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We Bid You Welcome! => Announcements => The Cemetery => Topic started by: Scatter on October 28, 2010, 07:48:43 PM

Title: "Danno" Has Booked His Last Perp
Post by: Scatter on October 28, 2010, 07:48:43 PM
LOS ANGELES – Stage and screen actor James MacArthur, who played "Danno" in the original version of television's "Hawaii Five-O," died Thursday at age 72.

MacArthur's agent, Richard Lewis, said the actor died in Florida of "natural causes," but no direct cause was specified.

In a career that spanned more than four decades, MacArthur was most recognized for his role as detective Danny "Danno" Williams on "Hawaii Five-O," which aired from 1968 to 1980. Episodes often ended with detective Steve McGarrett, the lead character, uttering what became a pop culture catch phrase: "Book 'em, Danno."

Jack Lord, who starred as McGarrett, died in 1998.

MacArthur quit the role of McGarrett's sidekick a year before the program's final season.

"Quite frankly, I grew bored," he explained on his website. "The stories became more bland and predictable and presented less and less challenge to me as an actor."

"Hawaii Five-O," one of the longest running crime shows in TV history with 278 episodes, was shot on location in the Hawaiian islands. It was the first Hawaii-based national TV series.

Glenn Cannon, a University of Hawaii theater professor who had a recurring role as the district attorney in the original series, said Lord and MacArthur were "a great part" of the team that produced the series and kept it "strong and positive."

The use of many local actors, scenery and flavor of the islands led Hawaii residents "to feel very positively about the series," added Cannon, who still acts, directs and leads the local branch of the Screen Actors Guild. "People in Hawaii felt they had an ownership of the series."

The drama has been remade by CBS with a new cast this season.

MacArthur, born Dec. 8, 1937, seemed destined to become an actor. He was the adopted son of playwright Charles MacArthur and Helen Hayes, an award-winning actress often referred to as "First Lady of the American Theater." Silent film star Lillian Gish was his godmother.
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"They did teach me a lot about the theatre just through my life with them," he said of his parents in a 1957 interview in Teen Life magazine. "They never pushed me in any direction. Any major decision has always been my own to make."

James MacArthur made his stage debut at age 8 in a summer stock production of "The Corn is Green."

His breakout role was in the 1957 "Climax!" television series production of "The Young Stranger," in which he starred as the 17-year-old son of a movie executive who has a run-in with the law.

He entered Harvard that same year, but dropped out in his sophomore year to pursue an acting career.

As a young actor, James MacArthur appeared in the Walt Disney movies "Kidnapped," "Third Man on the Mountain," "Swiss Family Robinson" and "The Light in the Forest."

He also had roles in "The Interns, "Spencer's Mountain," "Battle of the Bulge" and "Hang 'Em High," as well as many guest roles on TV series such as "Gunsmoke."

He performed in many stage plays, including the lead role of Hildy Johnson in a 1981 production of "The Front Page," which was co-written by his father in the late 1920s, at the Stanford Community Theatre in Palo Alto, Calif.

His live acting career won him the 1961 Theatre World Award for best new actor for his performance in "Invitation to a March."

James MacArthur said that one of his favorite "Hawaii Five-O" episodes was a 1975 segment called "Retire in Sunny Hawaii Forever" because it marked one of the rare times that he worked on screen with his mother. Hayes played Danno's Aunt Clara, who visits Hawaii and helps the detectives solve a murder.

Asked by the Hawaii Star Bulletin newspaper in 2003 about his fondest memories about working on "Hawaii Five-O," he replied: "Living in Hawaii."

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Title: Re: "Danno" Has Booked His Last Perp
Post by: GAKENSTEIN on October 28, 2010, 09:37:43 PM
Kind of odd.  When I was a kid watching Hawaii Five-O, I used to mistakenly think Danno was a grownup Johnny Sheffield who played Boy in the Weismuller Tarzan films.  Sheffield died just last week.
Title: Re: "Danno" Has Booked His Last Perp
Post by: Unknown Primate on October 28, 2010, 11:01:37 PM
He did an amazing job in SPENCER'S MOUNTAIN, which is a great film in it's own right.
Title: Re: "Danno" Has Booked His Last Perp
Post by: TheWolfman on October 29, 2010, 06:48:32 AM
 You are correct GAKENSTEIN, James MacAurthor did play the role of 'BOY' in those Tarzan movies.
Title: Re: "Danno" Has Booked His Last Perp
Post by: packy120353 on October 29, 2010, 07:07:01 AM
QuoteJames MacAurthor did play the role of 'BOY' in those Tarzan movies
.


Not so sure bout that...but he sure built a nice treehouse in Swiss Family Robinson!
Title: Re: "Danno" Has Booked His Last Perp
Post by: Sean on October 29, 2010, 08:52:38 AM
RIP, Danno.  I remember a H50 episode where McGarret told Danno to take Chin's car and go do something-----then he told Chin to go across the island and go do something else.... seconds after he just gave Chin's car to Danno.... What, did Chin have to freaking WALK?  Fabulous.
Title: Re: "Danno" Has Booked His Last Perp
Post by: charp13 on October 29, 2010, 11:21:33 AM
Awwww... I read this on D23 last night and was so sad...  Like many others in the 70s, I had a crush on Danno and I loved him so much in Swiss Family Robinson. I really hate getting old.......I take it ALL back when I said "I can't wait til' I get older".  Uggh- He'll always be young and handsome standing with his back to the ocean waves- in my memories.
Title: Re: "Danno" Has Booked His Last Perp
Post by: typhooforme on November 03, 2010, 09:03:05 AM
Quote from: TheWolfman on October 29, 2010, 06:48:32 AM
You are correct GAKENSTEIN, James MacAurthor did play the role of 'BOY' in those Tarzan movies.

Nope, we're talking two distinctly separate actors here--Johnny Sheffield, who died recently, was BOY in the Tarzan films.  James MacArthur never played Boy.  He did have one guest appearance as a doctor on one episode of the Ron Ely TARZAN series, however.

One of MacArthur's roles I remember best, besides SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON, is another Disney one--Conrad Richter's THE LIGHT IN THE FOREST, in which he played a White boy who'd been captured and raised as a Native American.  Good stuff.  I read the news of MacArthur's passing and my heart fell.  He was a part of Hollywood history, indeed.