Biff Elliot | |
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Elliot as Mike Hammer, on I, the Jury |
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Born | Leon Shalek July 26, 1923 Lynn, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1948-2001 |
Spouse | Betty Dole (1948–74 her death) Connie Elliot (1977-present) |
Biff Elliot (July 26, 1923) is an American actor. He is perhaps best known for his role as popular detective Mike Hammer in the 1953 version of I, the Jury, and as his guest appearance in the Star Trek episode "The Devil in the Dark".
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Biff Elliot was born in Lynn, Massachusetts as Leon Shalek. He was the son of Jack and Susan, with Jack being a former semi-pro baseball player, then retiring and opening up a burlap-bag manufacturing business in Presque Isle, Maine.
Originally Elliot received the nickname Bith from his brothers, but later adopted to Biff when he went into boxing. When he was 16 his family moved to Presque Isle, where he became involved in boxing and then bore the name Biff Harris. Eventually Elliot went on to become the North Maine champion and even reached the New England regional championship, but once his mother found out about his fighting she refused him to continue on boxing. In 1943 Elliot signed up for the United States Army and was placed in the 34th Infantry Division, later on being stationed to North Africa.
Once the war finished Elliot was discharged and decided to return to the University of Maine in 1945. He graduated from Maine in 1949 and moved to New York in hopes of pursuing a writing career. After failing to make out as a writer, Elliot switched his attention to acting, and began taking acting courses at the actors' studio.
He first started doing stage and television work, mostly playing tough, working-class characters. Until he was spotted by a Hollywood attorney while performing a television episode, the attorney recommended him to Victor Saville, the producer who was preparing the first film adaption of Mickey Spillane's I, the Jury. When accepted for the audition Elliot was brought to Hollywood, and began preparing for his role by cramming himself with Mike Hammer novels and spending the whole night re-reading the novels. After a successful 15 minute audition Elliot was selected to become the first actor to portray the famed Mike Hammer in a motion picture, and thus his first leading role on film.
Over the next few years Elliot was a prominent fixture in classic war films of the 1950s and 60s. Appearing in films such as Between Heaven and Hell, The Enemy Below, Pork Chop Hill, and PT 109, but mostly he worked in television. In 1959, Elliot got a seemingly good break when playwright Clifford Odets happened to see I, The Jury and offered him a role in The Story on Page One, which Odets wrote and directed. Thereafter Elliot was mostly seen on television over the next decade, including an appearance on Frank Lovejoy's detective series, Meet McGraw. In 1967, he appeared in the Star Trek episode "The Devil in the Dark". A late notable role was in 1981 when he co-starred in Back to the Planet of the Apes, a TV movie. Elliot would make his final film appearance in 1986 in a comedy which he co-starred with Jack Lemmon in That's Life. His latest appearance on television was in 1986 on the set of the television series of Starman, subsequently retiring in 2001.
Since Elliot's retirement he continued to work in radio sports, covering Los Angeles sports for CBS Radio Network. Elliot was previously married to Betty Cole a former model, whom he met during his tenure at the University of Maine and married her in his sophomore year in 1948, but died in 1974. Elliot remarried in 1977 to Connie and both ccurrently reside in Los Angeles.
He was a brother of longtime CBS Radio Network sportscaster and 1950's TV game show host Win Elliott.
Elliot was a close friend of the late actor Jack Lemmon, and appeared in several of his films, including Kotch, The Front Page, and That's Life!.