Dan Blocker
Dan Blocker | |
---|---|
Born | Bobby Dan Davis Blocker December 10, 1928 De Kalb, Texas, U.S. |
Died | May 13, 1972 Los Angeles, California, U.S. | (aged 43)
Resting place | Woodmen Cemetery in DeKalb, Texas |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1955–1972 |
Spouse |
Dolphia Parker Blocker
(m. 1952) |
Children | 4, including Dirk and David |
Bobby Dan Davis Blocker (December 10, 1928[1] – May 13, 1972) was an American television actor and Korean War veteran, who played Hoss Cartwright in the NBC Western television series Bonanza.
Biography
[edit]Early life
[edit]Blocker was born in De Kalb, Texas[2] to Ora "Shack" Blocker and Mary Arizona (Davis) Blocker.[citation needed]
As a boy, Blocker attended Texas Military Institute. He enrolled in a San Antonio school in 1940. He went to Hardin-Simmons University and Sul Ross State University, where he earned a degree in speech and drama.[3]
In 1946, Blocker played football at Southern Baptist-affiliated Hardin–Simmons University in Abilene, Texas. In 1947, he transferred to Sul Ross State Teacher's College in Alpine, Texas, where he was a star football player, and graduated in 1950. After two years of military service, he earned a master's degree in the dramatic arts.
Blocker worked as a rodeo performer and a bouncer in a bar while a student. He is remembered from his school days for his height of 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) and weight of 300 lb (140 kg), and for being good-natured despite his intimidating size.
Blocker was a high-school English and drama teacher in Sonora, Texas, from 1953 to 1954.[2] He was a sixth-grade teacher and coach at Eddy Elementary School in Carlsbad, New Mexico, and then a teacher in California. Blocker and his wife Dolphia, moved to Los Angeles, where he secured some acting roles.[3]
U.S. Army
[edit]Blocker was drafted into the United States Army during the Korean War. He had basic training at Fort Polk, Louisiana. In Korea, he served as an infantry sergeant in F Company, 2nd Battalion, 179th Infantry Regiment, 45th Infantry Division, from December 1951 to August 1952. He received a Purple Heart for wounds in combat.[4][5][6]
In addition to the Purple Heart, Blocker received the National Defense Service Medal, Korean Service Medal with two bronze campaign stars, Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation, United Nations Service Medal, Korean War Service Medal, and Combat Infantryman Badge.[citation needed]
Acting career
[edit]In 1957, Blocker appeared in a Three Stooges short, Outer Space Jitters, playing the Goon, billed as "Don Blocker".
He made two appearances on Gunsmoke. First as a cavalry lieutenant on August 24, 1956, in "Alarm at Pleasant Valley" (S1E39) and on October 18, 1958, in "Thoroughbreds". He appeared in 1957 as Will in the episode "A Time to Die" of the ABC/Warner Bros. Western series Colt .45.[citation needed]
In 1957, Blocker was cast in episodes of David Dortort's NBC series The Restless Gun as a blacksmith and as a cattleman planning to take his hard-earned profit to return to his family land in his native Minnesota. In 1957, he had at least two roles as a bartender in an episode of the syndicated Western-themed crime drama Sheriff of Cochise, starring John Bromfield, and in the film Gunsight Ridge. Also in 1957, he appeared in the Cheyenne episode "Land Beyond the Law", playing one of the outlaw minions (Pete). He also appeared in The Rifleman.
In 1958, he played a prison guard and later had a recurring role as Tiny Budinger in the NBC Western series Cimarron City, starring George Montgomery, John Smith and Audrey Totter. He was seen in "The Señorita Makes a Choice", a 1958 episode of Walt Disney's Zorro series, as well as an episode, "Underground Ambush", of Sergeant Preston of the Yukon, playing Mule Conklin.
In 1958, Blocker had a supporting role as Sergeant Broderick in "The Dora Gray Story" on NBC's Wagon Train.[citation needed] That same year, he appeared in "Stagecoach Episode" of the NBC Western Jefferson Drum, starring Jeff Richards.
In March 1958, he appeared as Joe, a thief, in season one of Have Gun Will Travel, in the episode "Gun Shy".[citation needed]
Blocker was cast as bearded poker-playing rodeo performer Cloudy Sims in the 1958 episode "Rodeo" on the David Janssen crime drama, Richard Diamond, Private Detective. In the storyline, a rodeo performer named Ed Murdock, portrayed by Lee Van Cleef, is murdered before he can make his final performance at the annual event in Madison Square Garden.[citation needed]
Another 1959 role was as Del Pierce in "Johnny Yuma", the first episode of the ABC Western series The Rebel, starring Nick Adams.
Bonanza (1959–1972)
[edit]Blocker's big break came in 1959, when he was cast as Eric "Hoss" Cartwright[3] on the NBC television series Bonanza, playing that role in 415 episodes[2] until his death. Blocker said he portrayed the gentle-natured Hoss character with a Stephen Grellet statement in mind: "We shall pass this way on Earth but once, if there is any kindness we can show, or good act we can do, let us do it now, for we will never pass this way again."[7]
In 1963, Blocker starred with Frank Sinatra in the comedy Come Blow Your Horn. He worked with Sinatra again in 1968 in the Tony Rome film sequel Lady in Cement, playing a menacing tough guy. Stanley Kubrick attempted to cast Blocker in his film Dr. Strangelove, after Peter Sellers elected not to add the role of Major T.J. "King" Kong to his multiple other roles, but according to the film's co-writer, Terry Southern, Blocker's agent rejected the script. The role went to Slim Pickens, who played the iconic scene of riding an atomic bomb down while waving his cowboy hat.
In 1968, Blocker starred as John Killibrew, a blacksmith, who had convinced a number of settlers to follow him to California and founded the town of Arkana. This TV film, Something for a Lonely Man, also featured Susan Clark, John Dehner, Warren Oates, and Don Stroud.[8] In 1970, Blocker portrayed a love-shy galoot in The Cockeyed Cowboys of Calico County, with Nanette Fabray as a love prospect and a supporting cast featuring Jim Backus, Jack Elam, Noah Beery Jr., and Mickey Rooney. Blocker also appeared on NBC's The Flip Wilson Show comedy hour.
Director Robert Altman befriended Blocker while directing episodes of Bonanza. Years later, he cast Blocker as Roger Wade in The Long Goodbye, but Blocker died before filming began. The role then went to Sterling Hayden, and the film was dedicated to Blocker.
Also in 1963, Blocker started and received partial ownership in a successful chain of Bonanza Steakhouse restaurants,[2] in exchange for serving, in character as Hoss, as their commercial spokesman, and making personal appearances at franchises.
Personal life
[edit]Originally from Bowie County, Texas, Blocker arrived in Los Angeles in 1958 planning to do post-grad work at UCLA but began getting acting roles. Previously, while attending Sul Ross State College, he had a non-speaking part in a stage play and found that he was attracted to acting. He played in Summer Stock in Boston in 1950 after getting his degree at the College.[9]
Blocker was a Free Methodist.[10] He married Dolphia Parker, whom he had met while a student at Sul Ross State University. Their children are Hollywood actor Dirk Blocker, Hollywood producer David Blocker, and twin daughters Debra Lee (artist) and Danna Lynn. David Blocker won a 1998 Emmy for producing Don King: Only in America.
Blocker, a liberal Democrat, was among Hollywood celebrities who supported Pat Brown's re-election in 1966 as governor of California against Ronald Reagan. In 1968, Blocker backed then-U.S. Senator Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota for the Democratic presidential nomination.[7] Blocker later supported the eventual Democratic Party nominee, Vice President Hubert Humphrey, also of Minnesota, for the presidency against the Republican Richard Nixon.
Blocker kept a house in Inglewood, California, and a 6,000-square-foot (560 m2) Tudor-style mansion in the Hancock Park area of Los Angeles.[citation needed]
On the 2010 PBS special, Pioneers of Television: Westerns, actor Mitch Vogel, who played adopted brother Jamie Cartwright on Bonanza, said Blocker, "was so easy to get to know—the kind of guy you could go and have a beer with."[citation needed]
Blocker, a performance automobile fan, once owned a 1965 Chevrolet Chevelle SS396 "Z-16" (RPO Z16 option), as Chevrolet was the commercial sponsor of the show. He also owned a 1965 Huffaker Genie MK10 race car, nicknamed the "Vinegaroon". The car was run by Nickey Chevrolet in the 1965 and 1966 U.S. Road Racing Championship series, as well as the 1966 Can-Am championship.[11]
Death
[edit]On May 13, 1972, Blocker died in Los Angeles, at age 43, of a pulmonary embolism, following gallbladder surgery at Daniel Freeman hospital.[12] A news item provides these specifics: "Blocker went into the hospital for gall bladder surgery, developed a blood clot in his lung, and died".[3]
The writers of Bonanza took the unusual step of referencing a major character's death in the show's storyline that autumn. A 2011 report added that "this was to be the first time in television history that a show had dealt with, or even mentioned, the death of one of its characters". Specifics as to the death were not discussed in the series, but some years later, in the sequel series Bonanza: The Next Generation, one character stated that "Hoss drowned trying to save another's life".[13]
Bonanza lasted another season without Hoss, and the 14th and final season ended on January 16, 1973. That season was "by far the least popular and least requested season in the show's rerun package".[13] Bonanza co-star Michael Landon said years later that whenever he needed to cry for a scene, he would think of Dan Blocker's death.[14]
Blocker's remains were interred in a family plot in Woodman Cemetery, in De Kalb, Texas.[2] The common grave site is marked by a plain stone with the name "B. Dan D. Blocker" engraved. Three family members are buried beside him – his father, mother, and sister.[15][16]
Filmography
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1957 | The Girl in Black Stockings | Mike, the Bartender | |
1957 | Black Patch | Blacksmith | Uncredited |
1957 | Gunsight Ridge | Bartender | Uncredited |
1957 | Cheyenne | Pete | Season 2/Episode 10 - "Land Beyond the Law" |
1957 | Outer Space Jitters | The Goon | Three Stooges Short |
1957–1958 | The Restless Gun | Olaf Burland / Jub Buckstar / John 'El Bruto' / Fred Burgermen / Ike Burnett | 5 episodes |
1958 | Cheyenne | Deputy Sam | Season 3/Episode 19 - "Noose at Noon" |
1958 | Have Gun - Will Travel | Joe | Episode: "Gun Shy" |
1958 | Decision | Salem | Season 1/Episode 1 - "The Virginian" |
1958 | The Rifleman | Pete Snipe | Episode: "The Sister" |
1958 | Gunsmoke | Lieutenant / Keller | Episodes: "Alarm at Pleasant Valley", "Thoroughbreds" |
1959 | The Rebel | Pierce | Episode: "Johnny Yuma" (series premiere) |
1959 | The Young Captives | Oil Field Roughneck | |
1959–1972 | Bonanza | Eric 'Hoss' Cartwright / Big Jack Slade | 415 episodes (final appearance) |
1961 | The Errand Boy | Hoss Cartwright | Uncredited cameo |
1963 | Come Blow Your Horn | Mr. Eckman | |
1968 | Lady in Cement | Waldo Gronsky | |
1968 | Something for a Lonely Man | John Kilibrew | |
1970 | The Cockeyed Cowboys of Calico County | Charley | |
1971 | The Flip Wilson Show | Himself | Episode 16 |
Namings
[edit]The following are named after Blocker:
- The Dan Blocker Room is on the second floor of the O'Donnell Heritage Museum in O'Donnell, Texas, where he was brought up.[citation needed]
- Dan Blocker Beach is in Malibu, California.[17][18]
- Dan Blocker Avenue is a street in the Boulder Ranch development in Henderson, Nevada.[citation needed]
References
[edit]- ^ Everett Aaker, Television Western Players, 1960-1975, page 39, McFarland, Inc., 2017
- ^ a b c d e "Dan Blocker: Teacher, Korean War Veteran, Purple Heart Recipient, Actor and Restaurant Franchise Owner". Nostalgia049.wordpress.com. March 3, 2014. Retrieved June 4, 2018.
- ^ a b c d McLeod, Gerald E. (March 25, 2005). "Day Trips". The Austin Chronicle. Archived from the original on July 20, 2021. Retrieved July 20, 2021.
- ^ Troesser, John. "Texan Dan Blocker". Texas Escapes. Retrieved February 16, 2014.
- ^ Gibson, Kelly (June–July 2013). "Korean War Vets Made Their Names On Screen". VFW Magazine. ISBN 9781574410853. OCLC 60622714.
- ^ Vergun, David. "Sports Heroes Who Served: 'Bonanza' Actor Served in Army During Korean War". US Department of Defense. Retrieved June 11, 2023.
- ^ a b Bonanza (Media notes). Bear Family Records. 2007.
- ^ 1. TV Guide, December 6–12, 1969, pp A-63 – A-64
- ^ Dan Blocker Star of TV's Bonanza is Dead at 43, The Palladium-Item, May 16, 1973
- ^ Finley, Gus (May 20, 1972). "Dan Blocker Obituary". Austin American-Statesman.
- ^ Vaughan, Daniel (February 2008). "1964 Genie MK10". Conceptcarz. Retrieved August 21, 2016.
- ^ "Blood clot in lung Kills Dan Blocker". Lodi News-Sentinel. May 16, 1972. Retrieved November 21, 2017 – via Google News Archive Search.
- ^ a b The First Time a TV Show Addressed the Death of a Character
- ^ McCray, Kent; Landon, Cindy (2005). Highway to Heaven Season 2: Audio Commentary - "The Torch" (DVD). A&E Television Networks.
- ^ Woolley, Bryan (July 4, 2000). Final Destinations: A Travel Guide for Remarkable Cemeteries in Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Louisiana. University of North Texas Press. ISBN 9781574410853 – via Google Books.
- ^ "Dan Blocker". June 28, 2018.
- ^ Emily Sawicki. "Dan Blocker Beach Unveiled to Public". Malibutimes.com. Archived from the original on November 23, 2017. Retrieved June 4, 2018.
- ^ "Dan Blocker Beach sign". Bonanzaboomers.com. Retrieved June 4, 2018.
External links
[edit]- Dan Blocker at IMDb
- Biography by Bruce Eder, Allmovie
- Dan Blocker at AllMusic
- Roadside America, Dan Blocker Memorial
- "Cactus Pryor Interviews Dan Blocker": KTBC interview from 1965
- Dan Blocker at Find a Grave
- 1928 births
- 1972 deaths
- People from DeKalb, Texas
- Male actors from Texas
- American male film actors
- United States Army soldiers
- United States Army personnel of the Korean War
- American male television actors
- Can-Am entrants
- Sul Ross State University alumni
- People from O'Donnell, Texas
- People from Sutton County, Texas
- TMI Episcopal alumni
- Male actors from Los Angeles
- Free Methodist Church members
- 20th-century American male actors
- Western (genre) television actors
- Burials in Texas
- Deaths from pulmonary embolism
- Hardin–Simmons Cowboys football players
- Sul Ross Lobos football players