Don Dubbins

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Don Dubbins
Born Donald Dubbins
June 28, 1928 (1928-06-28)
Brooklyn, New York City, USA
Died August 17, 1991 (aged 63)
Greenville, South Carolina, USA
Occupation Actor

Don Dubbins (June 28, 1928 - August 17, 1991),[1] originally Donald Dubbins, was an American actor of film and television who in his early career usually played younger military roles, particularly in such classic pictures as From Here to Eternity (1953) and The Caine Mutiny (1954). Screen giant James Cagney took a liking to Dubbins and procured roles for him in two 1956 films, These Wilder Years and Tribute to a Bad Man. In the former, Dubbins played Cagney's long-lost adopted son; in the latter, he was an unlikely romantic triangle with cattle boss Cagney for the affections of a senorita. In 1957, Dubbins played a callow young United States Marines private in Jack Webb's The D.I., meaning "Drill Instructor". In 1958, Dubbins was cast in a science fiction picture based on Jules Verne's novel From the Earth to the Moon.[2]

As Dubbins matured, he appeared in such films as The Prize in 1963, The Illustrated Man (based on a Ray Bradbury novel) in 1969, and Death Wish II in 1976.[3]

Dubbins appeared in many televisions roles, including four episodes each of CBS's Gunsmoke and Perry Mason. In 1960, Dubbins appeared in the episode "Elegy" of CBS's Twilight Zone. The next year he guest starred as a deputy who inadvertently killed his outlaw-brother in an episode of Stagecoach West, a Four Star Television series on ABC.[4] He later appeared with Walter Brennan in ABC's The Guns of Will Sonnett. He appeared twice on NBC's Little House on the Prairie with Michael Landon and five times on CBS's Barnaby Jones with Buddy Ebsen. Dubbins appeared in several episodes of Jack Webb's Dragnet 1967 series on NBC. Dubbins played the part of Billy Carter in The Incident of the Dog Days on "Rawhide".[5]

Dubbins last roles were in episodes of CBS's Knots Landing (1979), ABC's Dynasty (1981), and NBC's Highway to Heaven (1984).[6]

The Brooklyn-born Dubbins retired to Greenville, South Carolina, where his last acting was at the Warehouse Theater as Willie Loman in Death of a Salesman. Dubbins succumbed to cancer at the age of sixty-three.[7]

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