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Cec Linder
View on WikipediaCecil Yekuthial Linder (March 10, 1921 – April 10, 1992) was a Polish-born Canadian film and television actor. He was Jewish and managed to escape Poland before the Holocaust. In the 1950s and 1960s, he worked extensively in the United Kingdom, often playing Canadian and American characters in various films and television programmes.
Key Information
In television, he is best remembered for playing Dr. Matthew Roney in the BBC serial Quatermass and the Pit (1958–59). In film, he is best remembered for his role as James Bond's friend, CIA agent Felix Leiter, in Goldfinger (1964). Another well-known film in which he appeared was Lolita (1962), as Doctor Keegee.
Career
[edit]Linder was raised in Timmins, Ontario, where his father was a rabbi to the Jewish community. During the early years of his professional career, Linder worked as an announcer at CKGB in Timmins.[1]
Linder accumulated more than 225 credits in film and television productions in a long performing career. He had an extensive television career on both sides of the Atlantic. In the UK, probably his most prominent role was as the palaeontologist Roney in the original BBC version of Quatermass and the Pit (1958–59). In the United States, he was a regular in the CBS soap operas The Secret Storm and The Edge of Night and in the 1980s appeared in several of the Perry Mason revival TV films as District Attorney Jack Welles. He was also a regular on the popular 1980s Canadian crime series Seeing Things, playing Crown Attorney Spenser.
Linder had guest roles in episodes of a variety of other popular British, American and Canadian television programmes, including: The Forest Rangers, Doomwatch, The Littlest Hobo, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (TV series), Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Ironside, The Saint, Danger Bay, The New Avengers, The Secret Storm (as Peter Ames), and The Edge of Night as Senator Ben Travis #2.
Linder appeared as Inspector Cramer in the CBC 1982 radio dramatizations of Nero Wolfe short stories. His last work was as Syd Grady in two episodes of the television series Sweating Bullets (1991). He died the following year at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto of complications from emphysema.[2]
Selected filmography
[edit]- Flaming Frontier (1958) as Capt. Dan Carver
- Subway in the Sky (1959) as Carson
- Jet Storm (1959) as Colonel Coe
- SOS Pacific (1959) as Willy
- Too Young to Love (1959) as Mr. Bill
- Crack in the Mirror (1960) as Murzeau
- Lolita (1962) as Dr. Keegee
- Goldfinger (1964) as Felix Leiter
- The Verdict (Edgar Wallace Mysteries) (1964) as Joe Armstrong
- Tecnica di un omicidio (1966) as Gastel
- Quentin Durgens, M.P. (1966) as Sherwin
- Do Not Fold, Staple, Spindle or Mutilate (1967)
- Explosion (1969) as Mr. Evans
- Innocent Bystanders (1972) as Mankowitz
- The Sloane Affair (1973) as Roy Maxwell
- Super Bitch (1973) as American Ambassador
- A Touch of Class (1973) as Wendell Thompson
- To Kill the King (1974) as Stephen Van Birchard
- Old God Knows (1974) as Mr. Klein
- Why Rock the Boat? (1974) as Carmichael
- Sunday in the Country (1974) as Ackerman
- Second Wind (1976) as Graham
- Point of No Return (1976) as Professor Johns
- The Clown Murders (1976) as The Developer
- Age of Innocence (1977) as Dr. Hogarth
- Deadly Harvest (1977) as Henry the Chairman
- Three Dangerous Ladies (1977) as Dr. Carstairs (segment: "The Mannikin")
- The Case of Barbara Pasons (1978) as Loren Bowley
- Drága kisfiam (1978) as Mr. George
- Tomorrow Never Comes (1978) as Milton
- High-Ballin' (1978) as Policeman
- I Miss You, Hugs and Kisses (1978) as Chief Parker
- Something's Rotten (1979) as Alexis Alexander
- City on Fire (1979) as Councilman Paley
- Lost and Found (1979) as Mr. Sanders
- An American Christmas Carol (1979) as Auctioneer
- Virus (1980) as Dr. Latour
- Atlantic City (1980) as President of Hospital
- Deadly Eyes (1982) as Dr. Louis Spenser
- Heavenly Bodies (1985) as Walter Matheson
- Honeymoon (1985) as Barnes
References
[edit]- ^ Bachmann, Karen (10 January 2020). "Tales from the Porcupine told first-hand". Timmins Daily Press. Retrieved 29 July 2021.
- ^ Morris, Gerry (23 April 1992). "Cec Linder died". Canadian Jewish News. Retrieved 29 July 2021.
External links
[edit]- Cec Linder at IMDb
- Cec Linder at the Internet Broadway Database
| Preceded by Jack Lord |
Felix Leiter actor 1964 |
Succeeded by Rik Van Nutter |
Cec Linder
View on GrokipediaEarly life
Birth and heritage
Cecil Yekuthial Linder was born on March 10, 1921, in Radziechów, Poland (now Radekhiv, Ukraine), a town in the Galicia region then under Polish control.[8][9] He was born into an observant Jewish family, with his father, Wolfe Linder, serving as a rabbi.[9][10] As a Jewish family in interwar Poland, the Linders faced the escalating antisemitism that characterized the period, including pogroms and discriminatory policies that prompted many Eastern European Jews to emigrate before the outbreak of World War II and the Holocaust; the family immigrated to Canada in the early 1920s, with Wolfe Linder initially settling in Saskatchewan before moving to Timmins in the mid-1920s, avoiding the Nazi occupation that devastated the region's Jewish population.[1][3][10]Immigration and upbringing
Linder was born Cecil Yekuthial Linder on March 10, 1921, in Radziechów, then part of Galicia in Poland, to Jewish parents facing increasing antisemitism in Eastern Europe. His family immigrated to Canada in the early 1920s to escape persecution, arriving amid rising threats to Jewish communities in Poland during the interwar period, with the father initially in Saskatchewan before the family settled in Timmins in the mid-1920s.[2][3][1][10] The Linder family settled in Timmins, a remote mining town in northeastern Ontario, where Cec grew up as a first-generation Canadian in a modest immigrant household. Timmins, with its harsh winters and resource-based economy, offered a stark contrast to their Polish origins, but the community provided opportunities for integration through local institutions and labor. As part of this adaptation, the family contributed to building a new life, emphasizing education and cultural preservation amid the challenges of rural isolation.[1][3] Linder's father, Wolfe Linder, played a central role in the local Jewish community, serving as a rabbi and helping to establish religious and social support networks for the small group of Eastern European Jewish immigrants in Timmins. This involvement fostered a sense of continuity with their heritage while navigating Canadian assimilation, including participation in synagogue activities and community events that reinforced family bonds.[3][1][10] The small-town Ontario environment of Timmins, characterized by its multicultural immigrant fabric and tight-knit social structure, profoundly shaped Linder's early worldview and personal development. Growing up amid miners, loggers, and fellow newcomers, he experienced a formative blend of resilience and opportunity that influenced his curiosity about storytelling and human connections, laying the groundwork for his later pursuits.[1]Education and early career
Training at Lorne Greene Academy
After completing high school in Timmins, Ontario, Cec Linder enrolled at the Lorne Greene Academy of Radio Arts in Toronto during the late 1940s to formalize his interest in performing arts and prepare for a career in media.[11] He studied alongside other future notables in Canadian broadcasting and acting, including Leslie Nielsen, Alfie Scopp, and Fred Davis.[11] The academy, established by prominent Canadian actor and radio personality Lorne Greene shortly after World War II in 1945, specialized in radio production and performance training tailored to the burgeoning broadcasting industry. Linder acquired key skills in voice acting, radio announcing techniques, and dramatic presentation, which equipped him to transition from local amateur pursuits to professional opportunities in radio and beyond. This education marked a pivotal step in cultivating his versatile abilities as a performer.Radio broadcasting beginnings
Following his training at the Lorne Greene Academy of Radio Arts, Cec Linder secured his first professional position as an announcer at CKGB radio station in Timmins, Ontario.[1] In the mid-1950s, Linder handled local broadcasts and announcements, delivering news, weather updates, and community programming to audiences in northern Ontario. This role honed his on-air presence, building confidence in his distinctive voice and Polish-inflected English accent, which became signature elements of his delivery.[1] The experience at CKGB proved pivotal, as Linder's growing reputation for articulate narration opened doors to acting opportunities, marking his transition to broader media around 1955—the official start of his entertainment career.[1]Film career
Early film roles
Cec Linder made his film debut in the Western Flaming Frontier (1958) as Capt. Dan Carver. He followed with the British thriller Subway in the Sky (1959), directed by Muriel Box, where he portrayed the supporting character Carson, a military officer entangled in a web of intrigue involving drug smuggling and false accusations.[12] The film, set in post-war Berlin, marked Linder's transition from radio and stage work to cinema, showcasing his ability to handle tense, ensemble-driven narratives typical of late-1950s British productions.[13] In the same prolific year, Linder appeared in multiple supporting roles across several UK-based films, often embodying authoritative or professional figures. Notable among these was Jet Storm (1959), a disaster suspense picture directed by Cy Endfield, in which he played Colonel Coe, a passenger aboard a hijacked airliner facing imminent catastrophe.[14] He also featured as Willy, the disgruntled navigator, in SOS Pacific (1959), a survival drama directed by Guy Green about plane crash survivors on a volcanic island threatened by an impending eruption.[15] Additionally, in Too Young to Love (1959), a social-issue film addressing juvenile delinquency and statutory rape, Linder took on the role of Mr. Brill, a courtroom-associated character in this Anglo-American co-production.[16] Linder's early film work continued into 1960 with Crack in the Mirror, a Franco-American psychological drama directed by Richard Fleischer, where he played Murzeau, a minor legal figure in a story of murder and identity swap involving Orson Welles and Bradford Dillman.[17] These roles, primarily in British and international productions, highlighted Linder's versatility in supporting capacities, frequently casting him as professionals or officials amid high-stakes scenarios. As a Canadian actor based in the UK during this period, Linder navigated opportunities in the European film scene, often portraying American or authoritative personas to suit the demands of transatlantic collaborations.[13] Over the late 1950s to early 1960s, he contributed to approximately a dozen such films, building a foundation through consistent, character-driven appearances before gaining wider recognition.[18]Breakthrough performances
Linder's breakthrough in cinema arrived with his supporting role as Dr. Keegee, the family physician, in Stanley Kubrick's 1962 adaptation of Vladimir Nabokov's Lolita. In this black-and-white drama exploring themes of obsession and forbidden desire, Linder's character conducts a pivotal medical examination of the titular character, Dolores Haze, adding a layer of clinical detachment to the film's tense psychological narrative. The role, though brief, exposed Linder to a high-profile production starring James Mason and Shelley Winters, marking his entry into major international filmmaking.[19] Building on this momentum, Linder achieved wider recognition for portraying Felix Leiter, the dependable CIA operative and ally to James Bond, in the 1964 spy thriller Goldfinger, the third film in the Eon Productions series. Directed by Guy Hamilton and starring Sean Connery as Bond, the movie featured Linder in several key sequences, including a high-stakes gin rummy game at a Miami hotel and the climactic assault on Auric Goldfinger's Kentucky stud farm. His interpretation of Leiter emphasized loyalty and wry competence, contributing to the film's box-office success and cultural impact as a defining entry in the spy genre.[6] Collectively, these late-1950s and 1960s performances propelled Linder from supporting parts in lesser-known productions to established character work in high-impact films, positioning him as a reliable presence in sci-fi and espionage narratives.[2]Later film appearances
In the 1970s and 1980s, Cec Linder maintained a steady presence in feature films, accumulating approximately 15 supporting roles across Canadian, American, and international productions, often cast as authoritative professionals such as doctors, executives, and officials.[2] These appearances highlighted his versatility in character parts, contributing to both mainstream dramas and genre films without returning to the prominence of his 1960s breakthrough roles.[13] Linder's early work in this era included an uncredited role as a white-haired executive in Michelangelo Antonioni's experimental drama Zabriskie Point (1970), a U.S.-Italian co-production exploring countercultural themes.[20] He followed this with the part of Wendell Thompson, a business associate, in the British romantic comedy A Touch of Class (1973), directed by Melvin Frank and starring Glenda Jackson and George Segal.[21] By the late 1970s and into the 1980s, Linder frequently appeared in Canadian-led projects, embodying institutional figures amid rising tensions or crises. In Virus (1980), a Japanese-international disaster epic directed by Kinji Fukasaku, he portrayed Dr. Latour, a scientist navigating a global pandemic.[22] That same year, in Louis Malle's Atlantic City, a Canada-France co-production, Linder played the President of the Hospital, a minor but pivotal authority in the film's portrait of urban decay and ambition.[23] His role as Dr. Louis Spenser in the Canadian horror thriller Deadly Eyes (1982), directed by Robert Clouse, cast him as a biologist confronting oversized, contaminated rats terrorizing Toronto.[24] Linder's film output continued through the mid-1980s with roles like Walter Matheson, a promoter, in the sports comedy Heavenly Bodies (1984), a Canadian production emphasizing fitness culture. His final feature film appearance came around 1985, marking a period of sustained but increasingly selective work in supporting capacities as opportunities shifted toward television.[2]Television career
Soap opera and series work
Linder established a presence in American daytime soap operas during the 1960s and 1970s, where he took on recurring dramatic roles that showcased his authoritative screen presence. In The Secret Storm, a CBS soap opera, he portrayed Peter Ames, a key character involved in the show's family-centric storylines, from 1962 to 1964 across multiple episodes.[25] His performance contributed to the series' exploration of interpersonal conflicts and secrets in a middle-class American setting. Later, in 1974, Linder appeared as Senator Benjamin "Ben" Travis in The Edge of Night, another CBS soap, bringing gravitas to political intrigue subplots within the long-running narrative of crime and romance in the fictional town of Monticello.[26] Linder also had notable appearances in Canadian series Wojeck (1966–1968), playing multiple characters across four episodes, including Det. Luke Butler and Dr. Grainger.[27] Returning to Canadian television in the 1980s, Linder secured a regular role in the crime comedy-drama series Seeing Things, which aired on CBC from 1981 to 1987. He played Crown Attorney Robert T. Spenser, the conservative superior to the protagonist Louis Del Grande's character, appearing in 13 episodes and providing a foil to the more unorthodox investigative style of the lead.[28] This role highlighted Linder's versatility in blending humor with procedural elements, marking a sustained commitment to homegrown Canadian programming during a period of increasing national content production. He later guest-starred in Street Legal (1987–1994) as Judge Keil and Gerald Rose in three episodes.[29] Linder also featured prominently in the revival of Perry Mason as television movies produced by CBS in the 1980s and early 1990s, portraying District Attorney Jack Welles, a recurring adversarial figure to Raymond Burr's defense attorney. His debut in this capacity came in Perry Mason Returns (1985), where Welles represented the prosecution in a high-stakes murder case, and he reprised the role in several subsequent installments until his death in 1992, contributing to the franchise's enduring appeal through tense courtroom dynamics.[30] Over his career, Linder accumulated 118 television credits, with these soap opera and series engagements offering consistent opportunities to delve into serialized dramatic storytelling.[26]Guest starring roles
Throughout his career, Cec Linder amassed dozens of guest starring roles in television anthology series, procedurals, and crime/mystery programs, spanning from 1955 to 1992, where he typically portrayed professionals like doctors, professors, or authority figures, as well as occasional suspects in tense narratives. These transient appearances showcased his versatility in supporting parts that added depth to episodic stories, often in British and North American productions focused on intrigue and investigation.[2] One of his notable early guest spots was in the British adventure series The Saint, where he played the wealthy Waldo Oddington in the 1965 episode "The Persistent Parasites," involving a wedding disrupted by parasitic opportunists.[31] In the 1960s, Linder appeared in anthology formats tied to Alfred Hitchcock, including a role in the 1964 episode of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour and later in the 1985 revival of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, as an older doctor in the 1987 episode "When This Man Dies," centered on mysterious cash gifts tied to a death, and as Dr. Hoffman in the 1988 episode "Animal Lovers," centered on a veterinarian's illicit pet trade.[32][33] Linder's work extended into American procedurals during the late 1960s and 1970s, such as his portrayal of Prof. Carl Anderson, a chess-playing psychologist and art expert, in the 1968 Ironside episode "The Challenge," which explores intellectual rivalry and murder.[34] He also featured in science fiction-tinged mysteries like Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea as Van Druten in a 1966 episode, and in the horror anthology Thriller as Edgar Harrow in the 1975 episode "Nurse Will Make It Better."[35][36] Additional examples from this period include guest roles in The Four Just Men (1959), a British adventure series about vigilante justice, and Canadian crime shows like R.C.M.P. and Encounter.[37][1] These roles continued into the 1980s and early 1990s, with appearances in series such as The Beachcombers (1974) and Night Heat (1987), reinforcing his reputation for reliable character work in episodic television. Linder's final guest appearance was as the recurring suspect Syd Grady across two episodes of the Canadian crime drama Sweating Bullets (also known as Tropical Heat) in 1991.[38][39]Death and legacy
Final years and death
In his later years, Cec Linder resided in Toronto, Ontario, where he had long been based after establishing his career in Canadian media.[1] Linder had been battling emphysema.[1] His final on-screen appearance was as Gerald Rose in an episode of the television series Street Legal in 1992.[29] Linder passed away on April 10, 1992, at the age of 71, from complications arising from pulmonary emphysema.[40][41] He died at his home in Toronto, and no public details regarding a funeral service were reported.[1] He was buried at Beth Tzedec Memorial Park in Toronto.[1]Recognition and influence
Cec Linder's extensive career spanned nearly four decades, accumulating over 120 credits in film and television from 1955 to 1992, showcasing his reliability as a supporting player in both British and American productions.[26] His work ranged from science fiction thrillers like Quatermass and the Pit (1958) to dramatic adaptations such as Lolita (1962), demonstrating a breadth that solidified his reputation in the industry. Linder's primary legacy stems from his portrayal of CIA agent Felix Leiter in Goldfinger (1964), a role that marked the second iteration of the character in the James Bond franchise and contributed to ongoing discussions about the frequent recasting of Leiter across films.[42] This performance, delivered with a mix of humor and professionalism alongside Sean Connery, helped establish Leiter as a recurring ally and influenced the franchise's approach to ensemble casting, where actors were often selected for single appearances to maintain narrative flexibility.[43] Posthumously, Linder receives occasional mentions in James Bond retrospectives for his understated yet effective contribution to one of the series' most iconic entries, often praised for capturing the character's supportive dynamic without overshadowing Bond.[44] While he garnered no major awards during his lifetime, his versatility as a character actor—spanning genres from espionage to comedy—continues to earn respect among film historians and enthusiasts.[45]References
- https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q465582
