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Raymond William Stacy Burr (May 21, 1917 – September 12, 1993) was a Canadian actor who had a lengthy Hollywood film career and portrayed the title roles in the television dramas Perry Mason and Ironside. Burr's early acting career included roles on Broadway, radio, television, and film, usually as the villain.
Raymond Burr and Peppard purportedly clashed at first but then got along. [6] The film's title was changed to New Face in Hell then in September 1967, the title was changed from New Face in Hell to PJ. [7] One scene has Peppard beaten up by leather clad men in a gay bar. [8]
Hale and Raymond Burr in the CBS-TV series Perry Mason (1958) Hale was considering retirement from acting when she accepted her best known role, as legal secretary Della Street in the television series Perry Mason, starring Raymond Burr as the titular character. [7] The show ran for nine seasons from 1957 to 1966, with 271 episodes produced.
In 1988, Galloway appeared in the Perry Mason TV movie The Case of the Avenging Ace, reuniting with Raymond Burr for the first time in 13 years. Galloway and Burr had a long association with one another; aside from Ironside and a subsequent Perry Mason movie in 1990, the two actors starred in the 1973 TV movie Portrait: A Man Whose Name Was John.
Raymond Burr was a famous closeted gay actor who never came out but we knew, oh yes, we knew, born ... etc. --SergeWoodzing 17:04, 10 August 2020 (UTC) I agree wholeheartedly with this removal and lament its reinstatement. The IP nailed it and the reinstater failed it. --SergeWoodzing 09:54, 21 April 2021 (UTC)
Elizabeth Baur, who helped Raymond Burr bring the bad guys to justice as Officer Fran Belding on the long-running NBC crime drama Ironside, has died.She was 69. Baur died Sept. 30 in Los Angeles ...
Desire in the Dust is a 1960 American neo noir crime film released by the Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation, directed by William F. Claxton, produced by Robert L. Lippert and starring Raymond Burr, Martha Hyer and Joan Bennett. The screenplay was written by Charles Lang based on a novel by Harry Whittington. [2] [3]
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