Robert Vaughn began in films as boyish and rather callow youths, graduated to considerable success in the 1960s in intelligent, sophisticated roles, especially on TV, and later played a wide range of authoritative character parts. An intelligent and sensitive performer whose charisma is bound up with his pensive quality, Vaughn entered films in 1957. One of his earliest films was wildly out of character given his later image: the title role in the poor Roger Corman quickie, "Teenage Caveman" (1958). Vaughn's talent for expressing nervous tension came to the fore in one of his finest film performances, as a murder suspect defended by aspiring lawyer Paul Newman in "The Young Philadelphians" (1959). He won a supporting Oscar nomination and followed up with several typically "big" Hollywood productions; the best was the lively "The Magnificent Seven" (1960).
Vaughn had acted in a number of TV anthology dramas, but made the switch to series with "The Lieutenant" (NBC, 1963-64), as the superior officer who criticizes star Gary Lockwood to push him to do his best. Vaughn hit the jackpot in popularity with "The Man from U.N.C.L.E." (NBC, 1964-68), a tongue-in-cheek spy show, which followed in the wake of the hit James Bond films. As the smooth and dashingly urbane Napoleon Solo, Vaughn and co-star David McCallum were all the rage as they wore their slickly tailored 60s suits through various adventures. Eight feature films were eventually culled from the series. He also acted in films such as "Bullitt" (1968), and the unjustly overlooked "The Mind of Mr. Soames" (1970), as a compassionate scientist who revives a 30 year-old man in a coma since birth.
A serious and politically active actor, Vaughn wrote "Only Victims" (1972), a study of the Hollywood blacklist resulting from the injustices of the House Un-American Activities Committee after WWII. He also continued his academic studies, eventually earning a Ph.D. from USC, and has long been active in promoting liberal causes.
Vaughn's feature work during the 70s and beyond gradually fell into several categories: routine Hollywood genre fare ("The Towering Inferno" 1974, "Battle Beyond the Stars" 1980), offbeat but little-seen foreign films ("Babysitter" 1975, "The Last Bastion" 1984), and unabashed schlock ("C.H.U.D. II: Bud the Chud" 1989), sometimes redeemed by Vaughn's willingness to camp it up. (His Lord Byron Orlock in "Transylvania Twist" 1989, for instance, invoked Boris Karloff's famous role in "Targets" 1968.) TV work was frequent for the actor, though he never had another hit series. "The Protectors" (syndicated, 1972) rehashed "U.N.C.L.E.", but at least Vaughn had fun on one season of "The A-Team" (NBC, 1986-87) as a general who clearly suggested a retired Napoleon Solo. He was also properly nasty as a scheming businessman on "Emerald Point N.A.S." (1983-84), and has acted in many miniseries and TV-movies, often as clever villains or firm establishment types. Vaughn won an Emmy for his supporting turn in "Washington: Behind Closed Doors" (1977), played Woodrow Wilson in "Backstairs at the White House" (1979) and kidded himself amiably on "Danger Theater" (1993).
Family
FATHER: Walter Vaughn. Actor. Divorced from Vaughn's mother in 1933; died c. 1950.
MOTHER: Marcella Vaughn. Actor. Divorced from Vaughn's father in 1933.
DAUGHTER: Caitlin Vaughn.
CHILD: Cassidy Vaughn.
Companion
WIFE: Linda Staab. Married in 1974.
Milestone
1951: Moved to L.A.
1957: Feature film debut, "Hell's Crossroads"
1957: Played first leading role in features, "No Time to Be Young"
1962: Starred as A. Dunster Lowell, the title role in the NBC detective pilot, "The Boston Terrier"
1963 - 1964: First TV series, played Capt. Raymond Rambridge, one of the three leading roles, on the NBC drama series, "The Lieutenant"
1964: Played Hamlet in a production at the Pasadena Playhouse
Played agent Napoleon Solo on the popular NBC spy series, "The Man from U.N.C.L.E."
1972: First TV-movie, "The Woman Hunter"
Played Harry Rule on the syndicated detective adventure series, "The Protectors"
1976: First TV miniseries, "Captains and the Kings"
Directed episodes of the NBC drama series, "Police Woman", in the mid-1970s
Played Harlan Adams in the CBS drama series, "Emerald Point N.A.S."; Replaced Patrick O'Neal in the role
Played General Hunt Stockwell on the last season of the NBC action drama, "The A-Team"
1990: Played in "Love Letters" opposite Polly Bergen onstage in both New York and Los Angeles
1993: Hosted and served as narrator for the short-lived Fox-TV adventure spoof series, "Danger Theater"
1995: Joined the cast of the daytime drama, "As the World Turns", as attorney Rick Hamlin
1998: Had supporting role in the feature "BASEketball"
1998: Recieved star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame (July 27)
Education
Los Angeles City College - Los Angeles, California
University of Southern California - Los Angeles, California
University of Minnesota - Minneapolis, Minnesota - journalism - enrolled in 1950; began acting and won 1951 Philip Morris Intercollegiate Acting Contest; transferred to Los Angeles City College
Los Angeles State College of Applied Arts and Sciences - Los Angeles, California - theater arts - 1956 - school changed name to California State Univeristy, Los Angeles in 1972
Bibliography
"Only Victims: A Study of Show Business Blacklisting" Robert Vaughn 1972
"Christ, Shakespeare, Ho Chi Min: As I Knew Them" Robert Vaughn
Tammy Hayes
Robert Vaughn is Fantastic!
Robert Vaughn is by far the best! I love his movies (yes even "Teenage Caveman") I personally think it was ...
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Barbara Morgan
Can't get enough
I love everything Mr. Vaughn does. The best over-all, hands down, The Man From UNCLE. I watch an ...
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