Peter Breck

Peter Breck

Actor
Born
March 13, 1929
Died
February 6, 2012

Breck was born Joseph Peter Breck, the son of a jazz musician also named Joseph (nicknamed "Jobie"). Over time, his father worked with such legendary greats as Fats Waller, Bix Beiderbecke, Paul Whiteman and Billie Holiday. Nicknamed "Buddy" while young, Peter's parents were on the road for much of…

Biography

Breck was born Joseph Peter Breck, the son of a jazz musician also named Joseph (nicknamed "Jobie"). Over time, his father worked with such legendary greats as Fats Waller, Bix Beiderbecke, Paul Whiteman and Billie Holiday. Nicknamed "Buddy" while young, Peter's parents were on the road for much of his early life and he was sent to live with his grandparents in Haverhill, Massachusetts, a move that provided more stability.

His parents eventually divorced and young Peter returned to Rochester to live with his mother and her new husband, Al Weber, who was a sports editor of the Rochester Times-Union. Following his schooling at John Marshall High School in Rochester, Peter served in the United States Navy. He then turned his attention back to education and studied English and drama at the University of Houston in Houston. While performing in college plays, he started to apprentice at Houston's Alley Theatre, where he appeared in such productions as "Stalag 17", among others. He had a talent for singing and performed in several clubs in and around the Houston area.

Breck extended his stage resume at Washington D.C.'s Arena Theatre. While performing there in a 1957 production of George Bernard Shaw's "The Man of Destiny", he was "discovered" by Robert Mitchum, who cast him in an unbilled role in the film Thunder Road (1958), which Mitchum himself produced, co-wrote and starred in. Mitchum invited the young tenderfoot to Los Angeles and helped set him up out there. While Breck struggled trying to establish himself in films (he played a juvenile delinquent in the movie The Beatniks (1958)), it seemed that rugged TV roles came easier to him. He found his first series lead as "Clay Culhane" in the western Black Saddle (1959), the story of a gunfighter (Breck) who switches guns for law books and tries to tame the West through reason. Co-starring Russell Johnson (later the "Professor" on Gilligan's Island (1964)), who plays a suspicious U.S. Marshal, the series was canceled after two seasons.

A Warner Brothers studio contract, however, did come out of this-and a new visibility. Tall, dark and handsome at 6'2", Breck guest-starred on all the top Warner Bros. TV shows of the day: Sugarfoot (1957), Surfside 6 (1960), Bronco (1958), Hawaiian Eye (1959), 77 Sunset Strip (1958), Cheyenne (1955) and played a recurring "Doc Holliday" in the popular series Maverick (1957). He returned to the movies as well, but this time in stronger leads or co-leads. Handed a choice co-starring assignment in Portrait of a Mobster (1961) opposite star Vic Morrow, who played the infamous "Dutch Schultz", Peter also managed to show a rare, gentler side in the outdoor family drama Lad: A Dog (1962).

He left Warners after only a few years but managed to score the leads in two low-budget cult thrillers in its wake: Shock Corridor (1963)_ and The Crawling Hand (1963), along with a very dismal lead in the musical outing Hootenanny Hoot (1963), in which he was given no songs to perform despite his singing capabilities. Again, TV came to the rescue when he won the brotherly co-lead on The Big Valley (1965). Despite a uniformly strong ensemble cast that included oldest brother Richard Long, younger brother Lee Majors and sister Linda Evans, Stanwyck was the only performer on the show who was nominated for an Emmy during its four-season run; she was nominated twice and won once.

Following this TV peak, Breck abruptly left Hollywood and focused on the theater both in the U.S. and Canada throughout the 1970s, appearing in such showcase vehicles as "The Gazebo", "A Thousand Clowns", "The Rainmaker" and "Mister Roberts". Married to former dancer Diana Bourne since 1960, the couple settled in Vancouver, Canada, with their son Christopher, where Breck checked out the film scene. He also set up a full-time acting academy school, The Breck Academy, which ran for ten years. Tragically, it was during this time that their son, Christopher, was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia and died (two years later).

Breck decided to lay back following this traumatic period, but still manages to perform in films and TV from time to time. As he grew older, he joined the cast of some very offbeat "B" films: Terminal City Ricochet (1990) and and Highway 61 (1991). His more recent "B" movies included Decoy (1995), Enemy Action (1999) and Jiminy Glick in Lalawood (2004). He also wrote a western column and showed up occasionally at nostalgia conventions until he was diagnosed with dementia. He made his last film with a small role in the Martin Short vehicle Jiminy Glick in Lalawood (2004). Breck died on February 6, 2012, in Vancouver, Canada.

Actor

Jiminy Glick in LalawoodJiminy Glick in Lalawood(2004)as Tibor
John DoeJohn Doe(2002)as William Leverton
Enemy ActionEnemy Action(1999)as Gen. Turner
The New Batman AdventuresThe New Batman Adventures(1997)as Enoch Brown, Farmer Brown, Goat
L.A. HeatL.A. Heat(1996)as Captain Crimestopper, Wayne Berry

Archive Footage

CompressionCompression(1995)as Self
19th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards19th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards(2013)as Self - In Memoriam
TCM Remembers 2012(2012)as Self, actor
Pioneers of TelevisionPioneers of Television(2008)as Nick Barkley from Big Valley
The Men Who Made the Movies: Samuel FullerThe Men Who Made the Movies: Samuel Fuller(2002)as Johnny Barrett

Known for

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Photos 22

Peter Breck in Wagon Train (1957)Richard Boone and Peter Breck in Have Gun - Will Travel (1957)Lee Majors, Barbara Stanwyck, Linda Evans, Peter Breck, and Richard Long in The Big Valley (1965)Peter Breck in Shock Corridor (1963)Peter Breck in Shock Corridor (1963)Alan Baxter and Peter Breck in The Outer Limits (1963)

Credit Score: Peter Breck

98765432
1957195819591960196119621963196419651966196719681969197019711972197319741975197619771978197919801981198219831984198519861987
Nick Barkley
Wed Sep 15 1965 – Mon May 19 1969
#NameScoreYearWinNomKnownā˜…WinsNomsVotes
1The Big Valley13.001965•7.6134037
2Hawaiian Eye5.001959•7.600780
3Shock Corridor4.881963•7.30014009
4The Fall Guy3.751981•7.10010823
5Bronco3.751958•7.200439
6Benji3.251974•6.1015572
7Hootenanny Hoot3.091963•5.100270
8I Want to Live!3.0019587.5168247
9The Sword and the Sorcerer2.381982•5.5008949
10The Crawling Hand1.631966•3.3002168