Gary Lockwood


Gary Lockwood is an American actor.
He is known for his roles as astronaut Frank Poole in the film , and as Lieutenant Commander Gary Mitchell in the Star Trek pilot episode "Where No Man Has Gone Before". He played numerous guest television roles from the early 1960s into the mid 1990s, and played the title role in The Lieutenant.

Early life

Born in the Van Nuys district of Los Angeles, California, Lockwood's birth name was "John Gary Yurosek", according to the California Birth Index. Some sources report that he was brought up as "John Gary Yusolfsky" and later used the name "Yurosek". He is of partial Polish descent.
Lockwood's uncle, Mike Yurosek, is credited with creating the baby-cut carrots. Lockwood attended the University of California at Los Angeles on a football scholarship to play quarterback.
Lockwood was married to actress Stefanie Powers from 1966 until their divorce in 1972. He remarried, to Denise DuBarry, in 1982.

Career

Lockwood was a film stuntman, and a stand-in for Anthony Perkins prior to his acting début in 1959 in an uncredited bit role in Warlock.
Lockwood's two series came early in his career, and each lasted only a single season. ABC's Hawaii-set Follow the Sun cast him in support of Brett Halsey and Barry Coe, who played adventurous magazine writers based in Honolulu. Lockwood was Eric Jason, who did the legwork for their articles, but his on-screen time was limited since most of the plot focused on Halsey or Coe.
Lockwood appeared in a supporting role in the film Splendor in the Grass and in ABC's Bus Stop. The 26-week series, which starred Marilyn Maxwell as the owner of a diner in fictitious Sunrise, Colorado, aired a half-hour after Follow the Sun. He would star again with Tuesday Weld in his film debut, 1961's Wild in the Country, with Elvis Presley. Thereafter, Lockwood starred with Jeff Bridges in the acclaimed "My Daddy Can Beat Your Daddy" episode of The Lloyd Bridges Show.
In 1959, he played an uncredited police officer in Perry Mason in "The Case of the Romantic Rogue". In 1962, Lockwood appeared on Perry Mason as the title character in "The Case of the Playboy Pugilist". In 1963, Lockwood co-starred with Elvis Presley in the musical-comedy film It Happened at the World's Fair.
In 1963-1964, Lockwood starred as a young U.S. Marine second lieutenant named William T. Rice in the NBC series The Lieutenant. This drama, about the peacetime Marines, was produced by the creators of Star Trek and The Man from U.N.C.L.E.. The series co-starred Robert Vaughn as Lieutenant Rice's immediate superior, Captain Raymond Rambridge. Despite moderately good reviews, The Lieutenants Saturday night time slot, opposite CBS' Jackie Gleason's American Scene Magazine, caused its cancellation after 29 episodes.
In 1964, Lockwood guest-starred as Major Gus Denver in the first season of
12 O'Clock High, in episode 9, "Appointment at Liege", and again in 1965 in episode 29, "V For Vendetta". He also guest-starred as Lt. Josh McGraw in season 2, episode 4, "The Idolator" of 12 O'Clock High.
Shortly afterwards, Lockwood starred in another NBC television series
The Kraft Mystery Theater in an episode titled "Connery's Hands". He was cast opposite Sally Kellerman, with whom he would soon appear again as Helmsman Gary Mitchell in the second
' pilot "Where No Man Has Gone Before" in which their characters develop god-like powers.
In 1966, Lockwood guest starred as Clint Bethard in the episode "Reunion" of ABC's
The Legend of Jesse James, starring Christopher Jones in the title role of Jesse James. That same year, Lockwood appeared as Danny Hamil on the episode "Day of Thunder" of the NBC drama The Long, Hot Summer, based loosely on the works of William Faulkner. He appeared twice in 1966 as Jim Stark in the two-part episode "The Raid" of CBS' Gunsmoke with James Arness. He is perhaps best known for his lead role in Stanley Kubrick's iconic as Dr. Frank Poole. Lockwood was the lead in Model Shop, the American debut by French writer-director Jacques Demy.
Lockwood co-starred with Stefanie Powers in an episode of ABC's
Love, American Style as a newlywed who gets his mouth stuck around a doorknob. In 1983, he guest starred in the series Hart to Hart with Robert Wagner and Powers, by then his ex-wife.
Between 1959 and 2004, Gary Lockwood gained roles in some forty theatrical features and made-for-TV movies and eighty TV guest appearances, including the CBS 1975 family drama
Three for the Road and Barnaby Jones'' starring Buddy Ebsen, in which he appeared many times as a villain.

Personal life

Lockwood has been married three times. His first marriage was in 1966 to actress Stefanie Powers. The couple divorced in 1972.
In 1982, Lockwood married actress and businesswoman Denise DuBarry. The couple had one child, actress Samantha Lockwood, before divorcing in 1988.

TV and filmography