James McEachin
James McEachin | |
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McEachin reads a narrative on the conflict at a Department of Defense salute to the Korean War in 2003. | |
Born |
Rennert, North Carolina, U.S. | May 20, 1930
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1967–2004 |
Spouse(s) | Lois McEachin (1950's-present) |
James McEachin (born May 20, 1930) is an American actor, award-winning[1] author, and known for his many character roles such as portraying police Lieutenant Brock in several Perry Mason television movies.
Military career
McEachin served in the United States Army before, and then during, the Korean War. Serving in King Company, 9th U.S. Infantry Regiment, 2nd Infantry Division, he was wounded (nearly fatally) in an ambush and nearly left for dead. McEachin was one of only two soldiers to survive the ambush. He was awarded both the Purple Heart and Silver Star in 2005 by California Congressman David Dreier after McEachin participated in a Veterans History Project interview given by Dreier's office and in which they discovered McEachin had no copies of his own military records. Dreier's office quickly traced the records and notified McEachin of the Silver Star commendation and awarding him all seven of his medals of valor shortly thereafter, fifty years after his service.
Civilian career
Following his military career, McEachin dabbled in civil service, first as a fireman and then a policeman in Hackensack, New Jersey, before he moved to California and became a record producer. Known as Jimmy Mack in the industry, he worked with young artists such as Otis Redding and went on to produce The Furys. He began his acting career shortly after, and was signed by Universal as a contract actor in the 1960s. He was regularly cast in professional, "solid citizen" occupational roles, such as a lawyer or a police commander, guesting on numerous series such as Hawaii Five-O, Rockford Files, Mannix, The Feather and Father Gang, The Eddie Capra Mysteries, Matlock, Jake and the Fatman, Diagnosis Murder, Dragnet and Adam-12, and in films such as Uptight (1968), The Undefeated (1969), The Lawyer (1970), Buck and the Preacher (1972), The Groundstar Conspiracy (1972) and Fuzz (1972). He played Mr. Turner, a tax collector for the I.R.S., and later a character called Solomon Jackson, a co-worker that Archie Bunker tries to recruit for his social club, on the television show All in the Family. He played the deejay Sweet Al Monte in Play Misty for Me (1971) with Clint Eastwood. In 1973, McEachin starred as Harry Tenafly, the title character in Tenafly, a short-lived detective series about a police officer turned private detective who relied on his wits and hard work rather than guns and fistfights. He also appeared occasionally as Lieutenant Ron Crockett on Emergency!. In 1978 he played a police officer chasing Philo Beddoe (Clint Eastwood) in Every Which Way But Loose. In 1979, he played the role of a jaded ex-marine high school baseball coach in The White Shadow episode Out at Home.
He made his third film with Clint Eastwood in 1983 when he starred as Detective Barnes in the fourth Dirty Harry movie, Sudden Impact. He also appeared as Dr. Victor Millson, chairman of the fictitious National Council of Astronautics in the 1984 movie 2010. In addition to his appearing role with Roy Scheider, his character often appears in video dispatches transmitted to the American astronauts in the film.
While continuing to guest star in many television series and appearing in several feature-length films, McEachin landed his most memorable role, that of police lieutenant Brock in the 1986 television movie Perry Mason: The Case of the Notorious Nun. He would reprise this role in more than a dozen Perry Mason telemovies from 1986 until 1995, appearing opposite Raymond Burr.
In the 1990s, McEachin semi-retired from acting to pursue a writing career. His first work was a military history of the court-martial of 63 black American soldiers during the First World War, titled Farewell to the Mockingbirds (1995), which won the 1998 Benjamin Franklin Award.[2] His next works, mainly fiction novels, included The Heroin Factor (1999), Say Goodnight to the Boys in Blue (2000), The Great Canis Lupus (2001), and Tell me a Tale: A Novel of the Old South (2003). McEachin also published Pebbles in the Roadway in (2003), a collection of short stories and essays which he describes as "a philosophical view of America and Americans." In 2005, McEachin produced the award-winning[3] audio book Voices: A Tribute to the American Veteran.
In early 2006, the film short Reveille, in which McEachin starred with David Huddleston, began to play to troops in Afghanistan and Iraq and people began to request copies of the film.[4] The film was posted on video.google.com and quickly garnered 1.5 million hits and a deluge of fan mail to the jamesmceachin.com website; this inspired McEachin's latest contribution, Old Glory,[5] which he wrote, produced, directed, and acted in. Old Glory was McEachin's directorial debut.
In 2001, McEachin received the Distinguished Achievement Award[6] from Morgan State University. In 2005, he became an Army Reserve Ambassador; this distinction carries the protocol of a two-star general.[7] McEachin is married with three grown children. Felecia, Alainia and Lyle. His daughter Felecia McEachin was assistant to the Emmy Award winning producer Sam Simon.
The pronunciation of "McEachin," as he used it in a public service ad for the Army Relief Agency, rhymes with "beachin."
References
- ↑ Benjamin Franklin Award 2006 Best Audio, 2004 Best Fiction. ForeWord Magazine 2006 Best Audio, 2004 Best Fiction
- ↑ PMA Magazine, Benjamin Franklin Award, announced at 1998 Book Expo America
- ↑ PMA Magazine Benjamin Franklin Award announced at 2006 Book Expo America, Washington DC
- ↑ Written and verbal requests from Generals, soldiers, and civilians
- ↑ Winner of the 2007 GI Film Festival, Best Narrative Short, announced at 2007 GI FILM Festival, Washington DC
- ↑ News Release
- ↑ Acclaimed actor is newest Army Reserve Ambassador.(People) - Journal, Magazine, Article, Periodical
External links
- James McEachin's homepage
- Old Glory - movie homepage
- James McEachin at the Internet Movie Database Retrieved on 2008-02-04
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