‘Green Hornet’ Star Van Williams Dies at 82
He was number 146 on the list.
Van Williams, star of the 1966 TV show “The Green Hornet,”
died last Monday in Scottsdale, Ariz., of renal failure. He was 82.
“He had a wonderful, caring, and kind heart,” his wife of 57
years, Vicki Williams, told Variety. “He was a wonderful husband, he was a
fabulous father, and a devoted grandfather.”
Williams was a diving instructor in Hawaii when he was
discovered in 1957 by producer Mike Todd, who was married to Elizabeth Taylor
at the time. Williams was persuaded to come to Hollywood and try his hand at
acting, and earned his big break on the ABC private detective show “Bourbon
Street Beat.” He played Ken Madison, a character he later recycled for another
detective show, “Surfside 6.”
In 1966, Williams signed a deal with 20th Century Fox to
star in “The Green Hornet” as both the titular masked crusader and his
newspaper editor alter ego, Britt Reid. He was ably supported by his martial
arts master sidekick Kato, played by Bruce Lee, and by his weaponized car,
Black Beauty. Williams played the role straight, signaling a departure from the
lampoon comedy of Fox’s earlier “Batman” series.
Williams appeared in iconic shows such as “The Beverly
Hillbillies” and “The Dick Van Dyke Show,” as well as in the young
adult-targeted “Westwind,” which centered around the adventures of the Andrews
family who sailed around the world on a yacht.
After his acting career dropped off in the late 1970s,
Williams became a reserve deputy sheriff and a volunteer fire fighter at the
Malibu station of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.
Actress Pat Priest (“The Munsters”), Williams’ longtime
friend and neighbor, said Williams was her mentor.
“We had many fun dinners around our dining room table,”
Priest told Variety. “We laughed a lot and he was my mentor in helping me with
memorabilia shows. He was very special. We saw him last year and we have
wonderful memories.”
Producer Kevin Burns, who worked with Williams on a relaunch
campaign for “Batman” and “Green Hornet” in 1989, told Variety that Williams
had singed his lungs while working as a volunteer fire fighter, and suffered
from bronchial problems and back injuries.
“Through it all he remained strong and rarely spoke of what
he went through. He was a great guy and a class act all the way,” Burns said in
his Facebook post.
Williams is survived by his wife; three children, Nina, Tia,
and Britt; and five grandchildren.
Filmography
Surfside 6 cast: Troy Donahue, Lee Patterson, Van Williams
and Diane McBain
Film
Tall Story (1960)
- Young Man in Shower (uncredited)
The Caretakers
(1963) - Dr. Larry Denning
Batman (1966) -
President Lyndon B. Johnson (voice, uncredited)
Dragon: The Bruce
Lee Story (1993) - Green Hornet Director (final film role)
Television
Colt .45 in
"The Sanctuary" (1959) - Tom Rucker[20]
Bourbon Street
Beat (1959–1960) - Ken Madison
Surfside 6
(1960-1962) - Ken Madison in the same time slot
The Tycoon
(1964-1965) - Pat Burns
The Dick Van Dyke
Show (1965) - Corporal Clark Rice
The Beverly
Hillbillies (1965) - Dean Peters
The Green Hornet
(1966–1967) - Britt Reid/the Green Hornet
Batman : includes
three cross-over episodes (1966-1967) - The Green Hornet
The Big Valley
(1968) - Sheriff Dave Barrett
Nanny and the
Professor (1970) - Mr. Parsons
Mannix (1970) -
Executive #1
Gunsmoke (1974) -
Quincy
Westwind
(1975–1976) - Steve Andrews
The Streets of San
Francisco - "The Thrill Killers, Part 1" (1976) - Officer Morton
Quinn Martin's
Tales of the Unexpected - "Devil Pack," Season 1 Episode 3 (1977) -
Sheriff
Centennial -
"The Scream of Eagles" (1979) - George
The Rockford Files
- "Love is the Word," Season 6 Episode 6, (November 1979) - Lt.
Dwayne Kiefer
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