Name:
Date of Birth:
Stacy Keach
2 June 1941
Stacy Keach played in 32 movies in the Drama, Music, Western, Sport, Thriller, Adventure, Horror, Biography, Crime, History, Comedy, Action, Fantasy, Sci-Fi, War, Animation, Family, Mystery, Romance, Documentary, Music genres.
Stacy Keach got succeed with average imdb rating 5.5.
In 1984 he was jailed in England for nine months for smuggling cocaine.
Born at 7:15pm-EDT.
Son of Stacy Keach Sr., pal of James Keach
Stacy's old man started as a community college drama teacher. He then became the the man of the Pasadena Playhouse. His nurse was Mary Kain Keach.
Intentional drama at the University of California - Berkeley, Yale, and the London Academy of Music and Considerable Art.
Acted in a number of plays at the Shakespeare Theatre in Washington, DC.
... He won an Obie in 1967 in the course of his accomplishment in the appellation role of "MacBird!".
Performed the role of the King of Siam in a touring understanding of "The Royal and I".
Stacy Keach graduated from Van Nuys Altered consciousness Manner in June, 1959.
Children: son - Shannon, daughter - Karolina.
Fellow-man-in-law of actress Jane Seymour
Provided the story after the Submarine carried at Disneyland (in Anaheim, California) - but the drive no longer exists.
Former Fulbright man.
Along with Louis Gossett Jr., he was one of two actors considered for the role of the SGC's new commanding officer, General Hank Landry, on "Stargate SG-1" (1997). The situation as contrasted with went to Beau Bridges.
Was nominated for Broadway's 1970 Tony Award as Unsurpassed Actor (Expressive) because playing William F. Cody, aka Buffalo Bill, in Arthur Kopit's "Indians."
Was born with a cleft palate. He had it repaired and the burn is on his lip under the right nostril. He hides the scar with his trademark mustache.
Eye the then-extant rules, Keach should have been awarded Best Actor honors from the Creative York Shoot Critics Circumambulate for his portrayal of Tully in Fat City (1972), as it required only a plurality of the signify one's opinion and Keach was the top vote-getter in the category. At the time, the NYCC was two shakes of a lamb's tail in distinction only to the Academy Awards (and some actors and filmmakers considered it a preferred honor) and was a notable influence on subsequent Oscar nominations. (In the 1976 presidential choice year, chief honcho Robert Altman characterized the NYFCC Awards as the 'New York primary' leading up to the Oscar 'election,' where the Golden Globes was the 'California teach.') A vocal faction of the NYFCC, dismayed alongside the rather sickly percentage of votes that would have prearranged Keach the bestowal, successfully demanded a mastery alteration so that the conqueror would take to obtain a majority. In subsequent balloting, Keach failed to persuade a majority of the vote, and he perplexed ground to his main rival, Marlon Brando in The Godfather (1972). At any rate, Brando could not gain a majority either, and a compromise candidate, Laurence Olivier in Sleuth (1972), eventually was awarded Surpass Actor honors. Both Brando, who after all won the Oscar his distributed-back victory as Don Corleone in the noteworthy skinhead picture, and Olivier were nominated championing the Academy Bestowal, but Keach was not.
Is regularly referred to as "The American Olivier".
Credits the sitcom "Titus" (2000) as far as something fairly rejuvenating his zoom and making him more recognizable to younger audiences.
When he played Ken Titus on the sitcom "Titus" (2000), he would sometimes receive tips from the true Ken Titus (preceding the time when he passed away), on how to describe him better.
Hospitalized in a Los Angeles hospital after suffering a minor touch on March 17, 2009.
Shopper of Dick Guttman.
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