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Stacy Keach

Stacy Keach
Stacy Keach
Born: Jun 02, 1941 in Savannah, Georgia
Occupation: Actor, Director, Writer,
Active: '70s-2000s
Major Genres: Drama, History
Career Highlights: Fat City, Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer: More Than Murder, The Long Riders
First Major Screen Credit: The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter (1968)
41 Videos for Stacy Keach
Meteor (2009) Militia (2000) NOVA: Private Lives of Dolphins (1992)
W. (2008) Unshackled (2000) Mistral's Daughter (1984)
Honeydripper (2007) World's Most Amazing Videos, Vol. 1 (2000) The Blue and the Gray (1982)
Blackbeard (2006) Fear Runs Silent (1999) Cheech and Chong's Nice Dreams (1981)
Come Early Morning (2006) American History X (1998) Saturday the 14th (1981)
Death Row (2006) Future Fear (1997) The Long Riders (1980)
Washington: The Warrior (2006) Legend of the Lost Tomb (1997) Up in Smoke (1978)
Man With the Screaming Brain (2005) The Sea Wolf (1997) Gray Lady Down (1977)
Galaxy Hunter (2004) The Pathfinder (1996) Jesus of Nazareth (1977)
The Hollow (2004) Amanda and the Alien (1995) The Killer Inside Me (1976)
When Eagles Strike (2003) James A. Michener's Texas (1994) Man of Destiny (1973)
NOVA: Fireworks! (2002) Batman: Mask of the Phantasm (1993) The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean (1972)
Sunstorm (2001) Body Bags (1993) Brewster McCloud (1970)
Mercy Streets (2000) Raw Justice (1993)
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Biography:

A fine dramatic actor who never quite made it as a movie star and so settled with a highly successful career as a television leading man, Stacy Keach is best known for playing the title character in the television detective drama Mike Hammer (1984-1987). Though born with an irreparable harelip, Keach is a sturdy and handsome fellow who is often cast as policemen or other authority figures. Keach is the son of a British actor and drama coach, Stacy Keach Sr., and was born in Georgia but raised in Los Angeles.

While attending the U.C. Berkeley, Keach became interested in drama. An agent told him that his harelip would make it impossible for Keach to get leading roles. Keach disbelieved him and went on to study drama at Yale. He then received a Fulbright scholarship to study at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art.

In New York, he essayed a number of Shakespearean roles and those of other classic plays. He also worked in more contemporary productions such as the off-Broadway {+McBird!}, which won him his first Obie and a Vernon Rice Drama Desk Award. He again won these awards after he played Hamlet at the {~New York Shakespeare Festival}.

In 1969, Keach won a Tony nomination for his Broadway debut, portraying Buffalo Bill in Arthur Kopit's {+Indians}. For his performance in {+The Kentucky Cycle}, Keach earned a Drama League Outstanding Artist Award, the Helen Hayes Award for Best Actor, and a Drama Award nomination for Best Actor.

Keach made his feature-film debut as an alcoholic wanderer in The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter (1968). Keach's movie career took off afterward and he appeared in several major movies in quick succession, including Brewster McCloud (1970) and The New Centurians (1972). In 1971, Keach made an award-winning short film, The Repeatery.

Later, he also made a television version of Pirandello's complex Six Characters in Search of an Author. As a movie actor, Keach's heyday ended by the early '80s, after appearing in both American and international productions of widely varying quality; Keach then turned to television.

Mike Hammer was a very successful show, but production abruptly stopped when British customs officers at London's Heathrow Airport found Keach carrying a significant amount of cocaine. He spent several months imprisoned in England, but was released in 1986. Having kicked his drug habit, Keach repaired his damaged career and started showing up regularly in television miniseries such as The Blue and the Gray (1985).

Keach continues his stage work, often narrates documentaries, and occasionally appears in feature films such as Escape From L.A. (1995). Keach is a member of the Los Angeles Classic Theatre Work, the Yale Theater Circle, and the Players Club. In addition, he works on the Artistic Advisory Board for the National Foundation for the Advancement in the Arts, the Artists Committee for the Kennedy Center Honors, and the Helen Hayes Honorary Committee.

In the '90s, Keach was named Honorary Chair for the Cleft Palate Foundation and in 1995 won the Celebrity Outreach Award for his charitable work. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide.