Biff McGuire

Biff McGuire

ActorWriter
Born
October 25, 1926
Died
March 9, 2021

William Joseph McGuire Jr. (he was nicknamed 'Biff' when playing football at high school) initially pursued studies in agricultural engineering at the University of Massachusetts. Deciding "that farming wasn't for me", he dropped out and enlisted in the U.S. Army. Stationed in Oxfordshire during the…

Biography

William Joseph McGuire Jr. (he was nicknamed 'Biff' when playing football at high school) initially pursued studies in agricultural engineering at the University of Massachusetts. Deciding "that farming wasn't for me", he dropped out and enlisted in the U.S. Army. Stationed in Oxfordshire during the latter stages of World War II, he became interested in the performing arts while attending the Defence Academy of the United Kingdom at Shrivenham. Put to work as a set painter, Biff appeared in a local stage production, at which time he was spotted by a drama critic who talked him into going to London to audition (as it turned out, successfully) for a part in William Saroyan 's play The Best Years of Our Lives. Upon his return to the U.S., he acted on Broadway in the original 1949 production of South Pacific. His many subsequent performances on the 'Great White Way' during the next half century included a leading turn in Fininan's Rainbow in 1960, which also co-starred his wife, the English actress Jeannie Carson. In the course of many years, the 'McGuires' made many successful stage appearances together in off-Broadway plays, including Mary, Mary, Camelot and Cactus Flower. Both were also long-standing members of the Seattle Repertory Theatre.

The tall, lean-framed stage thesp eventually broke into TV acting during the early 50s. In addition, he penned several episodic screenplays as well as managing to sell an original drama entitled "Top of the World" to the BBC. Biff only made sporadic forays into motion pictures, notably as a character actor or second-string lead in The Phenix City Story (1955), The Thomas Crown Affair (1968) and The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter (1968). On the small screen, he starred in several episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1955) and was one of the three principal characters (Dr. Michael Malloy) in the nostalgic newspaper drama series Gibbsville (1976), alongside Gig Young and John Savage. Prior to his retirement from acting in 2013 he also had recurring appearances on the soaps Search for Tomorrow (1951) and Santa Barbara (1984).

Actor

Hollywood SeagullHollywood Seagull(2013)as Bruce Sorensen
Unfair and ImbalancedUnfair and Imbalanced(2012)as Frederick Huntsburg
In Memoriam(2009)as Franciszek
FrasierFrasier(1993)as Mr. Smolenski
JAGJAG(1995)as Adm. Caleb Stanton, Ret.

Self

The 56th Annual Tony AwardsThe 56th Annual Tony Awards(2002)as Self - Nominee
The 51st Annual Tony AwardsThe 51st Annual Tony Awards(1997)as Self - Nominee
DirectionsDirections(1960)as Self - Narrator
Look Up and LiveLook Up and Live(1954)as Self
5th Annual Celebrity Parade for Cerebral Palsy(1955)as Self

Archive Footage

TCM Remembers 2021TCM Remembers 2021(2021)as Self, actor
Film Önü / ArkasiFilm Önü / Arkasi(2019)as Self

Known for

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Photos 21

Al Pacino and Biff McGuire in Serpico (1973)Al Pacino and Biff McGuire in Serpico (1973)Al Pacino and Biff McGuire in Serpico (1973)Al Pacino and Biff McGuire in Serpico (1973)Biff McGuireAl Pacino and Biff McGuire in Serpico (1973)

Credit Score: Biff McGuire

987654
194919501951195219531954195519561957195819591960196119621963196419651966196719681969197019711972197319741975197619771978
Foley
Fri Jan 01 1971 – Thu Nov 14 1974
#NameScoreYearWinNomKnownWinsNomsVotes
1Great Performances40.0019718.0291051079
2The United States Steel Hour20.0019538.0316220
3Serpico6.5019737.702146725
4The Ford Theatre Hour6.5019487.60076
5The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter5.0019687.6025113
6The Thomas Crown Affair5.0019686.91231864
7The Werewolf of Washington2.0019774.1001379
8The Phenix City Story1.5019557.2003618
9Midway1.0019766.80023161