Recent from talks
Nothing was collected or created yet.
George Robotham
View on WikipediaThis article needs additional citations for verification. (June 2019) |
George Robotham (January 10, 1921 – February 1, 2007) was an American stuntman and actor.[1]
Key Information
Robotham was born in 1921 and played American football at UCLA, where he was awarded a degree in business administration. He started his acting career as a stuntman and actor in Batman.
Following his role in Batman, he usually appeared as an uncredited role in many movies where he was also doing stunts. He was probably best known as the human sacrifice in The Prodigal. He also made appearances in historical films such as Joan of Arc, The Robe, Disney's The Great Locomotive Chase, The Ten Commandments and Spartacus.
Robotham was reported dead on February 1, 2007, from complications of Alzheimer's disease. He was married to German actress Karin Dor. He died in Bonn, Germany, at the age of 86.
Partial filmography
[edit]- 1943 Batman (Serial) as Henchman (uncredited)
- 1943 Destination Tokyo as Crewman (uncredited)
- 1948 Joan of Arc as English Knight (uncredited)
- 1949 Bride of Vengeance as Assassin (uncredited)
- 1949 Batman and Robin (Serial) as Car 4 Henchman-Driver [Chs. 2-6, 11-12] (uncredited)
- 1950 Cody of the Pony Express (Serial) as Burt (uncredited)
- 1950 Atom Man vs. Superman (Serial) as Earl [Chs. 10-12]
- 1950 Chain Gang as Guard Reagan (uncredited)
- 1950 Last of the Buccaneers as Pirate (uncredited)
- 1951 Mysterious Island (Serial) as Mercurian
- 1951 Captain Video: Master of the Stratosphere (Serial) as Space Platform Operator-Observer [Chs. 4-5] (uncredited)
- 1952 Invitation as Tennis Player (uncredited)
- 1953 Savage Mutiny as Johnson (uncredited)
- 1953 The Robe as Slave With Demetrius At Palm Procession (uncredited)
- 1954 Gunfighters of the Northwest as Constable Evans (uncredited)
- 1954 Seven Brides for Seven Brothers as Town Suitor (uncredited)
- 1955 Many Rivers to Cross as Indian (uncredited)
- 1955 The Prodigal as Human Sacrifice (uncredited)
- 1956 The Great Locomotive Chase as William Knight, Union Civilian Train Engineer / Fireman
- 1956 The Ten Commandments as Attendant (uncredited)
- 1957 The Garment Jungle as Truck Driver (uncredited)
- 1957 The Way to the Gold as Policeman (uncredited)
- 1960 Spartacus as Pirate (uncredited)
- 1962 Mermaids of Tiburon as Dr. Samuel Jamison
- 1968 5 Card Stud as Stoney Burough, Evers' Ranch Hand (uncredited)
- 1968 The Split as Physical Instructor (uncredited)
- 1973 The Don Is Dead as Hood (uncredited)
- 1978 Invisible Strangler as Cemetery Guard
- 1979 The Prisoner of Zenda as (uncredited)
- 1985 The Goonies as Prison Guard
- 1988 Alien Nation as Boat Captain
- 1988 Split Decisions as Thug #2 (final film role)
References
[edit]External links
[edit]George Robotham
View on GrokipediaEarly life and education
Childhood and family
George Norman Robotham was born on January 10, 1921, in Sacramento, Sacramento County, California, USA.[3][6] He was the only documented child of Norman Harold Robotham and Dorothy Mary Jones (1892–1969), who raised him in Sacramento during the 1920s and 1930s.[1][6] Little is known about his parents' occupations or the family's socioeconomic status, but Sacramento's working-class environment during the Great Depression likely influenced his early years. Robotham later transitioned to higher education at the University of California, Los Angeles.University and athletics
Robotham enrolled at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in the early 1940s, where he pursued studies in Business Administration and earned his degree during that period.[7] As a student-athlete, Robotham joined the UCLA Bruins football team, playing primarily as an end from 1942 to 1945, with continued involvement into 1946.[8][9] His participation came during a transitional era for the program under coaches Babe Horrell and Bert LaBrucherie, marked by wartime challenges that limited rosters and schedules. During Robotham's tenure, the Bruins achieved notable success in 1942, compiling a 7–4 overall record and a 6–1 mark in the Pacific Coast Conference (PCC), securing the conference championship and earning a berth in the 1943 Rose Bowl, where they fell 9–0 to Georgia. The 1946 season, in which Robotham also featured, saw the team post a 10–1 record (7–0 PCC), again claiming the conference title and advancing to the 1947 Rose Bowl, though they lost 45–14 to Illinois. Robotham was selected by the Philadelphia Eagles in the seventh round (57th overall) of the 1946 NFL Draft as an end, though he did not play professionally. These experiences on the gridiron, including rigorous training and competitive play, developed Robotham's exceptional physical conditioning and agility, skills that would later underpin his demanding career in stunts.[10] Robotham's upbringing in Sacramento, California, laid an early foundation for his athletic interests, which flourished through his disciplined engagement in UCLA's campus sports culture.[7] Beyond football, his university years emphasized versatility, as he balanced academics with athletic commitments, fostering the resilience evident in his later professional pursuits.Professional career
Entry into film
Robotham entered the film industry in 1943, shortly after completing his studies at UCLA, where he had played football and earned a degree in business administration.[1] His athletic background provided a strong physical foundation that aligned with the demands of early stunt and acting opportunities in Hollywood, particularly as World War II created a surge in demand for action-oriented war films and serials requiring robust performers.[1] His debut came with an uncredited role as a henchman in the 15-chapter Columbia serial Batman, directed by Lambert Hillyer, in which he also contributed stunt work amid the production's high-energy fight sequences.[11] This marked the beginning of his on-screen presence, blending minor acting parts with physical performance in a wartime propaganda piece featuring Lewis Wilson as Batman and Douglas Croft as Robin. Later that year, Robotham appeared uncredited as a crewman in the Warner Bros. submarine thriller Destination Tokyo, directed by Delmer Daves and starring Cary Grant, further solidifying his shift from academic pursuits to the entertainment field during a period of national mobilization for film productions supporting the war effort.[12] These early roles highlighted his ability to capitalize on his football-honed skills in a burgeoning career that prioritized physicality over formal training.[1]Stunt work
George Robotham's stunt career spanned from 1943 to 1988, encompassing over 100 credits across film and television, where he performed and coordinated high-risk action sequences.[1][13] His work often involved uncredited performances that doubled for lead actors in demanding physical feats, contributing to the visual authenticity of epic productions during Hollywood's Golden Age and beyond.[7] Robotham specialized in underwater stunts, leveraging his athletic background to execute sequences requiring precise breath-holding and mobility in aquatic environments. In 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954), he performed stunts amid the film's elaborate submarine and sea creature effects, enhancing the realism of Jules Verne's fantastical voyage. Similarly, in Diamonds Are Forever (1971), his underwater work supported the James Bond thriller's iconic pool and ocean chases, including dives and fights that demanded endurance against water resistance and low visibility.[7] His portfolio included physically grueling stunts in landmark epics, such as the chariot races and mass battles in The Ten Commandments (1956), where he navigated high-speed collisions and falls on rocky terrain. In Spartacus (1960), Robotham executed gladiator combat sequences, involving choreographed sword fights and arena tumbles that simulated brutal hand-to-hand warfare.[14] For The Great Race (1965), he participated in elaborate car crash and pursuit stunts, enduring impacts from vehicles at speeds up to 60 mph to capture the film's comedic yet perilous slapstick action. Later, in The Towering Inferno (1974), his stunts featured controlled falls from heights and fire proximity work, heightening the disaster film's tension through realistic peril without modern safety rigs. As stunt supervisor on Hornet's Nest (1970), he oversaw combat and explosion sequences in the war drama, ensuring coordinated execution amid pyrotechnics and guerrilla warfare simulations.[15][16]Acting roles
George Robotham's acting career was marked by a series of predominantly uncredited appearances in biblical and historical epics during the mid-20th century, where his imposing physical presence often contributed to crowd scenes or minor antagonistic roles. In Joan of Arc (1948), he portrayed an English Knight, adding to the film's depiction of medieval warfare. Similarly, in The Robe (1953), Robotham appeared as a soldier, embodying the era's Roman military archetype in this early CinemaScope production. His role as a pirate in Spartacus (1960) further exemplified his utility in large-scale historical dramas, where he participated in the film's iconic gladiatorial and naval sequences without on-screen credit. Among his credited acting roles, Robotham gained particular recognition for the dramatic "human sacrifice" sequence in The Prodigal (1955), where he played the victim in a visually striking biblical epic starring Lana Turner. Later in his career, he took on more defined supporting parts, such as the prison guard in The Goonies (1985), a family adventure film that highlighted his continued involvement in action-oriented narratives. In Split Decisions (1988), Robotham appeared as the 2nd Thug, a brief but physically demanding role in this boxing drama featuring Gene Hackman. These credited performances often overlapped with his stunt background, allowing him to leverage his athleticism on screen. Robotham's television appearances underscored his versatility as a physical presence actor in episodic formats, frequently cast in roles requiring strength or intimidation. He featured in an episode of The Green Hornet (1966), contributing to the series' crime-fighting action scenes. Likewise, in Wonder Woman (1975), Robotham appeared in an installment that showcased his ability to embody tough adversaries in the superhero genre. These TV roles, though limited, complemented his film work by providing consistent outlets for his screen persona throughout the 1960s and 1970s.[17]Directing
George Robotham's directorial debut and only feature-length film as director was Dark Echoes (1977), a low-budget horror film that he also wrote. The story centers on the vengeful zombie ghost of a ship captain haunting an Austrian lake, seeking retribution against those responsible for a shipwreck he was falsely blamed for, blending elements of folklore, supernatural revenge, and investigation. Starring Joel Fabiani as a psychic detective and Karin Dor as a local woman entangled in the mystery, the film explores themes of injustice and escape from wrongful accusation through its eerie lakeside hauntings.[18] Produced as an Austrian-Yugoslavian co-production and filmed on location at scenic lakes in Austria and Yugoslavia, Dark Echoes drew on Robotham's extensive stunt background to craft authentic underwater sequences depicting the sunken vessel and ghostly emergences from the depths. His decades of experience coordinating complex aquatic and combat stunts for major Hollywood productions informed the film's action-oriented supernatural elements, providing a grounded realism to the otherwise fantastical narrative. Robotham handled both writing and directing duties, marking a creative pivot from his primary career in stunts and acting.[18][17] Upon release, Dark Echoes garnered limited attention due to its obscure distribution but achieved a niche cult following among European horror fans for its atmospheric slow-burn tension and unique ghost story rooted in local legend. It holds an average rating of 4.5 out of 10 on IMDb based on 138 user ratings (as of November 2025), with commentators noting its deliberate pacing that builds unease through subtle visuals rather than overt scares, and praising the authenticity of its rural settings enhanced by Robotham's practical filmmaking approach. Though not a commercial success, the film's legacy lies in representing Robotham's brief foray into helm, leveraging his industry expertise for a personal project that highlighted his versatility beyond physical performance.[18]Personal life and death
Marriage to Karin Dor
George Robotham married the German actress Karin Dor in 1988.[19]The marriage lasted nearly two decades, until Robotham's death in 2007.[5]
Dor, who had gained international recognition for her role as the SPECTRE assassin Helga Brandt in the James Bond film You Only Live Twice (1967) and as the Cuban revolutionary Juanita de Cordoba in Alfred Hitchcock's Topaz (1969), brought her established career in European and Hollywood cinema to the union.[19][20]
The couple had no children together, though Dor was mother to actor Andreas Reinl from her first marriage to director Harald Reinl.[19]
Their partnership facilitated a transatlantic lifestyle, with the pair maintaining homes in Los Angeles and Munich, which supported Dor's ongoing work in German theater and film while allowing Robotham to wind down his stunt career.[5]
In his later years, Robotham spent more time in Germany alongside Dor.[5]

