Tim McIntire

Tim McIntire

ActorComposerSoundtrack
Born
July 19, 1944
Died
April 15, 1986

Tim McIntire was a remarkably fine, versatile and underrated actor-composer-singer-songwriter-musician who gave consistently strong, impressive and charismatic performances in both movies and TV shows alike. The son of character actor John McIntire and actress Jeanette Nolan, McIntire was born on…

Biography

Tim McIntire was a remarkably fine, versatile and underrated actor-composer-singer-songwriter-musician who gave consistently strong, impressive and charismatic performances in both movies and TV shows alike. The son of character actor John McIntire and actress Jeanette Nolan, McIntire was born on July 19, 1944. He was the brother of actress Holly McIntire. McIntire first began acting in plays while attending high school. He worked in gas stations and men's stores in order to finance his early theatrical career. Handsome and husky, with a deep, rich and commanding voice of exceptionally exquisite sonority, McIntire made his film debut as James Stewart's son in Shenandoah (1965). MicIntire was superb in a rare substantial starring part as passionate pioneering '50s rock -'n'-roll disc jockey Alan Freed in the hugely enjoyable American Hot Wax (1978). McIntire's other notable movie roles include a raucous party hearty college student in The Sterile Cuckoo (1969), an illegal cross-country car race participant in the funny The Gumball Rally (1976), a wild-man cop in The Choirboys (1977), a shrewd top con in the offbeat prison drama Fast-Walking (1982), and a rugged mountain man in Sacred Ground (1983). McIntire supplied the deliciously dry, growly and sardonic voice of the cruel and cunning canine Blood in the terrific post-nuke sci-fi cult classic A Boy and His Dog (1975). McIntire also composed the score for the picture and even sings the catchy ending-credits theme song. McIntire also composed the scores for The Killer Inside Me (1976), Win, Place or Steal (1974), Kid Blue (1973), and Jeremiah Johnson (1972) (McIntire beautifully sings the lovely folk ballad which plays during the ending credits). Among the TV shows McIntire did guest spots on are Harry O (1973), Soap (1977) (the voice of the Devil), Kung Fu (1972), The F.B.I. (1965), Circle of Fear (1972), The New Perry Mason (1973), Bonanza (1959), All in the Family (1971), The Fugitive (1963), Gunsmoke (1955), Lassie (1954), Ben Casey (1961), and Wagon Train (1957). Outside of acting, McIntire did voice-overs for numerous TV commercials and was a prolific studio session musician. Alas, Tim McIntire had problems with drug addiction and alcoholism which led to his untimely death from heart failure at the tragically young age of 41 on April 15, 1986.

Actor

More Than MurderMore Than Murder(1984)as Malcolm Dobbs
Sacred GroundSacred Ground(1983)as Matt Colter
Fast-WalkingFast-Walking(1982)as Wasco
Stand by Your ManStand by Your Man(1981)as George Jones
BrubakerBrubaker(1980)as Huey Rauch

Archive Footage

The Magical World of DisneyThe Magical World of Disney(1954)as Corporal
Kung FuKung Fu(1972)as Deputy Mitchell

Known for

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Photos 7

James Drury, Robert Lipton, Tim McIntire, and John McIntire in The Virginian (1962)Tim McIntire and Robert Yuro in Death Valley Days (1952)Don Johnson, Tim McIntire, and Tiger in A Boy and His Dog (1975)Don Johnson, Tim McIntire, and Tiger in A Boy and His Dog (1975)Tim McIntire and Liza Minnelli in The Sterile Cuckoo (1969)Jerry Lee Lewis and Tim McIntire in American Hot Wax (1978)

Credit Score: Tim McIntire

98765
19641965196619671968196919701971197219731974197519761977197819791980198119821983
Huey Rauch
Fri Jun 20 1980
#NameScoreYearWinNomKnownWinsNomsVotes
1Brubaker3.7519807.10121404
2Shenandoah3.7519657.30110480
3Fast-Walking3.2519826.300869
4American Hot Wax3.2519786.9001436
5The Gumball Rally3.2519766.2004900
6A Boy and His Dog3.2519756.40020886
7The Sterile Cuckoo3.2519696.7022601
8The Choirboys2.3819775.6002086