District Attorney W.B. Covington / ... 3 episodes, 1959-1964 Robert Bray ... Carl Davis / ... 3 episodes, 1959-1963 Sean McClory ... Fred Wenzel / ... 3 episodes, 1961-1964 Robert F. Simon ...
In the HBO series, Perry Mason (2020), assistant district attorney Burger was a graduate of Yale Law with twenty-two years of trial experience, played by Justin Kirk. This series takes place 1931-1932, before Mason becomes a defense attorney. The adversary is district attorney Maynard Barnes, a character created for the series, played by Stephen Root. Burger, meanwhile, is …
"Perry Mason" The Case of the Prudent Prosecutor (TV Episode 1960) William Talman as District Attorney Hamilton Burger
With Raymond Burr, Barbara Hale, William Hopper, William Talman. Perry takes on the case of Jefferson Pike who is referred to him by none other than DA Hamilton Burger. Pike and Burger are old friends - Pike once saved his life - and the D.A. officially removes himself from …
Jul 02, 2021 · He played District Attorney Hamilton Burger on Perry Mason. William said in a 1958 interview that, although his character lost all but 3 of his cases throughout the series, it’s not technically a loss when a District Attorney fails to convict an innocent man and that he always acted in the interest of justice.
Dec 25, 2007 · William Talman appeared as Perry's most frequent and always defeated adversary District Attorney Hamilton Burger. Ray Collins played the crafty and irascible Police detective Lt. …
William Hopper | |
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Died | March 6, 1970 (aged 55) Palm Springs, California, U.S. |
Resting place | Rose Hills Memorial Park |
Occupation | Actor |
Talman is also known for being the first actor in Hollywood to film an antismoking public service announcement for the American Cancer Society. A lifelong heavy smoker, he was diagnosed with lung cancer, and knew he was dying when he filmed the commercial. The short film began with the words: "Before I die, I want to do what I can to leave a world free of cancer for my six children [...]" Talman requested that the commercial not be aired until after his death.
Talman began his acting career on the stage. He was the leading man in the summer stock company at Ivoryton, Connecticut, where he met his first wife, and he played the male lead in Dear Ruth during part of the play's New York run.
After college, he worked in summer stock and at an iron foundry, paper mills, boat yards, and as an automobile salesman. Talman served for 30 months in the United States Army in the Pacific Theatre of World War II, beginning his service as a private on February 4, 1942, at Camp Upton in Yaphank, Long Island, New York.
Talman was married three times. His first marriage, to actress Lynne Carter, lasted from just before Talman left for active service in 1942 to September 1952 and produced one daughter, Lynda. His second wife was actress Barbara Read; she had two sons, Damon and Quentin, from a prior marriage. They were married in 1953 and had one daughter, Barbie, and one son, William Whitney Talman III. The couple divorced on August 23, 1960. His third wife was Margaret Flanagan, whom he married in 1963. Margaret had a son (Steve) and daughter (Debbie) from a previous marriage. William and Margaret had two children: a son, Timothy, and a daughter, Susan. Widow Margaret Talman outlived Talman by nearly 34 years, until her death (also from lung cancer related to smoking) in January 2002, at age 73.
His widow, Margaret "Peggy" Louise Tal man, joined him there at the time of her death in January 2002, aged 73. After William Talman's death, she continued his antismoking efforts. Within a few years she had resumed smoking, however, and the cause of her death was also lung cancer.
Family and education. William Talman was born in Detroit, Michigan, to Ada Barber and William Whitney Talman, a vice president of an electronics company. His maternal grandparents, Catherine Gandy and James Wells Barber, were immigrants from England. Talman founded the drama club at the Cranbrook School in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.
Perry Mason movie series of the 1930s, The Case of the Black Cat. He was portrayed by Guy Usher. The character, now portrayed by Charles C. Wilson, played a larger role in the sixth and final film in the series, The Case of the Stuttering Bishop .
American. Hamilton Burger is the fictional Los Angeles County District Attorney (D.A.) in the long-running series of novels, films, and radio and television programs featuring Perry Mason, the fictional defense attorney created by Erle Stanley Gardner .
In her confirmation hearings before the Senate Judiciary Committee in July 2009, Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotoma yor prefaced her remarks on the role of the prosecutor by claiming that she was inspired by watching Perry Mason as a child, explaining, "I was influenced so greatly by a television show in igniting the passion that I had as being a prosecutor, and it was Perry Mason. In her 2013 memoir, Sotomayor, now a Supreme Court justice, wrote of the show's influence on her while she was growing up in a Bronx housing project. Sotomayor granted that the defense attorney was the show's hero, "but my sympathies were not entirely monopolized by Perry Mason . I was fond of Burger, the prosecutor, too. I liked that he was a good loser, that he was more committed to finding the truth than to winning his case. If the defendant was truly innocent, he once explained, and the case was dismissed, then he had done his job because justice had been served."
Hamilton Burger first appears in chapter 10 of Gardner's 1935 novel, The Case of the Counterfeit Eye, in which he is described as "a broad-shouldered, thick-necked individual with a close-cropped moustache".
In a hunting and fishing village, Jefferson Pike tries to confront Denver Leonard, but Leonard refuses to see the old man. Pike steals a revolver from Leonard's car and shoots himself in the leg, intending to implicate Leonard. Leonard's ranch foreman, Hal Kirkwood, helps Pike dress the wound.
Ruta Lee was more than 25 years younger than the two actors playing the men with which her character is involved in this episode (Philip Bourneuf and Walter Coy).
He played District Attorney Hamilton Burger on Perry Mason. William said in a 1958 interview that, although his character lost all but 3 of his cases throughout the series, it’s not technically a loss when a District Attorney fails to convict an innocent man and that he always acted in the interest of justice.
It was based on a series of novels by lawyer and author Erle Stanley Gardner. It was one of the first hour-long TV shows to ever air and most successful law shows of all time. Each Perry Mason cast member served as part of the show’s success. They created memorable personas who were crucial to solving each case.
The Perry Mason series ran from 1957-1966 and spawned several TV movies. It was based on a series of novels by lawyer and author Erle Stanley Gardner. It was one of the first hour-long TV shows to ever air and most successful law shows of all time. Each Perry Mason cast member served as part of the show’s success.
A poll by the National Law Journal shows that Perry Mason sits just behind attorney F. Lee Bailey as the most-admired lawyer in the world. Despite being fictional, he gave a positive picture of what a lawyer should be. The Perry Mason series ran from 1957-1966 and spawned several TV movies.
He achieved this goal by playing inspirational characters. Raymond Burr died of liver cancer at his Northern California ranch at the age of 76.
Ray Collins died on July 11th, 1965 of emphysema in Santa Monica, California at the age of 75. Like and subscribe for more on actors from the most memorable TV dramas of all time. Keep watching to learn about the careers of the rest of the Perry Mason cast.
Wesley Lau was born on June 18, 1921, in Sheboygan, Wisconsin. His acting career was successful there, but he was unknown everywhere else. He was a patient man and wanted to stretch his acting muscles. Wesley appeared on Perry Mason as client Amory Fallon in 1961.