Patrick Wayne
Patrick Wayne | |
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Patrick Wayne in McLintock! (1963) | |
Born |
Patrick John Morrison July 15, 1939 Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1950–present |
Spouse(s) |
Peggy Hunt (1965–1978) Misha Anderson (1999–present) |
Children |
Michael Wayne Anthony Wayne Melanie Wayne |
Parent(s) |
John Wayne Josephine Alicia Saenz |
Relatives |
Michael Wayne (1934-2003) Mary Antonia "Toni" Morrison LaCava (1936-2000) Melinda Morrison Muñoz (b. 1940) Aissa Wayne (b. 1956) Ethan Wayne (b. 1962) Marisa Wayne (b 1966) |
Patrick John Morrison (born July 15, 1939), better known by his stage name Patrick Wayne, is an American actor, the second son of movie star John Wayne and his first wife, Josephine Alicia Saenz. He made over 40 films, including nine with his father. In addition, Patrick Wayne held a role as the host of a 1990 revival of the television game show Tic-Tac-Dough, and hosted the short-lived Monte Carlo Show in 1980.
Early life and career
Born in Los Angeles, he is half Latino. He is one of John Wayne's four children by his first wife, Josephine Alicia Saenz, daughter of Panama's Consul General to the U.S. He adopted his father's stage surname, Wayne. He made nine movies with his father: Rio Grande (1950), The Quiet Man (1952), The Searchers (1956), The Alamo (1960), The Comancheros (1961), Donovan's Reef (1963), McLintock! (1963), The Green Berets (1968), and Big Jake (1971).
Patrick made his film debut at age 11 in his father's film Rio Grande. He followed that with films directed by family friend and iconic director John Ford: The Quiet Man, The Sun Shines Bright (1953), The Long Gray Line (1955), Mister Roberts (1955), and The Searchers (1956).
From 1957 to 1958, Wayne appeared as Walter on the CBS sitcom Mr. Adams and Eve, starring Howard Duff and Ida Lupino as a fictitious acting couple living in Beverly Hills. Other television work included the baseball teleplay Rookie of the Year (1955), directed by John Ford and starring John Wayne, and Flashing Spikes (1962), a baseball television anthology installment directed by Ford and starring James Stewart, with John Wayne in an extended cameo role. Patrick Wayne played similar roles in both shows as baseball players.
Following high school, Patrick attended Loyola Marymount University, where he was a member of Alpha Delta Gamma fraternity; he graduated in 1961. During this time, he struck out on his own to star in his own film The Young Land (1959). Patrick enlisted in the United States Coast Guard in 1961. He supported his father in The Alamo, Donovan's Reef, McLintock!, and The Green Berets. He also appeared in Ford's sprawling epic Cheyenne Autumn (1964), as James Stewart's son in Shenandoah (1965), in An Eye for an Eye (1966), The Deserter (1971), and in a lead role in The Bears and I for Walt Disney (1974).
In 1966 at age 27, Wayne co-starred with Ron Hayes and Chill Wills in the 17-episode ABC comedy-western series The Rounders, based on the 1965 Glenn Ford and Henry Fonda film of the same name. Patrick also served a tour of duty with the United States Coast Guard.[1]
Throughout the 1970s he portrayed Marathon John in commercials for Mars Inc's Marathon candy bar.
Later works
Following work on his father's Big Jake, Patrick earned recognition in the sci-fi genre. His career peaked in the late 1970s in the popular matinee fantasy Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger (1977), then The People That Time Forgot (1977). Wayne also screen-tested for the title role of Superman.[2] He co-starred as a romantic love interest to Shirley Jones in another brief TV series, Shirley (1979). He was the host of the The Monte Carlo Show in 1980, and occasionally worked on game shows and syndicated variety series.
He had many appearances on popular TV shows of the 1970s and '80s, including Fantasy Island (1978), Murder, She Wrote (1984), Charlie's Angels (1976), Sledge Hammer! (1986), and The Love Boat.[1] Wayne appeared in the movie Young Guns (1988) as Pat Garrett. He also did a comic turn in the Western spoof Rustler's Rhapsody (1985) starring Tom Berenger.
Wayne served as the host of the 1990 revival of the game show Tic-Tac-Dough.
In 2003, Patrick became chairman of the John Wayne Cancer Institute.[1]
In December 2, 2015, he travelled to Spain to receive the prize "Almeria Tierra de Cine" in Almeria (Andalucia) for his long trajectory in the cinema, and he remembered his maternal grandparents were born in Madrid and he is half spanish. He currently lives in Arizona.
Family
Mother: Josephine Alicia Saenz
- Michael Wayne (film producer), born November 23, 1934 / died April 2, 2003
- Mary Antonia "Toni" Morrison LaCava, born February 25, 1936 / died December 6, 2000
- Melinda Morrison Muñoz, born December 3, 1940
Stepmother: Pilar Pallete
- Aissa Wayne - (actress, now attorney), born March 31, 1956
- John Ethan Wayne (actor), born February 22, 1962
- Marisa Wayne (actress), born February 22, 1966
Filmography
- Rio Grande - Boy (un-credited) (1950)
- The Quiet Man - Boy on Wagon at Horse Race (un-credited) (1952)
- The Sun Shines Bright - Cadet (un-credited) (1953)
- The Long Grey Line - Abner 'Cherub' Overton (1955)
- Mister Roberts - Bookser (1955)
- The Conqueror - unknown (un-credited) (1956)
- The Searchers - Lt. Greenhill (1956)
- Teenager Idol - TV movie (1958)
- The Young Land - Sheriff Jim Ellison (1959)
- The Alamo - Captain James Butler Bonham (1960)
- The Comancheros - Tobe (1961)
- Donovan's Reef - Australian Navy Lt. (un-credited) (1963)
- McLintock! - Devlin Warren (1963)
- Cheyenne Autumn - 2nd Lt. Scott (1963)
- Shenandoah - James (1965)
- An Eye for an Eye - Benny Wallace (1966)
- The Green Berets - Lt. Jamison (1968)
- Sole Survivor - TV movie - Mac (1970)
- Swing Out, Sweet Land - TV movie - James Caldwell (1970)
- The Gatling Gun - Jim Boland (1971)
- Big Jake - James McCandles (1971)
- The Deserter - Captain Bill Robinson (1971)
- Movin' On - TV movie - Client Daniels (1972)
- Beyond Atlantis - Vic Mathias (1973)
- The Bears and I - Bob Leslie (1974)
- Mustang Country - Tee Jay (1976)
- Yesterday's Child - TV movie - Sanford Grant (1977)
- Flight to Holocaust - TV movie - Les Taggart (1977)
- The People That Time Forgot - Ben McPride (1977)
- Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger - Sinbad (1977)
- The Last Hurrah - TV movie - Robert "Bobby" Skeffington (1977)
- Three on a Date - TV movie - Roger Powell (1978)
- Texas Detour - Clay McCarthy (1978)
- Rustlers' Rhapsody - Bob Barber (1985)
- Revenge - Video - Michael Hogan (1986)
- Young Guns - Patrick Floyd "Pat" Garrett (1988)
- Chill Factor - Jerry Rivers (1989)
- Her Alibi - Gary Blackwood (1989)
- Deep Cover - Ray (1997)
Television
- Screen Directors Playhouse - Rookie of the Year - Lyn Goodhue (1955)
- Mr. Adams and Eve - Walter (1957)
- Have Gun - Will Travel, episode "Black Sheep" (1960)
- Alcoa Premiere: Bill Riley (1962)
- Branded, episode "The Mission: Part 3": Corporal Dewey (1965)
- Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, episode "Killers of the Deep" (1966)
- 12 O'Clock High, episode "The Outsider": Lt. Gabriel (1966)
- The Rounders, 17 episodes: Howdy Lewis (1966-1967)
- The F.B.I., episode "The Widow": Fred Bruno (1968)
- Love, American Style, episode "Love and Grandma": Oliver (1970)
- McCloud, episode "The Colorado Cattle Caper": Deputy Morris Knowles (1974)
- Marcus Welby, M.D., episode "The Outrage": Sgt. Buchanan (1974)
- Police Woman, episode "It's Only a Game": Kevin Duffy (1974)
- Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color, episode "The Bears and I: Part 2": Bob Leslie (1976)
- The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams, episode "The Renewal" (1978)
- The Love Boat - 7 episodes - Various (1979-1986)
- The Monte Carlo Show - Host/Himself (1980)
- Shirley, episodes: Lew Armitage (1980)
- Charlie's Angels, episode "Waikiki Angels": Steve Walters (1981)
- Fantasy Island, episode "Hard Knocks/Lady Godiva": John Apensdale (1981)
- Fantasy Island, episode "The Big Bet/Nancy and the Thunderbirds" (1982)
- Lottery!, episode "Kansas City: Protected Winner" (1983)
- Fantasy Island, episode "Midnight Waltz": François (1983)
- Murder, She Wrote, episode "Murder, She Spoke": Randy Witworth (1987)
- Sledge Hammer, episode "Brother, Can You Spare a Crime?": Myles (1987)
- Danger Bay, episode "All the King's Horses": Mr. Cormier (1987)
- MacGyver, episode "Collision Course": Jeff Stone (1988)
- Out of This World, episode "Old Flame": Robby Jamison (1988)
- Frank's Place, episode "Frank's Place: The Movie": Brandman Carr (1988)
- Alfred Hitchcock Presents, episode "South By Southeast": Michael Roberts (1989)
- They Came from Outer Space, episode "Look Who's Barking": Lester Kerwick (1991)
- Kung Fu: The Legend Continues, episode "Manhunt": Garrison (1995)
- High Tide, episode "Two Barretts and a Baby" (1997)
- Silk Stalkings, episode "Pumped Up": Harmon Lange (1997)
Documentaries/DVD special features
- Hollywood Greats, episode "John Wayne": himself (1984)
- A Turning of the Earth: John Ford, John Wayne and the Searchers (1998)
- The Quiet Man: The Joy of Ireland" himself (2002)
- 50 Films to See Before You Die, TV movie documentary: himself (2006)
- American Masters, episode "John Ford/John Wayne: The Filmmaker and the Legend": himself (2006)
- 100 Years of John Wayne, TV movie documentary short: himself (2007)
- The Personal Property of John Wayne, video documentary (2011)
References
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Patrick Wayne. |
*http://www.elmundo.es/andalucia/2015/12/01/565deb1e268e3eeb5b8b465a.html
Media offices | ||
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Preceded by Jim Caldwell |
Host of Tic Tac Dough 1990-1991 |
Succeeded by Show Cancelled |
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