95th Academy Awards on March 12, 2023, hostJimmy Kimmel said, "Everybody please get out your phones, even at home. It's time to vote. If you think Robert Blake should be part of the In Memoriam montage, text 'GIMME-A-Blake' to the number on your screen, or to any number."[63] Blake was not included in the "In Memoriam" montage or in the Academy's official newsletter.[64] His son Noah criticized the omission of his father's name and career.[65] Blake was also left out of the "In Memoriam" montage at the75th Primetime Emmy Awards, but was included in the full list of the names featured on the Television Academy's website.[66] Blake was featured in the 2023 "TCM Remembers" montage, an annual tribute to the film industry's deceased byTurner Classic Movies.[67]

Filmography

[edit]

Film

[edit]
YearFilmRoleNotesRef.
1939Bridal SuiteTotoUncredited
1939Joy ScoutsMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1939Auto AnticsMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1939Captain Spanky's ShowboatMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1939Dad for a DayMickeyShort film
1939Time Out for LessonsMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1940Alfalfa's DoubleMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1940The Big PremiereMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1940All About HashMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1940The New PupilMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1940Spots Before Your EyesKidShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi[68]
1940Bubbling TroublesMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1940I Love You AgainEdward Littlejohn Jr.Uncredited[68]
1940Good Bad BoysMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1940Waldo's Last StandMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1940Goin' Fishin'MickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1940Kiddie KureMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1941Fightin' FoolsMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1941Baby BluesMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1941Ye Olde MinstrelsMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
19411-2-3 GoMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1941Robot WrecksMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1941Helping HandsMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1941Come Back, Miss PippsMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1941Wedding WorriesMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1941Main Street on the March!Schulte ChildShort film; uncredited
1942Melodies Old and NewMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1942Going to PressMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1942MokeyDaniel "Mokey" DelanoCredited as Bobby Blake[68]
1942Don't LieMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1942Kid Glove KillerBoy in CarUncredited[68]
1942Surprised PartiesMickeyShort film; credited as Mickey Gubitosi
1942Doin' Their BitMickeyShort film; uncredited
1942Rover's Big ChanceMickeyShort film
1942Mighty Lak a GoatMickeyShort film
1942Unexpected RichesMickeyShort film
1942Andy Hardy's Double Life"Tooky" Stedman[68]
1942China GirlChandu[68]
1943Benjamin Franklin, Jr.MickeyShort film
1943Family TroublesMickeyShort film
1943Slightly DangerousBoy on PorchUncredited
1943Calling All KidsMickeyShort film
1943Farm HandsMickeyShort film
1943Election DazeMickeyShort film
1943Salute to the MarinesJunior CarsonUncredited
1943Little Miss PinkertonMickeyShort film
1943Three Smart GuysMickeyShort film
1943Lost AngelJerry
1944Radio BugsMickeyShort film
1944Tale of a DogMickeyShort film
1944Dancing RomeoMickeyShort film
1944Tucson RaidersLittle Beaver[68]
1944Meet the PeopleJimmy SmithUncredited
1944Marshal of RenoLittle Beaver
1944The Seventh CrossSmall BoyUncredited[68]
1944The San Antonio KidLittle Beaver[68]
1944The Big NoiseEgbert Hartley[68]
1944Cheyenne WildcatLittle Beaver[68]
1944The Woman in the WindowDickie WanleyUncredited[68]
1944Vigilantes of Dodge CityLittle Beaver
1944Sheriff of Las VegasLittle Beaver
1945Great Stagecoach RobberyLittle Beaver[68]
1945Pillow to PostWilbur
1945The Horn Blows at MidnightJunior Poplinski
1945Lone Texas RangerLittle Beaver[68]
1945Phantom of the PlainsLittle Beaver[68]
1945Marshal of LaredoLittle Beaver
1945Colorado PioneersLittle Beaver
1945DakotaLittle Boy
1945Wagon Wheels WestwardLittle Beaver[68]
1946A Guy Could ChangeAlan Schroeder[68]
1946California Gold RushLittle Beaver
1946Sheriff of Redwood ValleyLittle Beaver
1946Home on the RangeCub Garth
1946Sun Valley CycloneLittle Beaver
1946In Old SacramentoNewsboy
1946Conquest of CheyenneLittle Beaver
1946Santa Fe UprisingLittle Beaver
1946Out California WayDanny McCoy[68]
1946Stagecoach to DenverLittle Beaver
1946HumoresquePaul Boray as a Child[68]
1947Vigilantes of BoomtownLittle Beaver[68]
1947Homesteaders of Paradise ValleyLittle Beaver[68]
1947Oregon Trail ScoutsLittle Beaver
1947Rustlers of Devil's CanyonLittle Beaver
1947Marshal of Cripple CreekLittle Beaver
1947The Return of Rin Tin TinPaul the Refugee Lad[68]
1947The Last Round-upMike Henry[68]
1948The Treasure of the Sierra MadreMexican Boy Selling Lottery TicketsUncredited[68]
1950Black HandEnrico, Naples Bus BoyUncredited
1950The Black RoseMahmoud[68]
1952Apache War SmokeLuis Herrera
1953Treasure of the Golden CondorStable BoyUncredited
1953The Veils of BagdadBeggar Boy
1956Screaming EaglesPvt. Hernandez
1956The RackItalian soldierUncredited
1956Rumble on the DocksChuck[68]
1957Three Violent PeopleRafael Ortega
1957The Tijuana StoryEnrique Acosta Mesa
1958The Beast of BudapestKarolyi[68]
1958Revolt in the Big HouseRudy Hernandez[68]
1959Pork Chop HillPvt. Velie[68]
1959Battle FlameCpl. Jake Pacheco[68]
1959The Purple GangWilliam Joseph "Honeyboy" Willard[68]
1961Town Without PityCorporal Jim Larkin[68]
1963PT 109Charles "Bucky" Harris[68]
1965The Greatest Story Ever ToldSimon the Zealot[68]
1966This Property Is CondemnedSidney[68]
1967In Cold BloodPerry Smith[68]
1969Tell Them Willie Boy Is HereWillie Boy[68]
1972Ripped OffTeddy "Cherokee" Wilson
1972CorkyCorky[68]
1973Electra Glide in BlueOfficer John Wintergreen[68]
1974BustingFarrell[68]
1980Coast to CoastCharles Callahan[68]
1981Second-Hand HeartsLoyal Muke[68]
1995Money TrainDonald Patterson[68]
1997Lost HighwayThe Mystery ManFinal film role[68]

Television

[edit]
YearFilmRoleNotesRef.
1952The Adventures of Wild Bill HickokRain CloudEpisode: "The Professor's Daughter"
1953Fireside TheatreJohnnyEpisode: "Night in the Warehouse"
1953The Cisco KidDavy / Alfredo2 episodes
1956The Roy Rogers ShowUnknown characterEpisode: "Paleface Justice"
1956–1958Broken ArrowViklai / Machogee / Young Apache Warrior3 episodes
1957Official DetectiveAl MadsenEpisode: "The Hostages"
1957Men of AnnapolisEdEpisode: "The White Hat"
195726 MenTobe HackettEpisode: "Trade Me Deadly"
1957WhirlybirdsJoseEpisode: "The Runaway"
1957The Court of Last ResortTomas MendozaEpisode: "The Tomas Mendoza Case"
1958The MillionaireClark DavisEpisode: "The John Richards Story"
1958The Restless GunLupe SandovalEpisode: "Thunder Valley"
1958The CaliforniansCassEpisode: "The Long Night"
1959Black SaddleWayne RobinsonEpisode: "Client: Robinson"
1959Playhouse 90Unknown characterEpisode: "A Trip to Paradise"
1959Dick Powell's Zane Grey TheatreCSA Cpl. Michael BersEpisode: "Heritage"
1960The RebelVirgil MossEpisode: "He's Only a Boy"
1960Alcoa Presents: One Step BeyondTomEpisode: "Gyspy"
1960–1962Have Gun - Will TravelLauro / Jessie May Turnbow / Smollet3 episodes
1961Bat MastersonBill-Bill MacWilliamsEpisode: "No Amnesty for Death"
1961Wagon TrainJohnny KamenEpisode: "The Joe Muharich Story"
1961Naked CityKnox Maquon2 episodes
1961LaramieLame WolfEpisode: "Wolf Club"
1961–1962StraightawayChu Chu2 episodes
1962Ben CaseyJesse VerdugoEpisode: "Imagine a Long Bright Corridor"
1962Cain's HundredRick CarterEpisode: "A Creature Lurks in Ambush"
1962The New BreedBobby MaderoEpisode: "My Brother's Keeper"
1963–1964The Richard Boone ShowVarious14 episodes
1965Slattery's PeopleJerry LeonEpisode: "Question: Does Nero Still at Ringside Sit?"
1965The Trials of O'BrienJoe RooneyEpisode: "Bargain Day on the Street of Regret"
1965RawhideMax Gufler / Hap Johnson2 episodes
1965–1966The F.B.I.Junior / Pete Cloud2 episodes
1966Twelve O'Clock HighLt. Johnny EagleEpisode: "A Distant Cry"
1966Death Valley DaysBilly the KidEpisode: "The Kid from Hell's Kitchen"

1973Electra Glide in BlueCharacter John Wintergreen.

1975–1978BarettaDetective Anthony Vincenzo "Tony" Baretta82 episodes
197729th Primetime Emmy AwardsCo-hostWithAngie Dickinson
1981The Big Black PillJoe DancerTelevision film[68]
1981The Monkey MissionJoe DancerTelevision film[68]
1981Of Mice and MenGeorge MiltonTelevision film[68]
1982Saturday Night LiveHostEpisode: "Robert Blake/Kenny Loggins"
1983Blood FeudJimmy HoffaMiniseries[68]
1983Murder 1, Dancer 0Joe DancerTelevision film[68]
1985Hell TownNoah "Hardstep" Rivers13 episodes[68]
1985Heart of a Champion: The Ray Mancini StoryLenny ManciniTelevision film[68]
1993Judgment Day: The John List StoryJohn ListTelevision film[68]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdeNewton, Michael (2008).Celebrities and crime.Infobase Publishing. pp. 84–90.ISBN 9780791094020. RetrievedMay 18, 2013.
  2. ^LeDuff, Charles (March 5, 2005)."Actor's Trial, Complete With Pulp Novel Characters, Draws to a Close".The New York Times.Archived from the original on April 6, 2005. RetrievedFebruary 20, 2017.
  3. ^LeDuff, Charles (March 17, 2005)."'Baretta' Star Acquitted of Murder in Wife's Death".The New York Times.Archived from the original on April 8, 2005. RetrievedFebruary 20, 2017.
  4. ^"Actor Is Ordered to Pay $30 Million in Killing".The New York Times. November 19, 2005.Archived from the original on April 2, 2009. RetrievedFebruary 20, 2017.
  5. ^Blake, Robert (2015).Tales of a Rascal: What I Did for Love. Black Rainbow Productions. p. 169.ISBN 978-0-61-559194-0.
  6. ^abSteven Chermak; Bailey, Frankie Y. (January 25, 2016),Crimes of the Centuries: Notorious Crimes, Criminals, and Criminal Trials in American History, ABC-CLIO, p. 89,ISBN 978-1-61069-594-7,archived from the original on April 8, 2023, retrievedMarch 16, 2023
  7. ^King, Gary C."Robert Blake and the Murder of Bonny Lee Bakley". Tru TV. p. 15. Archived fromthe original on May 2, 2009. RetrievedMay 5, 2009.
  8. ^"'Baretta' Actor Robert Blake, Who Was Charged And Later Acquitted In Wife's Murder, Dies At 89".Oxygen Official Site. March 10, 2023.
  9. ^Maltin, Leonard; Richard W. Bann (1992) [1977].The Little Rascals: The Life & Times of Our Gang (Rev. ed.). Crown Publishing/Three Rivers Press.ISBN 0-517-58325-9.
  10. ^"Mokey".Turner Classic Movies. RetrievedAugust 31, 2024.
  11. ^"16th Annual Youth in Film Awards".YoungArtistAwards.org.Archived from the original on August 20, 2010. RetrievedMarch 31, 2011.
  12. ^"The Black Rose (1950) - Robert Blake as Mahmoud".IMDb.Archived from the original on May 1, 2024. RetrievedMay 1, 2024.
  13. ^"Black Hand (1950) - Robert Blake as Enrico - Naples Bus Boy".IMDB.Archived from the original on May 1, 2024. RetrievedMay 1, 2024.
  14. ^The Robert Blake InterviewPlayboy Magazine (June 1977)
  15. ^Geiger, Dorian (March 11, 2023)."'Baretta' Actor Robert Blake, Who Was Charged And Later Acquitted In Wife's Murder, Dies At 89".Yahoo Sports. RetrievedMay 1, 2024.
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  17. ^"17 Years After Being Accused Of His Wife's Murder, Actor Robert Blake Opened Up About The Crime". January 9, 2020.
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Further reading

[edit]
  • Holmstrom, John.The Moving Picture Boy: An International Encyclopaedia from 1895 to 1995, Norwich, Michael Russell, 1996, pp. 185–186.
  • Dye, David.Child and Youth Actors: Filmography of Their Entire Careers, 1914–1985. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co., 1988, p. 20–22.

External links

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