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William Smithers
William Smithers
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William Smithers (born July 10, 1927) is an American actor, perhaps best known for his recurring role as Jeremy Wendell in the television series Dallas. He appeared in the series in 1981 and from 1984 to 1989.

Key Information

Early life and career

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Smithers was born on July 10, 1927, in Richmond, Virginia, the son of systems engineer Marion Wilkinson Smithers and Marion Albany Smithers (née Thompson).[2]

In 1951, he made his Broadway debut as Tybalt in the Dwight Deere Wiman production of Romeo and Juliet, starring Olivia de Havilland; for this performance he received a Theater World Award.[3][4] In 1952, he was accepted as a life member of The Actors Studio.[5] In 1957, he received an Obie Award for his portrayal of Treplev in Anton Chekhov's The Seagull.[6]

Stage

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His other Broadway plays included Jean Anouilh's Legend of Lovers, Calder Willingham's End as a Man, (begun as a project at the Actors Studio), Carson McCullers's The Square Root of Wonderful and Terence Rattigan's Man and Boy (performed in London and New York).

Off-Broadway, he played leading roles in Frank Gilroy's Who'll Save the Plowboy? (Obie Award, Best Drama), Willingham's End as a Man (before the production went to Broadway), Sean O'Casey's Shadow of a Gunman (also begun as a Studio project) and George Bellak's The Troublemakers.

Film and television

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In 1965, Smithers moved to Los Angeles to play "David Schuster" in the television series Peyton Place for nine months. He also played Stanley Norris on the soap opera Guiding Light from 1970 to 1971, and, from 1976 to 1977, was a cast member in the series Executive Suite.

He has appeared in nearly 400 television productions, including The Invaders, Barnaby Jones, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, Star Trek, Combat, Mission: Impossible, and Hawaii Five-O, as well as feature films such as Attack (1956), Trouble Man (1972), Scorpio (1973), Papillon (1973), The Six Million Dollar Man (1974), and Deathsport (1978).

In 1981 and from 1984 to 1989, he played oil baron Jeremy Wendell on the prime-time soap opera Dallas.

Smithers vs. MGM

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As the plaintiff in Smithers vs. MGM, despite being threatened with blacklisting should he pursue the matter, he sued the multimillion-dollar corporation to protect his contractual rights with regard to star billing in the 1976 television series Executive Suite. In so doing, he won a case that was appealed as far as the California Supreme Court, and is now taught in entertainment law courses.[7][8]

Later life

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He lived in Santa Barbara, California, with his wife, acting teacher S. Loraine Boos Hull, known as Lorrie Hull Smithers (August 5, 1928 - January 10, 2022).

She authored Strasberg's Method: As Taught by Lorrie Hull. With Smithers, she co-produced an acting-training DVD The Method).[9]

From 2003 to 2005, he created, produced and directed the Santa Barbara Theatre of the Air for KCSB radio, broadcasting works of classic and contemporary playwrights.

From 2010 to 2013, he and his wife were co-hosts and co-producers of the Santa Barbara Channels (now TV Santa Barbara) television interview program Just Between Us! Seven episodes of this program were named finalists for the 2011, 2012 and 2013 WAVE (Western Access Video Excellence) Awards.

In 2010 and 2011, Smithers served on the Board of Directors of TV Santa Barbara. In December 2015, he was appointed by the Santa Barbara City Council to the city's Arts Advisory Committee.

Filmography

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Year Title Role Notes
1956 Attack Lt. Harold 'Harry' Woodruff
1972 Trouble Man Captain Joe Marx
1973 Scorpio Mitchell
1973 Papillon Warden Barrot
1978 Deathsport Dr. Karl
1978 The Amazing Spider-Man James Colbert

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
William Smithers (born Marion Wilkinson Smithers Jr., July 10, 1927) is an American actor renowned for his extensive career spanning theater, film, and television over six decades, with notable roles including the villainous Jeremy Wendell on the primetime Dallas and early Broadway performances that earned him critical acclaim. Born in , to electrical engineer Marion Wilkinson Smithers and homemaker Marion Thompson Smithers, he grew up during the , attending schools in and before studying drama at and Hampden-Sydney College. After brief service as a radio technician from 1945 to 1946, Smithers moved to in 1950, where he made his professional acting debut as in a Broadway production of in 1951, earning a Theatre World Award for his promising performance. He became a member of the Actors Studio in 1952 and continued in theater, winning an for Best Actor in 1957 for portraying Konstantin Treplev in an revival of Anton Chekhov's . Transitioning to film and television in the mid-1950s, Smithers appeared in movies such as Attack! (1956), where he played Lt. Harold "Harry" Woodruff, and later as the stern Warden Barrot in Papillon (1973). His television career gained momentum after relocating to in 1965, with his first major role as Dr. David Schuster on the Peyton Place, followed by guest spots on series like The Defenders, : Impossible, and The F.B.I.. Smithers achieved widespread recognition in the for his recurring portrayal of the ruthless oil tycoon Jeremy Wendell, a key to , on from 1981 to 1989, appearing in 50 episodes. Now retired after a career spanning six decades that included nearly 400 television appearances as a , Smithers has also directed, taught acting seminars nationwide, and co-authored instructional materials on the craft; his prematurely gray hair and resonant voice became signature traits in his often authoritative roles.

Early life and education

Upbringing in Richmond

William Smithers was born Marion Wilkinson Smithers Jr. on July 10, 1927, in . His father, Marion Wilkinson Smithers, worked as an electrical engineer, initially employed by , while his mother, Marion Thompson Smithers, contributed to the family income by selling can openers during tough economic times. The family faced significant challenges during the when Smithers' father lost his job, prompting them to move temporarily into the crowded home of his paternal grandparents in Richmond, where nine relatives, including two uncles and two aunts, lived together. This period of financial hardship in the instilled a strong sense of resilience and in young Smithers, as the family navigated scarcity and uncertainty in the city's working-class neighborhoods. In 1936, when his father regained employment at , the family moved to . Smithers' early childhood was spent attending William Fox Elementary School in Richmond, where he skipped a semester in the due to academic aptitude. His interest in the began to emerge through participation in school plays and operettas, such as Around the World in an Airship, which he performed at Robert Morris Grammar School. These experiences, amid the broader socioeconomic strains of the era—including the lingering effects of the Depression and the onset of —fostered his initial passion for theater and shaped his disciplined approach to creative pursuits.

Acting training and early influences

Smithers graduated from , an all-male institution in , around 1945. His family upbringing in , until age nine had instilled a sense of discipline that supported his early academic pursuits. Following high school, Smithers briefly attended Hampden-Sydney College in before transferring to in , drawn to its renowned drama department. He did not complete his degree, as his studies were interrupted by . There, he began formal studies, performing roles such as in and Edgar in , which deepened his engagement with Shakespearean texts as foundational influences. Prior to his military service, he changed his name to William Wilkinson Smithers. His college education was further interrupted when he enlisted in the U.S. Navy in 1945 as a Seaman 1st Class, serving 14 months in a radio technician program during the final stages of and receiving an honorable discharge in 1946. After the war, Smithers relocated to in 1950 to pursue acting professionally. In 1952, he joined the Actors Studio under the guidance of , where he immersed himself in techniques derived from Konstantin , emphasizing emotional authenticity and psychological depth in performance. These early off-stage influences, including intensive Shakespeare readings and Stanislavski's principles, shaped his approach to character development and laid the groundwork for his professional career.

Stage career

Broadway debut and major roles

William Smithers made his Broadway debut in 1951, portraying in a revival of Shakespeare's at the , opposite as Juliet and directed by Peter Glenville. The production, produced by Dwight Deere Wiman, ran for 49 performances and marked a significant entry for Smithers into professional theater following his training at the Actors Studio. For this role, he received the Theatre World Award for outstanding debut performance, recognizing his promise as a newcomer in the New York theater scene. In 1953, Smithers appeared in End as a Man, an adaptation of Calder Willingham's novel about at a Southern , initially developed as an project before transferring from to the Vanderbilt Theatre. He played the cadet Robert Marquales in the production, which starred and ran for 105 performances, earning critical acclaim for the ensemble's raw intensity, with reviewers noting Smithers' notable contribution to the play's harsh humor and dramatic tension. The work later served as the basis for the 1957 film , highlighting its impact on Smithers' early career visibility. Smithers returned to Broadway in 1963 with a supporting role as the David Beeston in Terence Rattigan's Man and Boy at the Theatre, co-starring with as the manipulative financier Gregor Antonescu. In this one-scene portrayal of a morally conflicted figure drawn into Antonescu's schemes, Smithers contributed to the production's exploration of paternal ambition and ethical compromise, though the play closed after just 54 performances amid mixed reception. Throughout the 1950s, Smithers navigated the fiercely competitive New York theater landscape, where limited roles and the rise of intensified rivalries among emerging talents. He expressed concerns over in ensemble-driven military or antagonistic parts, such as those in and End as a Man, which risked pigeonholing him amid the era's fears and production uncertainties.

Off-Broadway and regional theater

Smithers gained significant recognition in off-Broadway theater during the 1950s and early 1960s, where he portrayed complex characters in intimate productions that allowed for deeper exploration of psychological depth through method acting techniques he honed at the Actors Studio. In 1957, he earned the Obie Award for Distinguished Performance by an Actor for his role as Konstantin Treplev in Anton Chekhov's The Seagull, staged at the Circle in the Square Theatre, a production noted for its innovative approach to classical drama in a smaller venue. This performance highlighted his ability to convey inner turmoil, contrasting the grandeur of Broadway stages he had experienced earlier as a foundation for such versatility. Smithers continued with leading roles in other off-Broadway works, including Larry Doyle in Frank D. Gilroy's Who'll Save the Plowboy? at the Phoenix Theatre in 1962, a drama about war's lingering scars that received the for Best American Play and acclaim for its ensemble intensity. He also appeared in Calder Willingham's End as a Man at a Greenwich Village theater, an early production emphasizing raw emotional realism before its Broadway transfer. Beyond New York, Smithers engaged in regional theater, performing in summer stock productions such as at the Eaglesmere Playhouse in during his college years, where he balanced acting with technical duties. In 1959, he took on roles at the American Shakespeare Festival in , including in and in , experiences that underscored his commitment to classical works in repertory settings. These and regional engagements in the and represented a transitional phase for Smithers, where he applied method acting's focus on personal authenticity in close-knit environments, while beginning to incorporate emerging television opportunities alongside his commitments.

Screen career

Television roles and series

Smithers began his television career with a debut appearance in 1952 on the Goodyear Playhouse, portraying a role in the episode "The Search," marking his entry into the medium while still based in New York. He continued with guest appearances on New York-based and dramas in the and early , including Combat!. Following success on Broadway, he relocated to in 1965 to expand his opportunities in film and television, where he quickly found steady work in guest spots on crime dramas such as , , and The F.B.I. during the and . His training lent a dramatic intensity to these portrayals of authoritative figures, often executives or officials entangled in moral dilemmas. In 1965, Smithers achieved a breakthrough with a recurring role as the ambitious lawyer David Schuster on the prime-time soap opera Peyton Place, appearing in 56 episodes across nine months and contributing to the series' exploration of small-town scandals. He followed this with appearances in daytime serials, including the role of Stanley Norris on Guiding Light from 1970 to 1971, where he depicted a complex family patriarch amid the show's interpersonal conflicts. By the mid-1970s, he starred as Anderson Galt, a corporate executive navigating power struggles, in the short-lived prime-time drama Executive Suite (1976–1977), which aired for 18 episodes and drew from the 1954 film of the same name. Smithers' most memorable television antagonist came in the 1980s with his portrayal of Jeremy Wendell, the cunning and vengeful oil magnate who clashed repeatedly with on Dallas. He appeared in 50 episodes across seasons 4 through 12 (1981, 1984–1989), embodying corporate ruthlessness that heightened the show's central rivalries. Beyond these series, he made notable guest appearances, including as the conflicted slave Merik in the Star Trek: The Original Series episode "" (1968), where his performance added depth to the episode's commentary on gladiatorial spectacle. Over his career spanning 1952 to 2011, Smithers amassed nearly 400 television credits, showcasing his versatility in anthology, procedural, and serialized formats.

Film appearances

Smithers began his film career with a supporting role in the 1956 drama Attack, directed by , where he portrayed Lieutenant Harold "Harry" Woodruff, a facing the horrors of battle in the . The film, starring , , and , highlighted the incompetence and cowardice within military leadership, earning praise for its gritty realism despite initial mixed reviews. One of Smithers' most prominent film roles came in 1973 with Papillon, Franklin J. Schaffner's adaptation of Henri Charrière's memoir, where he played Warden Barrot, a stern prison official overseeing the penal colony. Starring as the titular convict and as his fellow inmate, the film grossed over $53 million at the box office and received five Academy Award nominations, showcasing Smithers in a key supporting capacity amid the epic tale of escape and survival. Smithers' other feature film appearances include the blaxploitation thriller Trouble Man (1972), in which he portrayed police Captain Joe Marx opposite as the cool private detective Mr. T; the spy drama Scorpio (1973), directed by and starring and ; and the post-apocalyptic action film (1978), where he appeared as Doctor Karl alongside . Over his , Smithers amassed around 30 film credits, including television movies and shorts, from 1956 to 2011, though he remained selective in pursuing cinema roles, often prioritizing the immediacy of stage work and the narrative opportunities in television.

Case origins and proceedings

The dispute arose in 1976 during the production of the MGM Television series , where William Smithers had been contracted for a starring role as Anderson Gault, a key executive character appearing in all 18 episodes of the short-lived drama. Despite an initial "memo of understanding" that included a most-favored-nation clause guaranteeing Smithers equal or superior billing and compensation to other cast members (except three top-billed actors), omitted this provision from the formal long-form and listed him as a recurring player rather than a star in promotional materials and credits. This billing demotion, coupled with unequal pay and threats of from executive Harris Katleman, prompted Smithers to allege multiple violations, including interference with his future employment opportunities at . Smithers filed the lawsuit in in 1976 against Studios, along with executives Katleman and Bernard Weitzman, asserting claims of , tortious breach of the implied covenant of and , , and seeking , monetary compensation, and restoration of proper credits. The suit emphasized 's failure to honor the negotiated terms, which had been approved under (SAG) standards for performer agreements. Central to Smithers' arguments was the violation of SAG billing protocols, which required consistent recognition of starring status for in lead roles across an entire series run, as evidenced by his substantial and narrative centrality in . Expert testimony from SAG's executive secretary supported this, highlighting how the demotion undermined industry norms for credit equity and could devalue an actor's professional standing. Smithers contended that his portrayal justified top-tier billing, given the character's integral role in driving the show's plot over the full production. The case proceeded to a in 1978 in , lasting three weeks and requiring a 9-3 majority verdict; it followed several years of pretrial preparation involving document discovery and witness depositions. appealed the trial outcome through appellate courts, with the litigation escalating to a petition before the in 1983, prolonging the proceedings amid ongoing legal battles. The extended litigation from 1976 to 1985 imposed significant personal hardship on Smithers, including severe financial strain that necessitated personal loans to cover legal fees and living expenses, as well as a prolonged career hiatus marked by and limited audition opportunities due to the industry's perception of the conflict.

Ruling and lasting impact

In 1983, the California Court of Appeal affirmed the lower court's judgment in favor of Smithers, upholding the jury's verdict that awarded him $500,000 for , $300,000 for tortious breach of the implied covenant of and , and an additional $100,000 in against individual defendants for fraud related to the billing violations. The California Supreme Court granted review in 1983 but retransferred the case to the Court of Appeal in 1985 without modification, effectively confirming Smithers' victory and the award exceeding $100,000, which included compensation for back billing and restored on-screen credits for his role in . This outcome not only resolved the immediate contract dispute but also provided Smithers with retroactive recognition of his billing status across syndication and reruns. The ruling set a significant legal by enforcing billing clauses more stringently in television contracts, recognizing that violations could constitute tortious conduct warranting compensatory and beyond mere economic loss. It influenced (SAG) practices by highlighting the enforceability of "most favored nations" billing provisions, with SAG's executive secretary providing key expert testimony that underscored industry standards for performer protections. As a landmark case on performers' rights, Smithers v. MGM is routinely taught in entertainment law courses at institutions such as UCLA and USC, serving as a on the implied covenant of in personal service contracts. For Smithers personally, the decision restored his professional credits and enhanced his leverage in negotiations, contributing to his casting as Jeremy Wendell in Dallas starting in 1981, a role that revitalized his career after the litigation's temporary disruptions. The case's details and reflections are chronicled in Smithers' essay "Smithers vs. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer" on his official website, which discusses the appellate process and broader implications for actors' contractual rights.

Later life and contributions

Production and media projects

In the later stages of his career and following his retirement from acting around 2011, after a performing career spanning 1951 to 2011, William Smithers transitioned to behind-the-scenes roles in media production, leveraging his theatrical background to foster community-based projects in Santa Barbara. From 2003 to 2005, during the later part of his acting career, Smithers conceived, produced, and directed the Santa Barbara Theatre of the Air. Broadcast on KCSB, the radio station of the University of California, Santa Barbara, the series featured adaptations of classic and contemporary plays performed by local talent, including actors such as Bonnie Bartlett and Salome Jens. In 2010, Smithers co-created and co-hosted Just Between Us! with his wife, Lorrie Hull Smithers, as a half-hour television interview program on TV Santa Barbara (formerly Santa Barbara Channels). The series produced 32 episodes through 2013, covering topics in politics, environmental issues, medical research, social justice, and the arts, with notable guests including prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi and physician David Bearman on marijuana's medical uses. Seven episodes were finalists for the 2011 WAVE Awards, recognizing excellence in community television. That same year, Smithers joined the of TV Santa Barbara as a producer representative, serving through 2011 and contributing to the oversight of public access and educational programming for the . In December 2015, the Santa Barbara City Council appointed Smithers to the city's Arts Advisory Committee, where he supported initiatives to promote local cultural programs and events.

Writing, activism, and legacy

In his later years, William Smithers turned to writing as a means of reflecting on politics, history, and personal experience. He authored the book The Wizard of Sacramento: Governor Jerry Brown, published in 2018, which provides a critical biographical analysis of Jerry Brown's tenure as California's governor, focusing on environmental policies, legislative decisions, and political maneuvers. Smithers also published an online autobiography in two parts on his personal website, williamsmithers.com, where he details his acting career, life journey, and insights into the entertainment industry from the mid-20th century onward. Smithers contributed several op-eds and essays to public discourse, often exploring themes of environmental urgency and historical foresight. His 2002 piece "Fiddling While Earth Burns," originally written as an editorial for a local newsletter, critiques societal inaction on amid escalating global risks. Additionally, he penned essays drawing parallels between 19th-century thinkers and contemporary crises, including "Percy Bysshe Shelley Foretells the Future in 1818," which examines the poet's visionary warnings in works like , and "Charles Darwin Foretells the Future in 1859," analyzing prescient environmental observations in On the Origin of Species. Smithers has engaged in through environmental and political commentary, leveraging his and interviews to for and critique governmental responses. His writings frequently highlight the intersection of policy failures and ecological threats, as seen in pieces addressing dismissive attitudes toward young activists and broader systemic issues. He has also supported causes by offering autographed memorabilia, such as signed cards from his role as Captain Merik, with proceeds tied to his ongoing public outreach efforts. Smithers' legacy encompasses a 60-year in that influenced television and theater. As of November 2025, at age 98, he remains active through his website's continued updates and content availability, residing in , with no major health announcements reported.

References

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