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| 1968 || '']'' || Willie Trion || Episode: "The Galloping Skin Game" | | 1968 || '']'' || Willie Trion || Episode: "The Galloping Skin Game" | ||
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| 1969 || '']'' || Le Mouche || Episode: "Benvenuto...Who?" | | 1969 || '']'' || Le Mouche || Episode: "Benvenuto...Who?" | ||
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| 1970 || '']'' || Luke Brown || Episode: "The Boy Who Stole the Elephant: Part 1 & 2" | | 1970 || '']'' || Luke Brown || Episode: "The Boy Who Stole the Elephant: Part 1 & 2" |
Revision as of 16:08, 26 December 2015
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Richard Kiel" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (September 2014) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Richard Kiel | |
---|---|
Kiel and Michael Dunn on The Wild Wild West | |
Born | Richard Dawson Kiel (1939-09-13)September 13, 1939 Detroit, Michigan, U.S. |
Died | September 10, 2014(2014-09-10) (aged 74) Fresno, California, U.S. |
Cause of death | Acute myocardial infarction |
Resting place | Belmont Memorial Park, Fresno, California, U.S. |
Nationality | American |
Occupation(s) | Actor, voice artist, comedian |
Years active | 1960–2014 |
Notable credit | Jaws in James Bond films |
Height | 7 ft 1.5 in (2.17 m) |
Spouse(s) |
Faye Daniels (m. 1960–1973) Diane Rogers (m. 1974–2014) |
Children | 4 (with Diane Rogers) |
Richard Dawson Kiel (September 13, 1939 – September 10, 2014) was an American actor, voice artist, and comedian, best known for his role as Jaws in the James Bond franchise, in which he played the character in The Spy Who Loved Me (1977) and Moonraker (1979). He was known for roles in The Longest Yard (1974), Silver Streak (1976), Force 10 from Navarone (1978), Pale Rider (1985), and as Mr. Larson in Happy Gilmore (1996). In television, he appeared as the Kanamit alien in the classic The Twilight Zone episode "To Serve Man" (1962) and as Dr. Miguelito Loveless' assistant, Voltaire, in first-season episodes of The Wild, Wild West (1965-1966).
Career
Kiel made his acting debut in the Laramie episode "Street of Hate". He also acted in an unaired TV pilot featuring Lee Falk's superhero The Phantom, where Kiel portrayed an assassin called Big Mike.
Before film and television, Kiel worked in numerous jobs, including a nightclub bouncer and a cemetery plot salesman.
Kiel broke into films in the early 1960s with Eegah (1962), which was later featured on Elvira's Movie Macabre and Mystery Science Theater 3000, as were The Phantom Planet and The Human Duplicators. He also produced, cowrote, and starred in The Giant of Thunder Mountain. Kiel appeared as the towering — and lethal — assistant Voltaire to Dr. Miguelito Loveless in first-season episodes of The Wild, Wild West. He later appeared in the episode "The Night of the Simian Terror" as Dimas, the outcast son of a wealthy family, banished because of birth defects that distorted his body and apparently affected his mind. This episode is significant because it allowed Kiel the opportunity to really act rather than just look intimidating. Kiel also had a cameo role in a 1961 episode of The Rifleman.
From 1963 to 1965, Kiel worked as a night school math instructor in Burbank, California.
In the Man from U.N.C.L.E. episode "The Vulcan Affair", Kiel appeared as a guard in Vulcan's plant, and he portrayed Merry in "The Hong Kong Shilling Affair". In 1967 he played a monster in a episode of The Monkees ("I was a Teenage Monster").
He portrayed Reace in Silver Streak. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Kiel were the original choices to portray the title character in The Incredible Hulk. Schwarzenegger was turned down due to his height. Kiel participated in the filming of the pilot. During the shoot, producers decided their Hulk needed to be muscular rather than just towering, and Kiel was dismissed because he possessed more body fat than the producers deemed necessary. According to a Den of Geek interview, Kiel, who saw properly out of only one eye, also reacted badly to the contact lenses used for the role, and found the green makeup difficult to remove, so he did not mind losing the part. All recognizable footage of Kiel was cut, except one scene where the Hulk saves the little girl from drowning; the scenes were then reshot with Lou Ferrigno.
He has appeared on many other television episodes, such as Laramie, I Dream of Jeannie, Honey West, Gilligan's Island, The Monkees, Daniel Boone, Emergency!, Starsky & Hutch, Land of the Lost, The Fall Guy, and Simon & Simon.
The James Bond film producers spotted Kiel in Barbary Coast and thought he was ideal for the role of Jaws in The Spy Who Loved Me (1977). He was one of the few Bond villains to appear in two Bond films, later appearing in Moonraker (1979). He reprised his role of Jaws in the video game called James Bond 007: Everything or Nothing, supplying his voice and likeness.
Personal life
Kiel's height and features were a result of a hormonal condition known as gigantism. In his prime, Kiel stood 7 feet 1½ inches (217 cm) tall. He noted in his 2002 autobiography Making It Big in the Movies that he used to state that he was 7 feet 2 inches (218.44 cm) because it was easier to remember. He suffered from acrophobia (fear of heights), and during the cable car stunt scenes in Moonraker, a stunt double was used because Kiel refused to be filmed on the top of a cable car over 2000 feet (607 m) above the ground.
In 1992, Kiel suffered a severe head injury in a car accident, which affected his balance. He was subsequently forced to walk with a cane to support himself (as shown in his appearance in Happy Gilmore, where he is seen leaning on a person or a cane). Afterwards, Kiel used a scooter or wheelchair.
Kiel was married to Diane for 40 years, and at the time of his death had four children, and nine grandchildren. He coauthored a biography of the abolitionist Cassius Marcellus Clay called Kentucky Lion. Kiel was also a born-again Christian. His website states that his religious conversion helped him to overcome alcoholism.
Death
On September 10, 2014, three days short of his 75th birthday, Kiel died at St. Agnes Medical Center in Fresno, California, of acute myocardial infarction possibly caused by coronary artery disease.
Filmography
Features
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1961 | The Phantom Planet | The Solarite | |
1962 | Eegah | Eegah | |
1963 | 30 Minutes at Gunsight | Uncredited | |
1963 | House of the Damned | Giant | |
1963 | The Nutty Professor | Bodybuilder #1 | Uncredited |
1964 | Roustabout | Strong Man | Uncredited |
1964 | The Nasty Rabbit | Ranch Foreman | Uncredited |
1965 | Two on a Guillotine | Tall Man at Funeral | |
1965 | The Human Duplicators | Dr. Kolos | |
1965 | Brainstorm | Psychiatric Hospital Patient | Uncredited |
1965 | Lassie's Great Adventure | Chinook Pete | |
1965 | I Dream of Jeannie | Ali | Season 1 Episode 2 |
1966 | The Las Vegas Hillbillys | Moose | |
1967 | A Man Called Dagger | Otto | |
1968 | Now You See It, Now You Don't | Nori | |
1968 | Skidoo | Beany | |
1970 | On a Clear Day You Can See Forever | Blacksmith | Uncredited |
1972 | Deadhead Miles | Unknown role | |
1974 | The Longest Yard | Samson | |
1976 | Flash and the Firecat | Tracker | |
1976 | Gus | Large Man | |
1976 | Silver Streak | Reace | |
1977 | The Spy Who Loved Me | Jaws | |
1977 | The Incredible Hulk | The Hulk | One scene |
1978 | Force 10 from Navarone | Captain Drazak | |
1978 | They Went That-A-Way & That-A-Way | Duke | |
1979 | The Humanoid | Golob | |
1979 | Moonraker | Jaws | Nominated-Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor |
1981 | So Fine | Eddie | |
1983 | Hysterical | Captain Howdy | |
1983 | Phoenix | Steel Hand | |
1984 | Aces Go Places 3 | Jaws | |
1984 | Cannonball Run II | Arnold / Mitsubishi Driver | |
1984 | Mad Mission 3: Our Man from Bond Street | Big G | |
1985 | Qing bao long hu men | Laszlo | |
1985 | Pale Rider | Club | |
1989 | The Princess and the Dwarf | Unknown role | |
1990 | Think Big | Irving | |
1991 | The Giant of Thunder Mountain | Eli Weaver | |
1996 | Happy Gilmore | Mr. Larson | |
1999 | Inspector Gadget | Jaws | |
2009 | The Awakened | Jasper | |
2010 | The Corpse of Albert Cradette | Albert Cradette | |
2010 | Tangled | Vladimir | Voice work |
Television
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1960 | Klondike | Duff Brannigan | Episode: "Bare Knuckles" |
1961 | The Phantom | Big Mike | |
1961 | Thriller | Master Styx | Episode: "Well of Doom" |
1961 | The Rifleman | Carl Hazlitt | Episode: "The Decision" |
1962 | The Twilight Zone | Kanamit | Episode: "To Serve Man" |
1964 | The Man from U.N.C.L.E. | Henchman for Mr. Vulcan | Episode: "The Vulcan Affair" Uncredited |
1965 | The Man from U.N.C.L.E. | Merry | Episode: "The Hong Kong Shilling Affair" |
1965 | I Dream of Jeannie | Ali | Episode: "My Hero" |
1966 | Honey West | Groalgo | Episode: "King of the Mountain" |
1966 | My Mother the Car | Cracks | Episode: "A Riddler on the Roof" |
1966 | The Wild Wild West | Voltaire | Episodes: "The Night the Wizard Shook the Earth" 1965: "The Night That Terror Stalked the Town" 1965: "The Night of the Whirring Death" |
1966 | Gilligan's Island | Ghost | Episode: Ghost-a-Go-Go" |
1967 | The Monkees | Monster | Episode: "I Was a Teenage Monster" |
1967 | The Monroes | Casmir | Episode: "Ghosts of Paradox" |
1968 | I Spy | Tiny | Episode: "A Few Miles West of Nowhere" |
1968 | The Wild Wild West | Dimas | Episode: "The Night of the Simian Terror" |
1968 | It Takes a Thief | Willie Trion | Episode: "The Galloping Skin Game" |
1969 | Daniel Boone | Le Mouche | Episode: "Benvenuto...Who?" |
1970 | Disneyland | Luke Brown | Episode: "The Boy Who Stole the Elephant: Part 1 & 2" |
1974 | Kolchak: The Night Stalker | The Diablero | Episode: "Bad Medicine" |
1974 | Emergency! | Carlo | Episode: "I'll Fix It" |
1974 | Kolchak: The Night Stalker | Peremalfait | Episode: "The Spanish Moss Murders" |
1975 | Switch | Unknown role | Episode: "Death Heist" |
1976 | Starsky & Hutch | Iggy | Episode: "Omaha Tiger" |
1975 – 1976 | Barbary Coast | Moose Moran | 14 episodes, 1975–1976 |
1977 | Land of the Lost | Malak | Episodes: "Survival Kit" "Flying Dutchman" |
1977 | The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries | Manager | Episode: "The Mystery of the Haunted House" |
1977 | Young Dan'l Boone | Unknown role | Episode: "The Game" |
1981 | The Fall Guy | Animal | Episode: "That's Right, We're Bad" |
1983 | Simon & Simon | Mark Horton | Episode: "The Skeleton Who Came Out of the Closet" |
1988 | Out of This World | Norman | Episode: "Go West, Young Mayor" |
1989 | Superboy | Vlkabok | Episode: "Mr. and Mrs. Superboy" |
2000 | Bloodhounds Inc. | Mortimer | Episode: "Fangs for the Memories" |
Video games
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1997 | GoldenEye 007 | Jaws | Likeness only |
2000 | The World Is Not Enough (video game) | Jaws | Likeness only, Nintendo 64 version only |
2000 | 007 Racing | Jaws | Archival footage |
2004 | James Bond 007: Everything or Nothing | Jaws | Voice work |
2010 | GoldenEye 007 (2010 video game) | Jaws | Likeness only |
2012 | 007 Legends | Jaws | Likeness only |
See also
- Rondo Hatton
- Ted Cassidy
- Lock Martin
- Carel Struycken
- The Great Khali
- John Aasen
- William Engesser
- Henry Hite
References
- ^ Weber, Bruce (February 11, 2015). "Richard Kiel Dies at 74; Played Jaws in Bond Films". The New York Times.
- ^ "Richard Kiel obituary". The Guardian (UK). September 11, 2014. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
- ^ "The Den of Geek interview: Richard Kiel". Den of Geek. January 6, 2009.
- Actor Richard Kiel taught math at Ogden's Radio School in '63
- Kiel, Richard. "Richard Kiel's Testimony". Official Richard Kiel Fan Club. Retrieved August 16, 2010.
- "Bond Villain Died Of Heart Disease". TMZ. October 9, 2014. Retrieved November 20, 2014.
External links
Categories:- 1939 births
- 2014 deaths
- 20th-century American male actors
- 21st-century American male actors
- American male voice actors
- American male comedians
- American male film actors
- American male television actors
- American male video game actors
- American Christians
- American people of German descent
- Male actors from Detroit, Michigan
- People with acromegaly
- Writers from Detroit, Michigan