“I Love Lucy” star William Frawley was such a crass curmudgeon that he once allegedly called his on-screen wife, Vivian Vance, a “miserable c–t.” ‘Alice’ star Linda Lavin: I was sexually harassed on the set of a TV movie Lucille Ball hated running a studio and was not a feminist, daughter says ‘Sixteen Candles’ star Carole Cook dead at 98 What I missed, I’m sure I missed, but I’m not too unhappy about what I did.Why Lucille Ball’s daughter, Lucie Arnaz, made a deal to be fired from ‘Here’s Lucy’ Of a childhood in the public eye, Considine once said, “It was generally a pretty good experience for me. He occasionally substituted for William Safire in the “On Language” column in The New York Times Magazine. Tim authored The Photographic Dictionary of Soccer, The Language of Sport, and American Grand Prix Racing: A Century of Drivers and Cars, which was serialized in Sports Car International magazine. Tim made some televised guest appearances and a few films afterwards, but for the most part has spent the ensuing decades combining his loves of writing, photography, sports, and cars. In 1970 Tim played his most famous-but perhaps most brief-screen role, as the bedridden soldier slapped by George C. He played the role of “Mike Douglas,” and eventually wrote and directed several episodes of the series. In 1960 he began working a five-year stint on the classic TV comedy My Three Sons starring Disney Legend Fred MacMurray and co-starring Disney contemporary Don Grady, a former Mouseketeer. “It was a very critical time as a teenager, and I was more interested in being a cool guy than being an actor.” Tim also played James Roosevelt opposite Ralph Bellamy in Sunrise at Campobello, and guest starred in the TV series Cheyenne, Johnny Ringo, and The Untouchables. “I’ve always thought that was one of the worst performances I ever gave,” Tim once said. Tim had a starring role opposite Fred MacMurray in The Shaggy Dog (1959). He went on to play Frank Hardy, opposite Tommy Kirk as Joe Hardy, in two “Hardy Boys” serials, and guest starred in the “Annette” serial, all for the Mickey Mouse Club TV show. In truth, the work and play were often indistinguishable.” But it might as well have been a thousand. He once described those days on the “Triple-R Ranch” as especially carefree: “We shot on a ranch about forty miles away from the Burbank studio. Alongside Stollery, Tim followed the original series with two “Spin and Marty” sequel serials. Tim played Spin Evans in “The Adventures of Spin and Marty,” a popular serial from 1955’s Mickey Mouse Club. Tim began his acting career at age 11, playing Red Skelton’s son in 1953’s The Clown (a remake of the 1933 Wallace Beery/Jackie Cooper film The Champ, a performance Leonard Maltin called “so good he overcomes some of the hokiness of the script.” This was followed by a role in Executive Suite with William Holden and June Allyson, and the Greer Garson boarding school story Her Twelve Men, where he met future co-star, friend, and Disney Legend and friend David Stollery. Tim’s brother John is also an actor and writer, and his uncle was King Features newspaper columnist Bob Considine. Considine and theater-chain heiress Carmen Pantages. Tim Considine was born in Los Angeles on Deceminto a theatrical lineage he is the son of British-born film producer John W.
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