Internationally-known actor Brett Halsey, one of Hollywood's busiest and handsomest actors of the mid-to-late '50s and early '60s, was born Charles Oliver Hand to a builder/contractor in Santa Ana, California on June 20, 1933. Interested in performing from childhood (he appeared in local community and church plays), the young man found a modest "in" when he was hired as a teenage page at CBS Television studios. A chance meeting with the legendary
Jack Benny and wife
Mary Livingstone who taped "The Jack Benny Show" at CBS led to his being accepted to study at Universal-International's training school that also included at the time future Universal stars
Clint Eastwood and
David Janssen. These intense studies eventually led to a contract offered by the studio.
Before deciding to pursue acting full time, the young teenager joined the Navy and enjoyed a brief stint as a deejay. Once signed with Universal, the studio decided to take advantage of Brett's esteemed ancestry (as the nephew of famed WWII Admiral William "Bull" Halsey) and changed the young nascent actor's stage name to the more marquee-friendly "Brett Halsey." He gained extensive experience apprenticing in a string of Universal bit parts, glimpsed in such standard filming as
Walking My Baby Back Home (1953),
The Man from the Alamo (1953),
The Black Shield of Falworth (1954),
Ma and Pa Kettle at Home (1954) (as one of the young Kettle brood),
Revenge of the Creature (1955) (as a victim) and _The Girl He Left Behind (1956). Eventually Brett's camera-worthy dark-haired good looks, penetrating blue eyes and earnest 'matinee idol' demeanor found their way front-and-center on TV drama ("Brave Eagle," "Mackenzie's Raiders," "Gunsmoke," "Perry Mason," "Highway Patrol," Harbor Command" and "Sea Hunt").
In the late 1950s, Brett increased his cinematic visibility with the growing interest of low budget "juvenile delinquent" films. Several of Brett's features, such as _Hot Rod Rumble (1957) with 'Leigh Snowden',
Roger Corman's cult classic
The Cry Baby Killer (1958) with
Jack Nicholson,
High School Hellcats (1958) and _Speed Crazy (1959), the last two co-starring
Yvonne Lime, have since attained camp and/or cult status. He ended that series of filming with
The Girl in Lovers Lane (1960) with
Joyce Meadows.
Keeping in step with the then-popular trend of showcasing cool, hunky "beefcake" talent in TV adventure series with interesting or exotic locales, such as when
Edd Byrnes combed his way to teen idol status on "77 Sunset Strip,"
Van Williams and
Troy Donahue checked into "Surfside Six" and
Robert Conrad spruced up "Hawaiian Eye," Brett fell into a co-starring role with
Barry Coe,
Gary Lockwood and former child star
Gigi Perreau in the one-season adventure series
Follow the Sun (1961), as a free-lance magazine writer looking for action in Honolulu. For his work, he earned a Golden Globe Award for "New Star of the Year".
Following co-star/featured work in the war films
To Hell and Back (1955), The Last Blitzkrieg (1958)_ and
Jet Over the Atlantic (1959), the sci-fi thrillers
Return of the Fly (1959) (with
Vincent Price) and
The Atomic Submarine (1959), the large-scale ensemble sudsers
The Best of Everything (1959) and Return to Peyton Place (1961)_, the crime drama
Desire in the Dust (1960) and the horror opus
Twice-Told Tales (1963), the 28-year-old Brett decided to follow a number of other young vital and promising American actors who wished to take advantage of career opportunities opening up overseas in Italy. What was originally a one-time acting job in Italy led to a decade-long stay in films. Often billed as "Montgomery Ford," Brett starred as several sword-and-sandal type heroes in including the spectacles
Le sette spade del vendicatore (1962) [The Seventh Sword],
The Burning of Rome (1963) [The Magnificent Adventurer] and
The Avenger of Venice (1964) [The Avenger of Venice]. He also settled comfortably into the fashionable international spy, "spaghetti" western and giallo genres with a slew of work including
Spy in Your Eye (1965) [Spy in Your Eye],
Espionage in Lisbon (1965) [Espionage in Lisbon],
The Hour of Truth (1965) [The Hour of Truth],
Uccidete Johnny Ringo (1966) [Johnny Ringo],
Der Kongreà amüsiert sich (1966) [Congress of Love],
Web of Violence (1966) [Web of Violence],
Bang Bang (1967),
Today We Kill, Tomorrow We Die! (1968) [Today We Kill...Tomorrow We Die],
Tutto sul rosso (1968) [All on the Red],
Wrath of God (1968) [Wrath of God],
Twenty Thousand Dollars for Seven (1969) [Twenty Thousand Dollars for Seven],
Roy Colt & Winchester Jack (1970) and
Four Times That Night (1971) [Four Times That Night].
In the early 1970s, Brett returned to the United States and planted himself squarely into TV work again, particularly in daytime drama. He appeared with regularity on
General Hospital (1963),
Search for Tomorrow (1951),
Love Is a Many Splendored Thing (1967), and, his last, a two-year stint (1980-82) on
The Young and the Restless (1973). Halsey continued sporadically in films as well, such as the comedy
Where Does It Hurt? (1972) starring
Peter Sellers,
Ratboy (1986),
The Godfather Part III (1990) and
Beyond Justice (1991), while also finding steady work on the small screen - "Alias Smith and Jones," "Toma," "The Love Boat," "The Bionic Woman," "Charlie's Angels," "Fantasy Island," "The Dukes of Hazzard," "Buck Rogers in the 25th Century," "Columbo," "Matt Houston" and "Cagney & Lacey".
At age 80+, the stalwart character actor continues to be seen from time to time with recent roles in the films
Hierarchy (2009),
The Scarlet Worm (2011),
Club Utopia (2013) (in which he held a leading role), and
Risk Factor (2015). Also known at one time as a film acting teacher, Halsey also writes novels ("The Magnificent Strangers") and screenplays while making occasional guest appearances at film festivals. One biography: "Brett Halsey: Art or Instinct in the Movies," which chronicles the actor's prolific career, was published in 2008. At various times, he has lived out of the country in Costa Rica, Canada and Italy.
Brett is the father of five children. In 1954, he married imported Universal starlet
Renate Hoy, an actress who won the "Miss Germany" beauty contest that same year. Together they had two children, the late Charles Oliver Hand, Jr. (a.k.a. punk rock performer "Rock Halsey" and/or "Rock Bottom") and Tracy Leigh. The couple divorced five years later. His second marriage (1960-1962) to exotic James Bond ("Thunderball") vixen
Luciana Paluzzi, an Italian beauty, produced son Christian, who is a producer ("American Psycho"). Halsey and Paluzzi co-starred in
Return to Peyton Place (1961) during their brief union. A third union (1964-1976) to German actress
Heidi Brühl, best known here for her US role in the 1975
Clint Eastwood film "The Eiger Sanction," produced two more children: Clayton, a TV video editor ("Big Brother"), and Nicole. Halsey is presently wed to Victoria Korda, granddaughter of British filmmaker
Alexander Korda.