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*''[[The Texas Wheelers]]'' (1974-1975)
*''[[The Texas Wheelers]]'' (1974-1975)


During the last 1970s or early '80s, Jack Elam starred in a sit-com titled: "Struck By Lightning" in which he played Frankenstein's Monster. To paraphrase an interview: At first, Jack was reluctant to play the part, because he did not wish to spend long hours in make-up; however, the person who wanted to cast him informed him that he would not need any make-up, because his appearance was already perfect for the part. According to the article, this statement convinced him to accept the role. The program only lasted about three weeks before it was cancelled, either for low ratings or because its use of dark humor made it inappropriate for American audiences.
During 1979, Jack Elam starred in a comedy titled: "Struck By Lightning" in which he played Frankenstein's Monster. To paraphrase an interview: At first, Jack was reluctant to play the part, because he did not wish to spend long hours in make-up; however, the person who wanted to cast him informed him that he would not need any make-up, because his appearance was already perfect for the part! According to the article, this statement convinced him to accept the role. The program only lasted about three weeks before it was cancelled, either for low ratings or because its use of dark humor made it inappropriate for American audiences.

A Synopsis of the sit-com is listed in Variety:
Reference: http://www.variety.com/profiles/TVSeries/Synopsis/160214/Struck+By+Lightning.html?dataSet=1


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 10:21, 3 December 2007

Jack Elam
File:Jackelam.JPG
Born
William Scott Elam
Other namesJack Elam
Height6 ft 0 in (183 cm)

Jack Elam (November 13, 1920October 20, 2003) was an American film actor. He appeared mostly in westerns.

William Scott Elam, "Jack", was born in Miami, Arizona to Millard Elam and Alice Amelia Kerby. Despite wildly spread rumors to the contrary, Alice did not die when Jack was one or two years old. She died in 1924 when he was just shy of four years old. After she died, he was raised by relatives in very unhappy circumstances. By 1930, he was once again living with his father, older sister, Mildred, and their step-mother, Flossie.

He grew up picking cotton, and as a Boy Scout he lost the sight in his left eye after another Scout threw a pencil at him at a troop meeting.[citation needed] He was a student of both Miami High School in Gila County and Phoenix Union High School in Maricopa County and graduated from the latter in the late 1930s.

He attended Santa Monica Junior College in California and subsequently became an accountant in Hollywood and, at one time, manager of the Bel Air Hotel in Los Angeles. In 1949, Elam made his debut in "She Shoulda Said 'No'!", an exploitation film where a chorus girl's smoking marijuana ruins her career and drives her brother to suicide. He then appeared mostly in westerns and gangster films playing "heavies".

In 1963, he got a rare chance to play the good guy when he played the part of Deputy Marshall J.D.Smith in The Dakotas, a TV western which was to run for 19 episodes. Elam was given his first comedic role in Support Your Local Sheriff!, after which he found his villainous assignments dwindling and his comic jobs increasing. He was inducted into the Hall of Great Western Performers of the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in 1994.

Elam classified the stages of a moderately successful actor's life, as defined by the way a film director refers to the actor suggested for a part.[citation needed]

Stage 1: "Who is Jack Elam?"

Stage 2: "Get me Jack Elam."

Stage 3: " I want a Jack Elam type."

Stage 4: "I want a younger Jack Elam."

Stage 5: "Who is Jack Elam?"

Jack Elam died in Ashland, Oregon of congestive heart failure on October 20 2003, aged 82. [1][2]

Partial filmography

TV series

During 1979, Jack Elam starred in a comedy titled: "Struck By Lightning" in which he played Frankenstein's Monster. To paraphrase an interview: At first, Jack was reluctant to play the part, because he did not wish to spend long hours in make-up; however, the person who wanted to cast him informed him that he would not need any make-up, because his appearance was already perfect for the part! According to the article, this statement convinced him to accept the role. The program only lasted about three weeks before it was cancelled, either for low ratings or because its use of dark humor made it inappropriate for American audiences.

A Synopsis of the sit-com is listed in Variety: Reference: http://www.variety.com/profiles/TVSeries/Synopsis/160214/Struck+By+Lightning.html?dataSet=1

References

  • Mahar, Ted. (Oct. 4, 1998) The Oregonian. A Sampling of Elams Movies. Page L10.
  • 1920 November 13; Arizona Certificate of Live Birth for William Scott Elam
  • 1920 United States Census, Arizona, Gila County, Miami
  • 1924 September 7; Arizona Original Certificate of Death for Alice Amelia Kerby Elam
  • 1930 United States Census, Arizona, Gila County, Miami
  • 2003 October 20; Oregon Certificate of Death for Jack Elam