
Edward Binns
Acting · Born 1916-09-12 · age 74 at death · Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Edward Binns (September 12, 1916 – December 4, 1990) was an American stage, film, and television actor. He had a wide-spanning career in film and television, often portraying competent, hard working, and purposeful characters in his various roles. Binns was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. One of the first members of the newly formed Actors Studio, Binns began studying with Elia Kazanin the fall of 1947. After appearing in a number of Broadway plays, Binns began appearing in films in the early 1950s. Some of his notable roles include playing Juror #6 in 12 Angry Men and Lieutenant GeneralWalter Bedell Smith in the Academy Award-winning film Patton (1970). Binns featured in Alfred Hitchcock's North by Northwest as a police detective. He played a key role as bomber pilot Colonel Grady in the 1964 film Fail-Safe. Binns also appeared in dozens of television programs including NBC's legal drama Justice, Rod Cameron's syndicated State Trooper, the syndicated adventure series Whirlybirds, the ABC/Warner Brotherswestern series, The Dakotas, the ABC rodeo drama, Stoney Burke, and ABC's war drama 12 O'Clock High. He was cast in CBS's Richard Diamond, Private Detective (as Larrabee in the 1958 episode "Pension Plan"), The Investigators and Thriller (U.S. TV series). Binns appeared as Colonel Robert Baldwin with June Allyson as his screen wife, Eleanor Baldwin, in the 1961 episode "Without Fear" of Allyson's CBS anthology series, The DuPont Show with June Allyson. Also that year he made two guest appearances on Perry Mason, first as Lloyd Castle in "The Case of the Angry Dead Man," then as Charles Griffin in "The Case of the Malicious Mariner," and in an episode of The Asphalt Jungle. He had a leading role in Rod Serling's The Twilight Zone in the 1960 episode "I Shot an Arrow into the Air". Binns also appeared in two episodes of ABC's The Untouchables as gunman Steve Ballard and in a later episode as a doctor. He was a cast member of CBS's The Nurses from 1962 through 1964. He appeared in an episode of the ABC espionage drama Blue Light early in 1966, and in ABC's It Takes a Thief (1969–1970) with Robert Wagner. Binns also appeared in one episode of the ABC series A Man Called Shenandoah, with Robert Horton, as General Korshak on CBS's M*A*S*H, in an episode of NBC's The Brian Keith Show, and in three episodes of ABC's The Fugitive. His distinctive voice was also heard in hundreds of radio and television commercials. Binns died from a heart attack at the age of seventy-four while traveling from New York City to his home inConnecticut. His ashes were scattered at his residence.
Titles

12 Angry Men

North by Northwest

Patton

The Twilight Zone

Judgment at Nuremberg

M*A*S*H

The Verdict

Fail Safe

Night Moves

Alfred Hitchcock Presents

Compulsion

Hawaii Five-O

Perry Mason

The Untouchables

The Rockford Files

Beyond a Reasonable Doubt

Gunsmoke

The Wild Wild West

The Americanization of Emily

Ironside

The Equalizer

The Fugitive

Alice

Patterns

McCloud

The Rifleman

Have Gun, Will Travel

Halls of Montezuma

Cannon

Curse of the Undead

The Virginian

Daniel Boone

Police Woman

Heller in Pink Tights

Wagon Train

Oliver's Story

It Takes a Thief

Vice Squad

The F.B.I.

Tarzan

The Scarlet Hour

Route 66

Thriller

Without Warning!

Dr. Kildare

The Man in the Net

Police Story

Hemingway’s Adventures of a Young Man

One Step Beyond

Laredo

The Name of the Game

Studio One

Suspense

Climax!

The Defenders

Teresa

After School

The Detectives

Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre

The Thin Man