Versatile character actor Peter Jason was born
on July 22, 1944, in Hollywood, CA, and grew up in Balboa. He attended Newport Beach Elementary School, Horace Ensign Junior High and Newport
Harbor High School.
He originally planned on being a football player, but fell in love with acting after playing the lead in a high school production of "The Man Who Came to Dinner." Following his high school graduation he attended Orange Coast Junior College and did a season of summer stock at the Peterborough Playhouse in New Hampshire.
He then studied as a drama major at the Carnegie Institute of Technology in Pittsburgh, PA. More stage work followed with the acting group the South Coast Repertory Company. He made his film debut in
Howard Hawks' final film,
Rio Lobo (1970) (which Jason said is one of his favorites). He worked with
Orson Welles on the uncompleted
The Other Side of the Wind (2018) as an actor, boom operator, prop man and even cook for the cast and crew.
Jason appeared in many films for director
Walter Hill; he was the racist redneck bartender in
48 Hrs. (1982). He appeared in many films for director
John Carpenter: as Dr. Paul Leahy in
Prince of Darkness (1987) and as underground guerrilla army leader Gilbert in
They Live (1988).
Other notable roles included a sinister government agent in
Dreamscape (1984), rugged Maj. G.F. Devin in
Clint Eastwood's
Heartbreak Ridge (1986), jerky detective Fedorchuk in
Alien Nation (1988), a newspaper reporter in
Seabiscuit (2003) and the U.S. president in
Alien Apocalypse (2005). He had a recurring role as dissolute gambler Con Stapleton in the superbly gritty cable Western TV series
Deadwood (2004). He also had a regular part as Capt. Skip Gleason on
Mike Hammer, Private Eye (1997).
Among the many TV shows Peter made guest appearances on include:
Desperate Housewives (2004),
Sabrina the Teenage Witch (1996),
Nash Bridges (1996),
Coach (1989),
The Golden Girls (1985),
Murder, She Wrote (1984),
Married... with Children (1987),
Roseanne (1988),
Dear John (1988),
Quantum Leap (1989),
Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman (1993),
B.J. and the Bear (1978),
The Incredible Hulk (1977),
Gunsmoke (1955) and
Hawaii Five-O (1968). In addition to his substantial film and TV show credits, he acted in over 150 plays and hundreds of TV commercials.
An accomplished baritone vocalist, he sang in such musical stage productions as "The Music Man" (this is one of his favorite plays), "Stop the World, I Want to Get Off," "The Roar of the Greasepaint", and "The Threepenny Opera" (as Mack the Knife).
He and his wife Eileen were married for more than three decades.
Peter Jason died in 2025, aged 80.