
Richard Davalos
Acting
1930-11-05 · New York City, New York, USA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Richard Davalos (born November 5, 1935) was an American actor. Davalos starred in East of Eden (1955) as James Dean's brother and portrayed the convict Blind Dick in Cool Hand Luke (1967). He won the Theatre World Award for his performance in the Arthur Miller play A Memory of Two Mondays in 1955. In the Civil War television series The Americans, broadcast by NBC in 1961, he played Jeff, the younger brother who joined Confederate Army, in opposition to Ben, the older brother (played by Darryl Hickman), who joined the Union Army. Davalos was the father of actress Elyssa Davalos and musician Dominique Davalos and grandfather of actress Alexa Davalos (The Chronicles of Riddick). An image of Davalos appears on the covers of The Smiths' albums Strangeways, Here We Come, Best...I, and ...Best II. Description above from the Wikipedia article Richard Davalos, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
movieCool Hand Luke
as Blind Dick · 1967 · 7.7
tvMannix
as Paddy Wright · 1967 · 6.8
tvThe Rat Patrol
as Captain Wansee · 1966 · 7.2
tvBlue Light
as · 1966 · 7.0
tvThe F.B.I.
as Mason Rhodes · 1965 · 5.6
movieThe Cabinet of Caligari
as Mark Lindstrom · 1962 · 6.4
tvDr. Kildare
as Gordon Hall · 1961 · 5.7
tvThe Americans
as Cpl. Jeff Canfield · 1961 · 6.5
movieAll the Young Men
as Pvt. Casey · 1960 · 6.7
tvHawaiian Eye
as · 1959 · 5.6
tvBonanza
as Johnny Logan · 1959 · 7.5
tvOne Step Beyond
as Corporal Fred Cossage · 1959 · 5.7
tvRawhide
as Will Butler · 1959 · 7.2
tv77 Sunset Strip
as · 1958 · 7.1
tvDecoy
as Danny Dombrowsky · 1957 · 6.7
tvPerry Mason
as James Anderson · 1957 · 7.7
tvPerry Mason
as Rodney Banks · 1957 · 7.7
tvWest Point
as · 1956 · 7.5
movieI Died a Thousand Times
as Lon Preisser · 1955 · 6.2
tvMatinee Theater
as · 1955 · 5.3
movieThe Sea Chase
as Cadet Walter Stemme (as Dick Davalos) · 1955 · 6.2
movieEast of Eden
as Aron Trask · 1955 · 7.5
tvGoodyear Television Playhouse
as · 1951 · 6.0
tvThe Philco Television Playhouse
as Tom Bates · 1948 · 6.6