John Anderson

Acting

John Anderson

Overview

Known for
Acting
Gender
Other
Birthday
Oct 20, 1922 (102 years old)
Death date
Aug 07, 1992

John Anderson

Known For

24 Hour Psycho
24h 0m
Movie 1993

24 Hour Psycho

24 Hour Psycho is the title of an art installation...

Bed of Lies
1h 40m
Movie 1992

Bed of Lies

Dramatization of the true-life story of a woman who fights...

Daddy
1h 40m
Movie 1991

Daddy

Oliver Watson has never been luckier: he is a successful...

Babe Ruth
1h 39m
Movie 1991

Babe Ruth

A film based on the home-run legend's life.

In Broad Daylight
1h 30m
Movie 1991

In Broad Daylight

The fanatically uncompromising Len Rowan and his family insult and...

Follow Your Heart
1h 35m
Movie 1990

Follow Your Heart

An ex-marine, in search of some defining life direction, unexpectedly...

Deadly Innocents
1h 35m
Movie 1989

Deadly Innocents

Angela is a sensitive teenager and her fanatically religious father...

American Harvest
1h 33m
Movie 1987

American Harvest

American Harvest is set in the heartland of Kansas. Two...

Scorpion
1h 38m
Movie 1986

Scorpion

A top counter-intelligence agent thwarts a hijacking and is assigned...

Never Too Young to Die
1h 32m
Movie 1986

Never Too Young to Die

Secret agent Drew Stargrove is brutally murdered by the ruthless...

Biography

John Robert Anderson (October 20, 1922 – August 7, 1992) A tall, sinewy, austere-looking character actor with silver hair, rugged features and a distinctive voice, John Robert Anderson appeared in hundreds of films and television episodes. Immensely versatile, he was at his best submerging himself in the role of historical figures (he impersonated Abraham Lincoln three times and twice baseball commissioner Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, men whom he strongly resembled). He was a familiar presence in westerns and science-fiction serials, usually as upstanding, dignified and generally benign citizens (a rare exception was his Ebonite interrogator in The Outer Limits (1963) episode "Nightmare"). He had a high opinion of Rod Serling and was proud to be featured in four episodes of The Twilight Zone (1959), most memorably as the tuxedo-clad angel Gabriel in "A Passage for Trumpet" (doing for Jack Klugman what Henry Travers did for James Stewart in It's a Wonderful Life (1946)).