John Vivyan

John Vivyan
Born John R. Vukayan
May 31, 1915
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Died December 20, 1983 (aged 68)
Santa Monica, Los Angeles County
California, U.S.
Resting place
Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery
Occupation Actor
Years active 19491983

John Vivyan (May 31, 1915 December 20, 1983)[1] was an American actor active primarily between 1957 and 1970. He was known for his starring role as the honest debonair gambler in the CBS adventure series, Mr. Lucky.

Early life and career

Born John R. Vukayan to Serbian immigrant parents in Chicago, Illinois, Vivyan served in the Guadalcanal campaign with the United States Army Company "E", the 132nd Infantry Regiment during World War II. He was wounded in the leg.[2]

John Vukayan changed his surname to Vivyan, like other aspiring actors, after attending the American Academy of Dramatic Art under the GI Bill of Rights. He first appeared on stage in the late 1940s before taking film and television roles.

Vivyan's first screen role was in the 1949 episode "Two Sharp Knives" of the Studio One anthology series at a time when relatively few residences had television access. In 1957, he appeared as the character Richard Goff with Broderick Crawford in the episode "Nitro" of the syndicated series, Highway Patrol. He guest starred in two other 1950s syndicated programs too, Harbor Command and State Trooper. In 1957, appeared as the character Hewitt in "The Laura Hunter Story" on CBS's The Millionaire. He starred too as Mack Barron in the episode "The Little Witness" on Loretta Young's NBC anthology series.

Thereafter, he appeared in three Warner Brothers series on ABC, two westerns, Colt .45 (as George F. Foley in "The Mirage") and Sugarfoot (as Victor Valla in the episode "Deadlock"), and then on the detective series 77 Sunset Strip (as Mitch in "The Girl Who Couldn't Remember"). Vivyan appeared as LeBow in "Duel at the Oaks" in the CBS western Yancy Derringer, starring Jock Mahoney. He appeared twice in ABC's The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp starring Hugh O'Brian, twice on CBS's Rawhide, and twice on NBC's Bat Masterson starring Gene Barry. He appeared four times from 1957 to 1959 as different characters on the ABC/WB western series, Maverick. He also appeared in the syndicated western series, Tombstone Territory, in the episode entitled "Desert Survival". He appeared as the gangster Duke in the 1958 Adventures of Superman, "The Gentle Monster."

Vivyan appeared twice in the role of Jason Hemp, a dishonest Texas rancher, on ABC's Disneyland in the western miniseries Texas John Slaughter, with Tom Tryon in the title role. He also guest starred on Richard Carlson's syndiczted western series, Mackenzie's Raiders.

Between 1959 and 1961, Vivyan appeared nine times as Lepke, nickname of mobster Louis Buchalter, on NBC's crime drama The Lawless Years, set during the Roaring 20s. Five of those appearances were on the multi-part episode "Louy K".[3]

In 1962, Vivyan appeared twice on the syndicated western anthology Death Valley Days. That same year he appeared as Shelly Hanson in NBC's modern-day western, Empire, starring Richard Egan as the rancher Jim Redigo, in the episode entitled "Down There, the World". He appeared on two CBS sitcoms too: Lucille Ball's The Lucy Show in the 1963 episode "Lucy Becomes a Reporter" and Petticoat Junction as Lane Haggard in the 1964 episode "Visit from a Big Star". In 1969, he was teamed up with Canadian-born Hollywood actress Yvonne De Carlo in Cactus Flower. The play was a big success, drawing full houses everywhere it played.

Vivyan made relatively few appearances after 1970, when he guest starred once on Efrem Zimbalist, Jr.'s ABC crime drama The F.B.I. His last two appearances were on CBS in 1982 as Mr. Mittenhoff in the episode "Jennifer's and Johnny's Charity" on the sitcom WKRP in Cincinnati, and in 1983 as Farley in the episode "Betty Grable Flies Again" on the detective series Simon & Simon.

Death

Vivyan died on December 20, 1983 in Santa Monica, California, at the age of 68. He is interred at Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery in Los Angeles.

References

  1. "Social Security Death Index: John Vivyan". ssdi.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Retrieved January 8, 2009. Most Internet sites, including findagrave.com, give his year of birth as 1916.
  2. p.106 San Antonio Express April 3, 1960
  3. "Full cast and crew for The Lawless Years". imdb.com. Retrieved January 8, 2009.

External links