Stacy Keach







































Stacy Keach

StacyKeachMay07.jpg
Stacy Keach in May 2007

Born
Walter Stacy Keach Jr.


(1941-06-02) June 2, 1941 (age 77)

Savannah, Georgia, U.S.

Education
University of California, Berkeley (BA)
Yale University
Occupation Actor, narrator
Years active 1964–present
Spouse(s) Kathryn Baker
(m. 1964; div. ?)
Marilyn Aiken
(m. 1975; div. 1979)
Jill Donahue
(m. 1981; div. 1986)



Malgosia Tomassi
(m. 1986)

Parent(s)
Stacy Keach, Sr.
Mary Peckham
Relatives
James Keach (brother)
Website www.gostacykeach.com

Walter Stacy Keach Jr. (born June 2, 1941) is an American actor. Highly prolific, he has played mainly dramatic roles throughout his career, often in law enforcement or as a private detective. His most prominent role was as Mickey Spillane's fictional detective Mike Hammer, which he played in numerous stand-alone television films and at least three different television series throughout the 1980s and 1990s. The role earned him a Golden Globe Award nomination in 1984.


He has also performed as a narrator for programs including CNBC'S American Greed (2008–) and various educational television programs. Comedic roles include his role in the Fox sitcom Titus (2000–2002) as Ken, the father of comedian Christopher Titus, and as Sergeant Stedenko in Cheech & Chong's films Up in Smoke (1978) and Nice Dreams (1981). His most recent recurring roles include two seasons as Henry Pope, the warden, in the series Prison Break (2005–2007); "Pops", the father of the main character from the boxing drama Lights Out (2011); the elderly father Bob on the sitcom Crowded (2016); and the father of Matt LeBlanc's protagonist Adam on Man With A Plan (2016–). Keach won a Golden Globe Award and was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for the television miniseries Hemingway (1988).




Contents






  • 1 Early life


  • 2 Career


    • 2.1 Theatre


    • 2.2 Music


    • 2.3 Films


    • 2.4 Television


    • 2.5 Narrator




  • 3 Personal life


  • 4 Filmography


    • 4.1 Films


    • 4.2 Television




  • 5 References


  • 6 External links





Early life


Keach was born in Savannah, Georgia, to Mary Cain (née Peckham), an actress, and Walter Stacy Keach Sr., a theatre director, drama teacher, and actor.[1] His brother James Keach is an actor and television director. Keach graduated from Van Nuys High School in June 1959, where he was class president,[2] then earned two BA degrees at the University of California, Berkeley (1963): one in English, the other in Dramatic Art. He earned a Master of Fine Arts at the Yale School of Drama in 1966 and was a Fulbright Scholar at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art.[citation needed]


While studying in London, Keach met Laurence Olivier, his acting hero.[3]



Career



Theatre


Keach played the title role in MacBird!, an Off-Broadway anti-war satire by Barbara Garson staged at the Village Gate in 1966. In 1967, he was cast, again Off-Broadway, in George Tabori's The Niggerlovers with Morgan Freeman in his acting debut. To this day, Freeman credits Keach with teaching him the most about acting.[4] In 1967, Keach also starred in We Bombed in New Haven, a play by Joseph Heller that premiered in New Haven at the Yale Repertory Theatre and later was produced on Broadway. Keach first appeared on Broadway in 1969 as Buffalo Bill in Indians by Arthur Kopit.[5] Early in his career, he was credited as Stacy Keach, Jr. to distinguish himself from his father. He played the lead actor in The Nude Paper Sermon, an avant-garde musical theatre piece for media presentation, commissioned by Nonesuch Records by composer Eric Salzman.


Keach has won numerous awards, including Obie Awards, Drama Desk Awards and Vernon Rice Awards. In the early 1980s, he starred in the title role of the national touring company of the musical Barnum, composed by Cy Coleman.[6] In 1991 and 1996 he won Helen Hayes Awards for Outstanding Actor for his work in Richard III and Macbeth with the Shakespeare Theatre Company. In 1998, he was one of the three characters in a London West End production of 'Art' with David Dukes and George Wendt.


In 2006, Keach performed the lead role in Shakespeare's King Lear at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago. In 2008, he played Merlin in Lerner and Loewe's Camelot, done with the New York Philharmonic. In the summer of 2009, Shakespeare Theatre Company remounted the production of King Lear at Sidney Harman Hall in Washington, D.C., for which Keach won another Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Actor.[7][8]


He has played the title role in two separate productions of Hamlet.[9]


In 2008 and 2009, Keach portrayed Richard M. Nixon in the U.S. touring company of the play Frost/Nixon.[7]


On December 16, 2010, Keach began performances as patriarch Lyman Wyeth in the off-Broadway premiere of Jon Robin Baitz' acclaimed new play Other Desert Cities. The production transferred to Broadway's Booth Theatre, where it opened November 3, 2011.


Keach is a founding member of L.A. Theatre Works. He has performed leads in many productions with the company, including 'Willy Loman' in Death of a Salesman and 'John Proctor' in The Crucible.[10]


He was scheduled to return to Broadway in December 2014 in the revival of Love Letters at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre alongside Diana Rigg, but the production closed before Keach and Rigg began their runs.[11]


Keach was scheduled to play Ernest Hemingway in Jim McGrath's one-man play Pamplona at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago from May 30 to June 25, 2017. Keach appeared in previews of Pamplona, May 19 through May 28, and was well-received by audiences. He was reported as sick on opening night, but still went on stage. The production was halted about an hour into the performance due to his ill health.[12] The following two nights' performances were also canceled, and on June 2, the Goodman Theatre announced that the entire run would be canceled after Keach's doctors advised a period of rest and recuperation.[13]


In February 2018, the Goodman announced that Keach would return to the role July 10 through August 18. Keach said it would fulfill and obligation "to the play, to the city and to myself".[14][15]



Music


Keach sang backing vocals on the Judy Collins hit song "Amazing Grace". He is also credited with co-writing a song, "Easy Times", on the Judy Collins live album Living.



Films


Keach played a rookie policeman in The New Centurions (1972), opposite George C. Scott. That year he also starred in Fat City, a boxing film directed by John Huston. He was the first choice for the role of Damien Karras in the 1973 movie The Exorcist, but he did not accept the role. He went on to play Kane in the 1980 movie The Ninth Configuration, written and directed by Blatty; this role was itself intended for Nicol Williamson.


Stacy Keach's storytelling talent as narrator was given worldwide exposure in the 1973 Formula One racing documentary Champions Forever, The Quick and the Dead by Claude du Boc.


Keach played Cheech & Chong's police department nemesis Sgt. Stedenko in Up in Smoke and Nice Dreams. He also appeared as Barabbas in Jesus of Nazareth. In 1978 he played a role of explorer and scientist in The Mountain of the Cannibal God, co-starring former Bond girl Ursula Andress.[7] The film became a cult favorite as a "video nasty".


One of his most convincing[to whom?] screen performances was as Frank James (elder brother of Jesse) in The Long Riders (1980). His brother James played Jesse James. In 1982 Keach starred in Butterfly with Pia Zadora.


He portrayed a white supremacist in American History X, alongside Edward Norton and Edward Furlong. In Oliver Stone's 2008 biopic W., Keach portrays a Texas preacher whose spiritual guidance begins with George W. Bush's AA experience, but extends long thereafter.


Keach also starred in the TV film Ring of Death playing a sadistic prison warden who runs an underground fight club where prisoners compete for their lives.


He had also starred in the movie Planes as Skipper Riley, main character Dusty Crophopper's flight instructor. He reprised the role in Planes: Fire & Rescue.


In 2012 Keach had a significant supporting role in The Bourne Legacy, and in the 2013 Alexander Payne film Nebraska.


In 2017 the film Gotti will be released. Keach plays the part of Neil Dellacroce, the notorious underboss of the Gambino crime family.



Television




Keach as Mike Hammer and Tanya Roberts as Velda in Murder Me, Murder You in 1983


One of Keach's early television roles was in 1958 on the syndicated romantic comedy, How to Marry a Millionaire, with Barbara Eden and Merry Anders. His first-ever experience as a series regular on a television program was playing the lead role of Lieutenant Ben Logan in Caribe in 1975.[16] He played Barabbas in 1977's Jesus of Nazareth, and portrayed Jonas Steele, a psychic and Scout of the United States Army in the 1982 CBS miniseries, The Blue and the Gray. He later portrayed and is best known as Mike Hammer in the CBS television series Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer and The New Mike Hammer from 1984 to 1987. He returned to the role of Hammer in Mike Hammer, Private Eye, a new syndicated series that aired from 1997 to 1998. In 1988, he starred as Ernest Hemingway in the made-for-TV movie Hemingway.[17]


In 2000, he played Ken Titus, the father of the title character in Fox's sitcom Titus. Cast members of Titus have commented they enjoyed working with Keach because he would find a way to make even the driest line funny.[18]


Keach lent his voice to The Simpsons episodes "Hungry, Hungry Homer", "Old Yeller-Belly", "Marge and Homer Turn a Couple Play", and "Waiting for Duffman", portraying Duff Brewery President Howard K. Duff VIII, and the Batman Beyond episode "Lost Soul" as an artificial intelligence. He also guest starred in a 2005 episode of the sitcom Will & Grace, and had a recurring role as Warden Henry Pope in the Fox drama Prison Break.


In November 2013, Keach appeared on the Fox comedy series Brooklyn Nine-Nine, in the episode "Old School".[19] In February 2015, Keach started guest appearing in NCIS: New Orleans as Cassius Pride, father of NCIS Agent Dwayne Pride.[20] In 2017, Keach started guest appearing in Man with a Plan as Joe Burns, father of Adam Burns (played by co-star Matt LeBlanc) and was later promoted to series regular status for season two.



Narrator


Stacy Keach narrated several episodes of Nova, National Geographic, and various other informational series. From 1989-92, he was host of the syndicated informational reenactment show, Missing Reward, which had a similar format to the popular Unsolved Mysteries at the time. From 1992-95, he became the voice-over narrator for the paranormal series Haunted Lives: True Ghost Stories.[citation needed]


Beginning in 1999, he served as the narrator for the home video clip show World's Most Amazing Videos, which is now seen on Spike TV. He currently hosts The Twilight Zone radio series. Keach can also be heard narrating the CNBC series American Greed. For the PBS series American Experience, he narrated The Kennedys, among others.[citation needed]


In 2008, Keach once again reprised his famous role as Mike Hammer in a series of full-cast radio dramatisations for Blackstone Audio. (He also arranged and performed the music for the audio dramas. His wife, Malgosia Tomassi also starred in the dramas playing Maya Ricci, a yoga instructor.) Keach has also read many of Mickey Spillane's original Mike Hammer novels as Audiobooks.


Keach played the role of John in The Truth & Life Dramatized Audio Bible, a 22-hour audio version of the RSV-CE translation of the New Testament.[21] He also voiced both Job and Paul the Apostle in The Word of Promise, a 2007 dramatic audio presentation based on the New King James Version.[22]


On January 6, 2014, Keach became the official voice of The Opie and Anthony Channel on SiriusXM Satellite Radio (Sirius Channel 206, XM Channel 103).[citation needed]



Personal life




Keach's star at the Orpheum Theatre, 2010


Keach was born with a cleft lip and a partial cleft of the hard palate, and he underwent numerous operations as a child. Throughout his adult life he has often worn a mustache to hide the scars. He is now the honorary chairman of the Cleft Palate Foundation, and advocates for insurance coverage for such surgeries.[23]


In 1984, London police arrested Keach at Heathrow Airport for possession of cocaine. Keach pleaded guilty, and served six months at Reading Prison.[24]


Keach stated that his time in prison (which he said was the lowest point of his life) and the friendship he formed with a priest during that time led to his conversion to Roman Catholicism. Subsequently, he and his wife met with Pope John Paul II to have their son blessed. His wife, Malgosia Tomassi, had gone to the same school as the Pope had attended in Warsaw when young.[25]


Keach has been married four times: to Kathryn Baker in 1964, to Marilyn Aiken in 1975, to Jill Donahue in 1981, and to Malgosia Tomassi around 1986.[citation needed] In 2015, Keach became a Polish citizen.[26]


He suffered a mild stroke in March 2009, from which he has made a full recovery.[9][27][28]



Filmography



Films












































































































































































































































































































































































































































Title
Year
Role
Notes

The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter

1968
Blount


Brewster McCloud

1970
Abraham Wright


End of the Road
Jacob Horner


The Traveling Executioner
Jonas Candide


Doc

1971
Doc Holliday


The New Centurions

1972
Roy Fehler


Fat City
Billy Tully


The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean
Original Bad Bob the Albino


Wilbur and Orville: The First to Fly

1973

Wilbur Wright


Luther

Martin Luther


The Gravy Train

1974
Calvin


Watched!
Mike Mandell/Sonny


Conduct Unbecoming

1975
Captain Harper


Street People

1976
Charlie Hanson


The Killer Inside Me
Lou Ford


The Squeeze

1977
Jim Naboth


The Greatest Battle

1978
Major Mannfred Roland


Gray Lady Down
Capt. Bennett


Up in Smoke
Sergeant Stedanko


Two Solitudes
Huntley McQueen


Mountain of the Cannibal God

1979
Professor Edward Foster


The Ninth Configuration

1980
Col. Vincent Kane


The Long Riders

Frank James


Road Games

1981
Patrick Quid


Nice Dreams
Sergeant Stedanko


Butterfly

1982
Jess Tyler


That Championship Season
James Daley


False Identity

1990
Ben Driscoll/Harlan Errickson


Class of 1999
Dr. Bob Forest


Milena

1991
Jesenski


Sunset Grill

1993
Harrison Shelgrove


Batman: Mask of the Phantasm
Carl Beaumont / Voice of Phantasm

Voice

New Crime City

1994
Wynorski


Raw Justice
Deputy Mayor Bob Jenkins


Escape From L.A.

1996
Commander Malloy


Prey of the Jaguar
The Commander


The Sea Wolf

1997
Captain Wolf


American History X

1998
Cameron Alexander


Future Fear
General Wallace


Fear Runs Silent

1999
Mr. Hill


Children of the Corn 666: Isaac's Return
Dr. Michaels


Unshackled

2000
Warden Kelso


Icebreaker
Bill Foster


Militia
George Armstrong Montgomery


Mercy Streets
Tom


Sunstorm

2001
General John Parker


Birds of Passage
Captain Savienko


When Eagles Strike

2003
General Thurmond


The Hollow

2004
Claus Van Ripper


Caught in the Headlights
Mr. Jones


Galaxy Hunter
3V3


El Padrino: The Latin Godfather
Governor Lancaster


Man with the Screaming Brain

2005
Dr. Ivanov


Keep Your Distance
Brooks Voight


Come Early Morning

2006
Owen Allen


Jesus, Mary and Joey
Jack O'Callahan


Honeydripper

2007
Sheriff


W.

2008
Earle Hudd


Chicago Overcoat

2009
Ray Berkowski


The Boxer
Joe


Weather Wars

2011
Marcus Grange


Cellmates
Warden Merville


Jerusalem Countdown
Jackson


The Bourne Legacy

2012
Turso


The Great Chameleon
Max


Ooga Booga

2013



Planes
Skipper
Voice only

Nebraska
Ed Pegram


Planes: Fire & Rescue

2014
Skipper
Voice

Sin City: A Dame to Kill For

Wallenquist


If I Stay
Grandpa


Truth

2015
Lt. Colonel Bill Burkett


Cell

2016
Charles Ardai


Gold
Clive Coleman


Girlfriend's Day

2017
Gundy


Gotti

2018

Aniello "Neil" Dellacroce



Television

































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Title
Year
Role
Notes

Channing

1964
The Colleague
Episode: "The Face in the Sun"

The Winter's Tale

1967
Autolycus

Television film

Macbeth

1968

Banquo
Television film

NET Playhouse

1971

Wilbur Wright
Episode: "The Wright Brothers"

The Man of Destiny

1973

Napoleon Bonaparte
Television film

All the Kind Strangers

1974
Jimmy Wheeler
Television film

Great Performances
Chorus
Episode: "Antigone"

Caribe
1975
Lieutenant Ben Logan
6 episodes

Dynasty

1976
Matt Blackwood

Miniseries

Lincoln
Politician
Episode: "Crossing Fox River"

Jesus of Nazareth

1977

Barabbas
Miniseries; episode: "Part 2"

The Fitzpatricks

1978
Unnamed character
Episode: "The New Fitzpatrick"

Saturday Night Live
Man in Cold As Ice
Episode: "Christopher Lee/Meatloaf"

A Rumor of War

1980
Maj. Ball
Miniseries

The Blue and the Gray

1982
Jonas Steele
Miniseries

Princess Daisy

1983
Prince Alexander "Stash" Valensky
Miniseries

Murder Me, Murder You

Mike Hammer
Television film

Mistral's Daughter

1984
Julien Mistral
Miniseries

More Than Murder

Mike Hammer
Television film

Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer
1984–1985

Mike Hammer
Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Television Series - Drama

The Return of Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer

1986

Mike Hammer
Television film

Intimate Strangers
Dr. Jeff Bierston
Television film

The New Mike Hammer
1986–1987

Mike Hammer

Television series

Hemingway

1988

Ernest Hemingway
Miniseries
Golden Globe Award for Best Actor - Miniseries or Television Film (tied with Michael Caine for Jack the Ripper)
Nominated—Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor - Miniseries or a Movie

The Forgotten

1989
Adam Roth
Television film

Mike Hammer: Murder Takes All

Mike Hammer
Television film

Missing: Reward
1989-1992
Host
Television series

The Mysteries of the Dark Jungle

1991
Colonel Edward Corishant
Miniseries

Mission of the Shark: The Saga of the U.S.S. Indianapolis

Captain Charles Butler McVay III, USN
Television film

Lincoln

1992
George McClellan (voice only)
Television film

Haunted Lives: True Ghost Stories
Narrator (voice only)
Television series

Revenge on the Highway
Claude Sams
Television film

Rio Diablo

1993
Kansas
Television film

Body Bags
Richard Coberts
Television film

In The Heat Of The Night
Wade Hatton
Television film

Against Their Will: Women in Prison

1994
Jack Devlin
Television film

Texas

Sam Houston

ABC Television film

Young Ivanhoe

1995
Pembrooke
Television film

Amanda & the Alien
Emmitt Mallory
Television film

The Pathfinder

1996
Compte du Leon
Television film

Promised Land

1997
Ned Bernhart
Episode: "Downsized"

Legend of the Lost Tomb
Dr. William Bent
Television film

Murder in My Mind
Cargill
Television film

Mike Hammer, Private Eye
1997–1998

Mike Hammer
26 episodes

Touched by an Angel
1997, 2003
Maury Hoover / Ty Duncan
2 episodes

Rugrats
1998–2001
Marvin Finster (voice)
3 episodes: The Family Tree, Parts One and Two; Finsterella

Batman Beyond
1999
Vance (voice)
Episode: "Lost Soul"

The Courage to Love

2000
Jean Baptiste
Television film

The Outer Limits
Cord van Owen
Episode: "The Gun"

Titus
2000–2002
Ken Titus
54 episodes

Lightning: Fire from the Sky
2001
Bart Pointdexter
Television film

The Zeta Project
Roland de Flores (voice)
Episode: "The Next Gun"

The Simpsons
2001–2016
Howard Duff / Various (voice)
6 episodes

The Santa Trap
2002
Max Hurst
Television film

The Zeta Project
Roland de Flores (voice)
Episode: "The Next Gun"

Girls Club
Harold Falcon
Episode: "Book of Virtues"

Miracle Dogs
2003
C.W. Aldrich
Television film

Frozen Impact
Pete Crane
Television film

What's New, Scooby-Doo?
2003, 2005
Harold Lind / The Mayor (voice)
2 episodes

George Lopez
2005
Blaine McNamara
Episode: "George Stare-oids Down Jason"

Will & Grace
Wendell Schacter
Episode: "From Queer to Eternity"

Prison Break
2005–2007

Henry Pope
23 episodes

Desolation Canyon

2006
Samuel Kendrick
Television film

Fatal Contact: Bird Flu in America
Secretary Collin Reed
Television film

Blackbeard
Captain Benjamin Hornigold
Television film

Death Row (a.k.a. Haunted Prison)
John Elias
Television film

ER
2007
Mike Gates
3 episodes

American Greed
2007–present
Narrator (voice only)
Television series transmitted on the Consumer News-and-Business Channel

Lone Rider

2008
Robert Hattaway
Television film

Ring of Death
Warden Golan
Television film

Meteor

2009
Sheriff Crowe
Television film

The Nanny Express
Rev. McGuiness
Television film

Two and a Half Men

2010
Tom, Chelsea's father
4 episodes

Lights Out

2011
Pops Leary
13 episodes

Bored to Death
Bergeron
2 episodes

Mater's Tall Tales
Skipper (voice)
Episode: "Air Mater"

Hindenburg [de]
Edward van Zandt
Television film

30 Rock

2012
Himself
Episode: "Murphy Brown Lied to Us"

Anything For Money
Narrator
Song written and composed to promote CNBC's series American Greed[29] (see above)

The Neighbors
2012–2013
Dominick Weaver
3 episodes

Sean Saves the World
2013
Lee Thompson
3 episodes

1600 Penn
Senator Frohm Thoroughgood
2 episodes

Anger Management
Ray
Episode: "Charlie and Deception Therapy"

Brooklyn Nine-Nine
Jimmy Brogan
Episode: "Old School"

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit

2014
Orion Bauer
Episode: "American Disgrace"[30]

Enlisted
Patrick
Episode: "Vets"

Jennifer Falls
Mike
Episode: "Jennifer's Song"

The Exes
Bill Drake
Episode: "An Officer and a Dental Man"

Hot in Cleveland

2015
Alex
2 episodes

Full Circle
Bud O'Rourke
8 episodes

NCIS: New Orleans
2015, 2017
Cassius Pride
3 episodes

Crowded
2016
Bob Moore
13 episodes

Blunt Talk
Arthur Bronson
2 episodes

Ray Donovan
Marty (The Texan)
2 episodes

Blue Bloods
2016-2019
Archbishop Kevin Kearns
4 episodes

Man with a Plan
2017–present
Joe Burns
23 episodes


References





  1. ^ "Stacy Keach profile". Filmreference.com. Retrieved 2013-02-22..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ "Thomas Del Ruth Interview". The Television Academy Foundation. January 18, 2007. Retrieved 2018-05-18.


  3. ^ Hannan, Caryn (January 1, 1999). Georgia Biographical Dictionary. Vol 1. Somerset Publishers. p. 51. ISBN 978-1878592422. Retrieved 2018-05-18.


  4. ^ "James Lipton Takes on Three". Million Dollar Baby, DVD, directed by Clint Eastwood


  5. ^ "History". Brooks Atkinson Theatre. Retrieved 2018-05-18.


  6. ^ Weiss, Michael J. (August 10, 1981). "Stacy Keach and Bride Jill Have Got Their Act Together and Put It on the Road". People. Retrieved 2018-05-18.


  7. ^ abc Marks, Peter (June 14, 2009). "Enter the King, With New Rules". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2009-07-16.


  8. ^ "The Plays - Production Details". The Shakespeare Theatre Company. Archived from the original on 2009-07-08. Retrieved 2009-07-16. King Lear by William Shakespeare, directed by Robert Falls, 6/16/2009 - 7/26/2009


  9. ^ ab Boehm, Mike. Stacy Keach Suffers Mild Stroke Los Angeles Times, March 18, 2009


  10. ^ King, Susan (March 31, 2002). "Much to Do in a Few Short Radio Days". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-06-12.


  11. ^ Cox, Gordon (December 9, 2014). "Broadway's 'Love Letters' to Close". Variety. Retrieved 2018-05-18.


  12. ^ Jones, Chris (May 31, 2017). "The Herculean efforts of Stacy Keach at the Goodman". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2017-06-06.


  13. ^ Weiss, Hedy (June 3, 2017). "Goodman cancels full run of 'Pamplona' as Stacy Keach recuperates". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2017-06-06.


  14. ^ Hetrick, Adam (February 6, 2018). "Stacy Keach to Bring Pamplona Back to the Goodman Theatre". Playbill. Retrieved June 3, 2018.


  15. ^ Rooney, David (February 6, 2018). "Stacy Keach to Return After Illness to Hemingway Bio-Drama 'Pamplona'". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved June 3, 2018.


  16. ^ Henderson, Kathy (December 6, 1992). "His Practical Approach: Stacy Keach's Heart is With the Stage But TV Suits His Life and Family Fine". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2013-02-22.


  17. ^ "Stacy as Hemingway". Gostacykeach.com. Retrieved 2017-05-28.


  18. ^ Commentary found in Titus Season 1&2 DVD.


  19. ^ "Watch Brooklyn Nine-Nine Season 1 Episode 8: Old School". TV Guide. Retrieved May 28, 2017.


  20. ^ Walker, Dave (January 13, 2015). "'NCIS: New Orleans:' Stacy Keach cast as Pride's dad for a Mardi Gras-themed episode to air on Fat Tuesday". The Times-Picayune. New Orleans. Retrieved 2018-05-18.


  21. ^ "Free business profile". truthandlifebible.com. Retrieved May 28, 2017.


  22. ^ "The Word of Promise App". FutureSoft. Retrieved September 27, 2017.


  23. ^ "Stacy Keach - Links". Archived from the original on 2009-10-22. Retrieved 2009-07-16.
    stacykeach.com



  24. ^ "Keach Appeal Rejected On Cocaine Sentence". The New York Times. Associated Press. December 19, 1984. Retrieved 2009-07-16.


  25. ^ Raymond Arroyo (May 22, 2014). "Stacy Keach with Raymond Arroyo". The World Over. EWTN.


  26. ^ "Habit and Armour: Cast". Arkana Studio.


  27. ^ "Star Keach recovering from stroke". BBC News. March 19, 2009. Retrieved 2009-07-16.


  28. ^ Dobuzinskis, Alex; Bob Tourtellotte; Paul Simao (March 18, 2009). "Stacy Keach had mild stroke: spokesman". Reuters. Retrieved 2009-07-16.


  29. ^ "American Greed: "Anything For Money"". YouTube. 2012-11-07. Retrieved 2013-02-22.


  30. ^ "American Disgrace". IMDb. October 1, 2014. Retrieved May 28, 2017.




External links








  • Stacy Keach - official website


  • Stacy Keach on IMDb


  • Stacy Keach at the Internet Broadway Database Edit this at Wikidata


  • Stacy Keach at the Internet Off-Broadway Database

  • Cleft Palate Foundation


  • BroadwayWorld.com interview with Stacy Keach, September 23, 2008










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