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Stacy Keach Biography
When Stacy Keach burst into the public consciousness in John Huston's Fat City in 1972, it appeared that a great actor had been discovered. He was not unknown: Keach had earlier appeared on-screen in The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter, End of the Road and the revisionist Western 'Doc', but he was brilliant as the tank-town boxer Tully in Huston's small masterpiece. Keach would have been awarded the New York Film Critics Circle Award as Best Actor in January 1973 if a dissident faction had not successfully demanded that the rules be changed to require a majority (rather than a plurality) of votes to win the award. Keach's on-screen career would continue to be plagued by bad luck.

Keach followed up Fat City with a starring turn in the film adaptation of "The New Centurions" opposite the great George C. Scott. He also took the prized role in the film adaptation of John Osborne's "Luther," a part made famous by and virtually "owned" by Albert Finney. With this promising beginning, bolstered by cameos in Robert Altman's "Brewster McCloud" and Huston's "The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean" and by his TV-directing debut on PBS with Arthur Miller's "Incident at Vichy," Keach seemed to be on the cusp of a kind of stardom enjoyed by only a small elite of American actors like Marlon Brando and Paul Newman: a star who was also a fine actors.

However, Keach, like his immediate predecessor for the actor/star crown Jon Voight, was unable to capitalize on his stunning debut. The 1970s turned out to be the heyday of the ethnic actor, dominated by Dustin Hoffman, Al Pacino and Robert De Niro, who racked up 10 Academy Award nominations and 3 Oscars between them in the period 1972-1980.

It was Keach's bad luck that he never became a star and thus never able to get roles that befitted his marvelous ability. It was emblematic of the times that even when a part called for an actor, many directors, including Martin Scorcese in "The Age of Innocence" and Robert Redford in "Quiz Show," would turn to Englishmen rather than Americans.

He was born Walter Stacy Keach, Jr. in Savannah, Georgia on June 2, 1941. His father, Stacy Keach, Sr., was a contract player as a character actor at Universal Pictures in the 1940s and later worked as a producer for R.K.O. before returning to acting in television. Stacy, Jr. was born with a cleft lip, a facial birth defect, but it was repaired and did not hinder his dream of becoming an actor. After graduating from Van Nuys High School, he entered the University of California, Berkeley in 1959, then continued his studies at the Yale University School of Drama. Keach won a Fulbright Scholarship and used it to further his craft at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art.

He made his Broadway debut as a member of the Repertory Theatre of Lincoln Center in "Danton's Death" on October 21, 1965. He also appeared in "The Country Wife" and "The Caucasian Chalk Circle" for the Lincoln Center Rep in 1966, and appeared as Edmund to Lee J. Cobb's "King Lear" in the '68-'69 season for the Rep. Later that year he achieved theatrical fame as Buffalo Bill in Arthur Kopit's play "Indians" in 1969, in which he proved himself to be a superb actor, wining a Tony nomination for Best Actor in a Play for his debut.

He consolidated his reputation as an actor's actor playing the eponymous "MacBird," a hit off-Broadway hit comedy satirizing Lyndon Johnson as a latter-day MacBeth. For his turn as MacBird, he won an Obie Award, a Vernon Rice Award, and the Drama Desk Award, as well as being named "Best Performance in a Comedy" by Saturday Review's Award. Switching gears from comedy to serious drama, his 1971 performance of Jamie in Eugene O'Neill's, "Long Day's Journey Into Night" with Robert Ryan and Gerladine Fitzgerald brought him another round of Obie, Vernon Rice and New York Drama Desk awards.

In the 1972-73 season, Keach took on the greatest challenge for the dramatic actor, the title role in Shakespeare's "Hamlet" off-Broadway for the New York Shakespeare Theatre. (No American actor had mounted a Broadway Hamlet since John Barrymore and Walter Hampden in the 1920s and '30s. Raymond Massey was a Canadian and Maurice Evans was an English immigrant.) Keach's portrayal of the Gloomy Dane brought him his third Obie and Vernon Rice Awards. Playing Hamlet had been a challenge that the great Brando himself had ignored, though Keach played Stanley Kowalski off-Broadway in . Stacy Keach apparently had arrived as the next Great American Actor. Alas, that was not to be. His career in films sputtered out by the mid-70s and he was reduced to playing a caricature in Cheech and Chong movies. It was a waste of a major talent (as can be seen in his understated performance as Frank James in "The Longriders," a film he co-wrote and co-produced with his brother, 'James Keach' ) and an indictment of the post-Hollywood studio American film industry. While American film became dominated by directors in the 1970s, it also increasingly became focused on the box office, i.e., appealing to the 12-24 year-old male demographic once satisfied with drive-in fare as the drive-in movie became lavished with big budgets and big stars (e.g., "Silence of the Lambs"). In another era, an actor of Keach's talent surely would have thrived as a character lead and supporting actor, possibly breaking through like Humphrey Bogart did in his early 40s.

The alternative to a career like Bogart's is television, the media that doomed the studio system, and that's where Keach turned. He had a success as a hardboiled private dick in the series "Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer" from 1984 to 1987. The momentum of Keach's success on series TV was impeded after n he was arrested at Heathrow Airport when customs officials found cocaine in a hollowed-out shaving cream container. He was convicted of smuggling cocaine into the United Kingdom and spent six months in prison. Keach's contrition attracted sympathy, including that of First Lady Nancy Reagan, the high priestess of her husband's war on drugs, and he eventually returned to the show.

For his TV portrayal of "Hemingway," he won a Golden Globe and an Emmy nomination as Best Actor. He also played the role of Ken Titus' father in the TV series "Titus". Television also uses his well-trained voice frequent as a narrator, most notably for "Nova," "National Geographic" and "The Discovery Channel."

Always one to return to the boards like a true actor, Keach scored another major success on stage when he was the lead in "The Kentucky Cycle," the only play to be awarded a Pulitzer Prize for Drama without first appearing in New York. He appeared in the play both on and off-Broadwayas as well as in its Washington, D.C. tryouts. For his Broadway turn in the play, he won an Outstanding Artist Award from The Drama League, the Helen Hayes Award as Best Actor and a New York Drama Desk Awards nomination as Best Actor.

Stacy Keach serves as the honorary chairman of the Cleft Palate Foundation, for which he received a Celebrity Outreach Award in 1995. He also is a Charter Member of the Artist's Rights Foundation. That he continues to act 37 years after making his film debut in "The Heart is a Lonely Hunter" is testimony to his talent. Audiences should not be surprised if, seemingly out of the blue, Keach the screen actor returns to form and delivers another masterful performance like his Tully, the last time he came in out of the cold.
Trivia
In 1984 he was jailed in England for nine months for smuggling cocaine.
Born at 7:15pm-EDT
Son of Stacy Keach Sr., brother of James Keach
Stacy's father started as a community college drama teacher. He then became the director of the Pasadena Playhouse. His mother was Mary Kain Keach.
Keach studied drama at the University of Berkeley, Yale, and the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art.
Acted in a number of plays at the Shakespeare Theatre in Washington, DC.
He won an Obie in 1967 for his performance in the title role of "MacBird!".
Performed the role of the King of Siam in a touring rendition of "The King and I".
Stacy Keach graduated from Van Nuys High School in June, 1959.
Children: son - Shannon, daughter - Karolina
Brother-in-law of actress Jane Seymour
Provided the narration for the Submarine ride at Disneyland (in Anaheim, California) - but the ride no longer exists.
Former Fulbright scholar.
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. The role instead went to Beau Bridges.
Was nominated for Broadway's 1970 Tony Award as Best Actor (Dramatic) for playing William F. Cody, aka Buffalo Bill, in Arthur L. Kopit's "Indians."
Was born with a cleft palate. He had it repaired and the scar is on his lip under the right nostril. He hides the scar with his trademark mustache.
Under the then-extant rules, Keach should have been awarded Best Actor honors from the New York Film Critics Circle for his portrayal of Tully in Fat City, as it required only a plurality of the vote and Keach was the top vote-getter in the category. At the time, the NYCC was second in prestige only to the Academy Awards (and some actors and filmmakers considered it a superior honor) and was a major influence on subsequent Oscar nominations. (In the 1976 presidential election year, director Robert Altman characterized the NYFCC Awards as the 'New York primary' leading up to the Oscar 'election,' where the Golden Globes was the 'California primary.') A vocal faction of the NYFCC, dismayed by the rather low percentage of votes that would have given Keach the award, successfully demanded a rule change so that the winner would have to obtain a majority. In subsequent balloting, Keach failed to win a majority of the vote, and he lost ground to his main rival, Marlon Brando in The Godfather. However, Brando could not gain a majority either, and a compromise candidate, Laurence Olivier in Sleuth, eventually was awarded Best Actor honors. Both Brando, who eventually won the Oscar for his come-back triumph as Don Corleone in the classic gangster picture, and Olivier were nominated for the Academy Award, but Keach was not.
Is often referred to as "The American Olivier".
Credits the sitcom Titus for somewhat rejuvenating his career and making him more recognizable to younger audiences.
When he played Ken Titus on the sitcom Titus he would sometimes receive tips from the actual Ken Titus (before he passed away), on how to portray him better.
Source provided by imdb (Copyright) - The Internet Movie Database.

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