- Neville Brand
-
Neville Brand
in D.O.A. (1950)Born August 13, 1920
Griswold, Iowa, United StatesDied April 16, 1992 (aged 71)
Sacramento, California, United StatesYears active 1949–85 Spouse Mae Brand (?-1992) (his death) Neville Brand (August 13, 1920 - April 16, 1992) was an American television and movie actor.
Contents
Early life
Neville Brand was born in Illinois.[1] He was born to Leo and Helen Brand as one of seven children. Leo, an electrician and bridge building steel worker and Neville was raised in Detroit. After high school, he helped support the family while employed as a soda jerk, waiter, and shoe salesman in Kewanee. He entered the Illinois Army National Guard on October 23, 1939 as a private in Company F, 129th Infantry Regiment. Enlisted as Corporal Neville L. Brand infantryman on March 5, 1941, he was listed as being six feet tall and weighing 169 pounds.
World War II
He trained at Fort Carson, and served nine months and nineteen days in the U.S. Army in World War II seeing action with the 331st Infantry Regiment of the 83rd Infantry Division (Thunderbolt Division) in the Ardennes, Rhineland, and Central European campaigns. Brand, a sergeant and platoon leader, was wounded in action along the Weser River on April 7, 1945. His upper right arm was hit by a bullet, and he nearly bled to death. He was discharged from service in October 1945.
He worked on a 1946 U.S. Army Signal Corps film with Charlton Heston, and next settled in Greenwich Village and enrolled at the American Theater Wing, working off Broadway, including Jean-Paul Sartre's The Victors. He also attended the Geller Drama School in Los Angeles on the G.I. Bill.
According to the IMDb, the claim that he was the fourth most decorated soldier (actor Audie Murphy being the first) is often repeated but is incorrect, though that same article does list many decorations that he did receive. These include a Silver Star, Purple Heart, Good Conduct Medal, American Defense Service Medal, the European African Middle Eastern Campaign Medal (with three Service Stars), American Campaign Medal, World War II Victory Medal, one Service stripe, and the Combat Infantryman Badge.
In a November 1979 interview with author William R. Horner for his book Bad at the Bijou, Brand admitted to battles with drugs and alcohol.
Acting career
Brand started his big screen career in D.O.A. (1950) as a henchman named Chester. He became well known as a villain when he killed the character played by Elvis Presley in Love Me Tender. He has the distinction of being the first actor to portray outlaw Butch Cassidy in the film Three Outlaws, opposite Alan Hale, Jr. as the Sundance Kid. Though not the big-budget romp the later Paul Newman-Robert Redford film was, both Brand's Cassidy and Hale's Kid are played as likable outlaws, a rare change from Brand's typecasting as a murderous psycho. He played the villain in so many movies, his self-image became affected, culminating in a television interview on Entertainment Tonight with the actor moving about in agitation repeating, "I'm a loser. I'm a loser."[citation needed]
However, Brand played a very romantic lead in the movie Return from the Sea with Jan Sterling and a heartwarming character who was brain damaged and misunderstood in an episode of the TV show Daniel Boone. He played Hoss Cartwright's (Dan Blocker) Swedish uncle "Gunnar Borgstrom" on Bonanza in the episode "The Last Viking". He also played U.S. Navy Lieutenant Kaminsky, ignored as he tried to warn his commander of the opening skirmish in Tora! Tora! Tora!, who later waves his arms at the Pearl Harbor carnage, exclaiming to a shocked Captain John B. Earle (Richard Anderson) "Sir, THERE'S your confirmation!"
Of the hundreds of roles he played, he is probably most well known as Al Capone in the TV show The Untouchables and again in the movie The George Raft Story. The characterization caused an outcry from the Italian American community over stereotypes.
Many will remember him as Bull Ransom, the prison guard of Birdman of Alcatraz, and as the antagonistic and untrusting, yet dedicated POW, "Duke", in Stalag 17.
Known also for his cowboy roles, he appeared twice on the long running TV western The Virginian, he then went on to star as Reese Bennet in the television series, Laredo, with William Smith, Peter Brown, and Philip Carey. Laredo was a spinoff series from The Virginian. One of the most heart-rending scenes on television showed Brand's character, Reese waiting in torment when he realizes he has been stood up by the love of his life. In another episode, the gruff and dusty Reese has an immaculate and proper lookalike that confounds the other Texas Rangers. The producers suspended Brand from Laredo due to his heavy drinking and problems between directors and co-stars. Brand admitted "I missed a lot of days I should have been on the set and wasn’t."
In his memoir, actor Bruce Dern said that "Neville Brand was the baddest guy I’ve ever met in the business. Second baddest was Audie Murphy". Actress Coleen Gray described him as "the steely-eyed, evil person of all time... he was mean." She also said "...he was a nice person, and an intelligent person."
Actress Roberta Collins accused him of date rape but did not press charges.
Brand co-starred with George Takei in "The Encounter", an episode of the original Twilight Zone series. Ironically, Brand, a genuine decorated veteran, portrays a phony war hero, a coward who obtained his prize trophy (a Japanese soldier's sword) by murdering a Japanese officer after he had surrendered. After its initial airing, "Encounter" triggered complaints from Japanese-Americans due to the backstory of the character played by Takei: he portrays a Nisei (the U.S.-born son of Japanese immigrants) whose father spied for the Japanese navy during the Pearl Harbor attack. Although "Encounter" is a taut drama with excellent performances by Brand and Takei, this historical inaccuracy (and the complaints it engendered) has caused this episode to be omitted from syndicated broadcasts of The Twilight Zone. (This episode, in three parts, is available for view on YouTube.)
Personal life
Brand's personal life was complicated. He was married three times — Jean Enfield (one daughter Mary Raymer, marriage ended in divorce in 1955), Laura Rae Araujo (married in Mexico April 6, 1957, two daughters Michelle Beuttel and Katrina, divorced in Los Angeles June 1969). His third wife was Ramona. It is possible his marriages to Laura and Ramona overlapped. Obituaries mention a wife named Mae Brand. He was survived by a brother, Bryce; and two sisters, Babara Byrne and Louise Turngren.
Brand was also an insatiable reader, who amassed a collection of 30,000 books over the years, many of which were destroyed in a 1978 fire at his Malibu home.
Neville Brand died from emphysema at Sutter General Hospital in Sacramento, California in 1992. He was cremated and his remains are interred in a niche of the Morning Glory Room at East Lawn Memorial Park in Sacramento.
Partial filmography
Films
- D.O.A. (1950)
- Halls of Montezuma (1951)
- Only the Valiant (1951)
- The Mob (1951)
- Kansas City Confidential (1952)
- The Turning Point (1952)
- Stalag 17 (1953)
- Gun Fury (1953)
- The Charge at Feather River (1953)
- The Man from the Alamo (1953)
- Riot in Cell Block 11 (1954)
- Return from the Sea (1954)
- The Prodigal (1955)
- Mohawk (1956)
- Gun Brothers (1956)
- Three Outlaws (1956)
- Love Me Tender (1956)
- The Tin Star (1957)
- Cry Terror! (1958)
- Five Gates to Hell (1959)
- The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1960)
- The Last Sunset (1961)
- Birdman of Alcatraz (1962)
- That Darn Cat! (1965)
- The Desperados (1969)
- Tora! Tora! Tora! (1970)
- Cahill U.S. Marshal (1973)
- The Deadly Trackers (1973)
- Scalawag (1973)
- Killdozer! (1974) (TV)
- Eaten Alive (1977)
- Captains Courageous (1977) (TV)
- The Ninth Configuration (1980)
- Without Warning (1980)
- Evils of the Night (1985)
Television
- Appointment with Adventure (1955)
- Tightrope (1959)
- The Untouchables (1959–1961)
- The Twilight Zone episode "The Encounter" (1964)
- Laredo (1965–1967)
- Bonanza (November,1960–December,1971 episodes: The Last Viking, The Luck of Pepper Shannon, The Rattlesnake Brigade)
- Alias Smith & Jones (1971)
- The Quest (1976)
- Combat! (TV Series) (1964)
References
- California Divorce Index 1966-1984.
- Dern, Bruce. Thing's I’ve Said but Probably Shouldn’t Have. Hoboken, New Jersey: Wiley, 2007.
- Hannsberry, Karen Burroughs. Bad Boys: The Actors of Film Noir. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland, 2003.
- Horner, William R. Bad at the Bijou. Jefferson NC: McFarland, 1982.
- Lambert, Bruce. "Neville Brand, 71, Craggy Actor Known for Many Roles as Villains" New York Times, April 19, 1992.
- Wise, James E., Jr. and Paul W. Wilderson III. Stars in Khaki. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 2000.
External links
- Neville Brand at the Internet Movie Database
- Neville Brand at AllRovi
- Neville Brand at Find a Grave
- Neville Brand: Setting the Record Straight by Robert E. Witter
Categories:- 1920 births
- 1992 deaths
- American film actors
- American television actors
- American military personnel of World War II
- People from Cass County, Iowa
- Actors from Iowa
- People from Kewanee, Illinois
- Deaths from emphysema
- Recipients of the Silver Star
- Recipients of the Purple Heart medal
- The Untouchables
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.