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Lettris
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1.United States actor (1914-1998)
actor; histrion; player; thespian; role player; trouper; comedian[ClasseHyper.]
mocker; scoffer[Classe]
(film-making; movie-making; filming; cinematography; motion-picture photography)[termes liés]
theatre[Domaine]
Position[Domaine]
performer, performing artist[Hyper.]
act, play, portray, represent - act, play, playact, roleplay - dramatic, thespian[Dérivé]
E. G. Marshall (n.)
| E. G. Marshall | |
|---|---|
![]() Portrait, circa late 1940s |
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| Born | Everett Eugene Grunz June 18, 1914 Owatonna, Minnesota United States |
| Died | August 24, 1998 (aged 84) Bedford, New York United States |
| Occupation | Actor |
| Years active | 1945–1998 |
| Spouse | Judith Coy (?-1998) Emy de Haze Winkelman Helen Wolf (1939-1953) |
E. G. Marshall (June 18, 1914 – August 24, 1998) was an American actor, best known for his television roles as the lawyer Lawrence Preston on The Defenders in the 1960s and as neurosurgeon David Craig on The Bold Ones: The New Doctors in the 1970s. Among his film roles he is perhaps best known as the unflappable "Juror #4" in Sidney Lumet's courtroom drama, 12 Angry Men (1957).[1][2][3]
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Marshall was born Everett Eugene Grunz in Owatonna, Minnesota, the son of Hazel Irene (née Cobb; 1892–1975) and Charles G. Grunz (1882–1959). He attended both Carleton College and the University of Minnesota.[4] During his life, he chose not to reveal what "E. G." stood for, telling most people it stood for "Everybody's Guess".[5]
Although most familiar for his later television and movie roles, E. G. Marshall also had a distinguished Broadway career, having appeared in original New York productions of The Skin of Our Teeth and The Iceman Cometh and having had lead roles in The Crucible and Waiting for Godot.[6] In 1972, he returned to the live stage to play the title role in Macbeth in Richmond, Virginia, under the direction of Keith Fowler [7] Marshall was the original host of the popular nightly radio drama, The CBS Radio Mystery Theater.[8]
Marshall was married three times. He had seven children in all, including Jed, Sarah, Jill, Degen, and Sam. He died of lung cancer in Bedford, New York, on August 24, 1998. His grave is in the Middle Patent Rural Cemetery, located in the hamlet of Banksville, a part of the town of North Castle, New York.
As a member of the Committee for National Health Insurance, E. G. Marshall was a long-time advocate for government-provided health care in the United States.[9] During the 1968 US presidential campaign, he filmed and narrated a political ad endorsing Democratic candidate Hubert Humphrey.[10]
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