
Robert Middleton
Multiple people share this name — showing the most well-known match (Acting).
Acting · Born 1911-05-13 · age 66 at death · Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Robert Middleton, born Samuel G. Messer (May 13, 1911 – June 14, 1977), was an American film and television actor known for his large size and beetle-like brow. With a deep, booming voice, Middleton trained for a musical career at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music and Carnegie Tech in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He worked steadily as a radio announcer and actor. One of his early works was as the narrator of the educational film "Duck and Cover". After appearing on the Broadway stage and live television, Middleton began appearing in films in 1954. He's also remembered on television as the boss Mr. Marshall on The Jackie Gleason Show and in film opposite Humphrey Bogart in The Desperate Hours (1955), Gary Cooper in Friendly Persuasion (1956), Richard Egan and Elvis Presley in Love Me Tender (1956), Dorothy Malone and Robert Stack in The Tarnished Angels (1958), and Dean Martin in Career (1959). A native of Cincinnati, Ohio, Middleton appeared in many television programs in the 1950s and 1960s, including the CBS anthology series Appointment with Adventure. He was cast as "The Tichborne Claimant" in the NBC anthology series The Joseph Cotten Show. He appeared in ten episodes of ABC's family Western The Monroes, with costars Michael Anderson, Jr., and Barbara Hershey. Among his several appearances in the long-running Alfred Hitchcock Presents, he portrayed a gangster in high places, Mr. Koster, in the 1956 episode "The Better Bargain". In 1958, he played the villain in the first episode of Bat Masterson. In 1961, he appeared in the episode "Accidental Tourist" on the James Whitmore ABC legal drama The Law and Mr. Jones. That same year, he portrayed the highly sympathetic but fiercely dedicated state executioner in an episode of Thriller (U.S. TV series) entitled "Guillotine". He also appeared in at least one episode of Bonanza (1964). In the early 1950s, Middleton appeared on Broadway in Ondine. Other significant film roles include The Court Jester (1956) as a grim and determined knight who jousts with Danny Kaye in the famous "pellet with the poison" sequence, and as a sinister politician in The Lincoln Conspiracy (1977). Betwixt and between were an array of brutish mountain daddies, corrupt, cigar-chomping town bosses and lynch mob leaders. Occasionally he showed a bit of levity, as in his recurring role as Jackie Gleason's boss on The Honeymooners (1955) sketches. Middleton died of congestive heart failure in Hollywood at the age of sixty-six. Description above from the Wikipedia article Robert Middleton, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Titles

Columbo

Bonanza

Get Smart

Mission: Impossible

Alfred Hitchcock Presents

Even Angels Eat Beans

Kung Fu

The Court Jester

The Desperate Hours

The Big Combo

Friendly Persuasion

Perry Mason

The Untouchables

Gunsmoke

The Tarnished Angels

Love Me Tender

The Wild Wild West

A Big Hand for the Little Lady

The Cheyenne Social Club

The Law and Jake Wade

The Big Valley

Mannix

McCloud

Rawhide

The Silver Chalice

The Proud Ones

Hell Bent for Leather

The Wonderful World of Disney

Which Way to the Front?

Alias Smith and Jones

Daniel Boone

Red Sundown

Wagon Train

The Great Impostor

Don't Give Up the Ship

Thriller

The Lonely Man

The Mark of Zorro

Trial

The Harrad Experiment

Day of the Badman

Gold of the Seven Saints

Career

Bat Masterson

Cattle King

Burke's Law

The Lincoln Conspiracy

Suspense

Climax!

For Those Who Think Young

The Rebel

The Detectives

Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre

Suspicion

The Tall Man
Lux Video Theatre

Letter to Loretta

Tales of Tomorrow

Adventures in Paradise

Matinee Theater