Although he geared himself up for major film stardom throughout the
1950s, it took a leading role on a 1960s TV series opposite a lion and
chimpanzee to make Marshall Thompson a genuine household name.
Born on November 27, 1925, and named James Marshall Thompson after an ancestor,
a famed Supreme Court justice, he moved at age 5 with his parents from
his Peoria, Illinois, hometown to the Los Angeles area. There his
father set up a successful Westwood practice in dentistry that
continued for over three decades. His mother once took to the stage as
a concert singer and musician. Marshall was their only child.
He caught the acting bug while in high school when he appeared in a
number of school productions and was spotted by a local talent agent.
This did not pan out, but he also acted upon his early skills as a
writer. The Westwood Village Players produced the young high school
student's ambitious three-act play "Faith," the story of two young
aviators in a Nazi prison. He enrolled at Occidental College, where he
switched from pre-med to drama. He was also a member of the college's
cross-country team.
The athletic, lanky-framed, good-looking collegiate
was rediscovered while performing as one of the Occidental Players in
1944. This time, he made good and was signed to a Universal contract.
He began in minor war-era films with
Reckless Age (1944) starring
Gloria Jean and was quickly brought
over to MGM on the strength of this film.
With most big stars off to war, Marshall was given the chance to work
quite steadily in perfunctory nice-guy assignments such as
Blonde Fever (1944),
The Clock (1945),
They Were Expendable (1945)
and
Bad Bascomb (1946) opposite
Frances Rafferty. His first association
with animals came with the lead in the horse-friendly yarn
Gallant Bess (1946), MGM's first
film produced in CineColor.
The handsome Marshall went on to provide
yeoman work in the war dramas
Homecoming (1948),
Command Decision (1948) and
Battleground (1949), becoming an
instant idol to film fans. A genial player on screen, he
managed to show potential outside his benign typecast in
Dial 1119 (1950) as a cold-hearted,
baby-faced killer, and finished his MGM contract out with
The Tall Target (1951) playing a
potential assassin of Abraham Lincoln.
Freelancing for the next several years after losing his contract to MGM owing to a change of management,
Marshall assisted a few serious-minded dramas but a noticeable pall soon took
over his career with "B" thrillers taking up the bulk of his time. He
achieved a bit of cult infamy with the films
Cult of the Cobra (1955)
Fiend Without a Face (1958),
It! The Terror from Beyond Space (1958)
and
First Man Into Space (1959).
A couple of notable exceptions were his strong roles in the
Audie Murphy starter
To Hell and Back (1955) and
East of Kilimanjaro (1957), in which he performed his own dangerous stunts
and developed a lifelong passion for Africa and wildlife.
It was this aforementioned wildlife association, combined with TV, that
made the biggest dramatic impact on his career. Throughout the 1950s
Marshall appeared faithfully in small-screen presentations, but in 1966
he was cast as a series lead, that of game warden Dr. Marsh Tracy in
the African adventure
Daktari (1966)
developed by
Ivan Tors and filmed at Africa,
U.S.A., a wild-animal theme park near Los Angeles. Although
overshadowed sometimes by those inveterate scene-stealers Clarence the
Cross-eyed Lion and Judy the Chimpanzee, Marshall provided a strong,
honest, authoritative yet friendly persona and earned the most
attention yet in his nearly two-decade-long career. He was also
involved in nearly every aspect of the show and was afforded the
opportunity to direct a few episodes.
The series lasted four seasons, and following his departure, Marshall continued in the same animal vein. His
association with Tors continued by his hosting of the live action daytime series
Jambo (1969), starring in the feature
film
Clarence, the Cross-Eyed Lion (1965)
(which he co-wrote), and directing some episodes of
Flipper (1964).
Lying low after his final feature film,
Around the World Under the Sea (1966),
which starred assorted TV adventure alumni including
Flipper (1964) star
Brian Kelly and
Sea Hunt (1958) lead
Lloyd Bridges, he spent much of
his later time providing footage for wildlife documentaries.
An avid photographer, horseman, and guitarist, among many other
talents, he died at age 66 in 1992 of congestive heart failure and was
survived by his wife
Barbara Long,
daughter Janet, and grandson Jackson.