ee Philips (January 10. 1927 - March 3. 1999) |
Marriages: (1) Jean Marie Allison (actress) (Nov 16. 1951 - bfr 1956, divorced) (2) Barbara Schrader (Dec 23. 1956 - Dec 31. 1980, divorced) Daughters: Caitlin Meg Philips (b.Oct 9. 1957) Julie Amanda Philips (b. Aug 14. 1960) actress |
Lee Philips was born as Leon Friedman on January 10, 1927 in New York City, New York, USA.
His parents were Abraham & Frances Friedman from Poland and Russia,
respectively. After attending public schools in Brooklyn he went to study (Bachelor of
Arts) at the Adelphi College, Garden City, Long Island in New York with Harold Clurman
(theatre director and drama critic).
Whilst in college he started performing with an off-Broadway
group Interplayers at The Circle Theatre, .... Philips' original intention was to be a writer, but he changed to acting on the advice of veteran showman, John Golden, who saw him in a school production.
Philips majored in creative writing and after graduation
(Class of 1950) he married another Adelphi graduate and actress Jean Allison
on November 16. 1951. After a first appearance in The Big Story (NBC, Oct 31. 1952) he appeared in two classic 1950s television productions: an episode of The Philco Television Playhouse: "Marty" (Goodyear/NBC, May 24. 1953) and Studio One's "12 Angry Men" (CBS, Sep 20. 1954) where, credited as Lee Phillips, he was Juror Number 5. Surely one of the high points in the history of television. The script was re-written for the stage in 1955 and made into a movie in 1957. As sober, good-looking dramatic actor, this Navy veteran's acting career started on Broadway where in January 1954 he made his debut with an understudy role with Mademoiselle Colombe which was short-lived. (Longacre Theatre, Jan 4. 1954 - Feb 27. 1954). In Wedding Breakfast he replaced Anthony Franciosa (48th Street Theatre, from Jan. 11 1955 until closing in Feb 26. 1955).
Jean Allison and Lee Philips, scored personal triumphs in the John Van Druten comedy The Moon is Blue, which broke box office records at the Theatre-Go-Round in Virginia Beach. His first major break came when he was cast as the artist in Time of the Cuckoo for a national touring company. First opposite Shirley Booth (one month), later with Mary Astor and then with Edna Best. His wife Jean Allison also joined the company. His marriage however didn't last they were divorced amicably. He had some success whilst performing as "the husband" in Broadway's Middle of the Night (Anta Theatre, Feb 8. 1956 - May 25. 1957).
Philips met his wife Barbara Schrader when she was a production assistant on the TV's Appointment with Adventure (Episode "Devil Beast", CBS, Mar 25. 1956) on which he was appearing. He appeared in a Off-Broadway play on December 18. called U.S.A. (Lucille Lortel Theatre) and married a few days later on December 23. 1956. On October 9. 1957 their first daughter Caitlin Meg was born. Both Philips and his wife were devoted to the poetry of Dylan Thomas and chose Thomas' wife name for their daughter. |
Above left: Lee Philips popularity really peaked when he played Dr. Michael Rossi in Lana Turner's film version of Peyton Place (20th Century Fox, Dec 11. 1957). Above right: Robert Stack and Lee Philips on the set of Peyton Place. |
His popularity really peaked when he played Dr. Michael Rossi in Lana Turner's film version of Peyton Place (20th Century Fox, Dec 11. 1957). No with any difficulty. Turner's lover at the time, the notorious Johnny Stompanato, would stand behind the camera and intently watch the actress during her scenes with Lee Philips.
Past the halfway point of The Further Adventures of Ellery Queen series (NBC, 1958), he took over as Ellery Queen from George Nader. Apparently ABC TV's Mike Wallace turned down the title role in NBC-TV's Ellery Queen - At some point (Jan 29. 1959) Gig Young was considered the lead contender for the part. Nader only knew that Lee was on of a half dozen being considered. "I know they're thinking about Alfred Drake." he said "but I think he comes too high." He also named Steve Forrest and Ron Randall among the aspirants. But when the series switched to production in New York, Lee Philips took over the EQ role and the Inspector was completely dropped. Philips played Ellery as a man of awareness and compassion, substantially closer to the original concepts. Using only original scripts the show was produced on videotape rather than live and the title was shortened to Ellery Queen. |
Above left and right: Lee Philips on the set of "A Girl named Daisy" (NBC, Mar 27. 1959) episode of TV series The Further Adventures of Ellery Queen. |
In 1959 he again appeared in his Broadway success Middle of the Night
(Columbia, June 17. 1959),
this time on the movie screen opposite Kim Novak. On August 14. 1960 another daughter Julie Amanda was born just as his career shifted towards directing, with credits ranging from the television series of Peyton Place to The Dick Van Dyke Show (1961), and The Lloyd Bridge Show (CBS, May 7. 1963). |
Above left: In 1959 he again appeared in his Broadway success Middle of the Night (Columbia, June 17. 1959), this time on the movie screen opposite Kim Novak. Above right: A moral issue involving the future of their textile mills and thousand of employees forces a head-on clash between father, Edward G. Robinson (R), and son, Lee Philips (L), in "A Good Name," seen on Goodyear Theater (NBC, Mar 2. 1959). Jacqueline Scott sides with her father-in-law against her husband in dispute. |
Above left: Husband and wife Barbara Schrader and Lee Philips. Above right: Candid photo of Lee Philips showing his daughter Julie (ca. August 1960) |
Occasionally he still did some acting, in 1963 he appeared in "Never Wave Goodbye", a two-part episode for ABC of The Fugitive. Also in 1963, he played a lead role in "Passage on the Lady Anne", an hour-long episode of The Twilight Zone; he returned to the show the following year in the episode "Queen of the Nile", where he plays a reporter named Jordan 'Jordy' Herrick. |
Above left: Lee Philips as Dr. Ray Brooks in The Fugitive episode "Never Wave Goodbye" (ABC, Oct 8. 1963). Above right: In the Twilight Zone episode "Queen of the Nile" we see Lee opposite Ann Blyth (CBS, March 6. 1964). |
He appeared in Flipper
in 1964 and also made two guest appearances on Perry Mason in 1965: as Kevin
Lawrence in "The Case of the Golden Venom," and murderer Gordon Evans in "The
Case of the Fatal Fortune." Also guest starred on the Combat!: episode: "A Walk with an Eagle". Let's not forget The Andy Griffith Show for which he directed a whopping 60 episodes (CBS, Dec 13. 1965 - Mar 25. 1968, min. 60). Philips joined the durable M*A*S*H (CBS, Oct 22. 1972 - Feb 18. 1975, min. 2) where he remained for several years and again directed Farrell, who played one of the series' irreverent Army surgeons on the front lines in the Korean War. In 1973 he directed the TV movie The Girl Most Likely to... (MGM, Nov 6. 1973) starring Stockard Channing. Other series of which Philips directed episodes included The Waltons (CBS, Nov 16. 1972 - Jan 30. 1975, min. 7), The Practice (NBC, Jan 30. 1976, min. 1), and Salvage 1 (ABC, Jan 20. 1979, min. 1). For the 1972-73 Emmy for Director of a Drama Series for a Single Program he was nominated the The Waltons episode "The Love Story". |
Above left: Lee Philips as George in "Double Trouble" (ABC, Oct 9. 1969) an episode from The Ghost & Mrs. Muir. Above right: Whilst directing it Lee Philips did a cameo as Minister on "Shivaree", an episode from the Waltons (CBS, Jan 30. 1975). |
On December 31. 1980, Lee and Barbara were divorced ending a 24 year long marriage. Philips also directed dozens of television movies and such miniseries as Sidney Sheldon's Windmills of the Gods in 1988 and James A. Michener's Space in 1985. Among his made-for-TV movies were Silent Movie, Barnum, American Geisha, Samson and Delilah, Mae West, Wanted: The Sundance Woman and Louis Armstrong--Chicago Style. More recently he directed Dick Van Dyke on several episodes of Diagnosis: Murder (CBS, Jan 6. 1995, min. 1). Philips died in his Brentwood home from progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) just past his 72nd birthday on March 3. 1999. |
Notes: All dates for movies are for the first US release. All dates for TV programs are original first airdates. All dates for (radio) plays are for the time span the actor was involved. Facts in red still need confirmation. |
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Other References (1) Wikipedia (2) IMDb (3) IBDB (4) Radiogoldindex (5) IOBDB (6) Playbill and Playbill Additional video & audio sources (1) The Twilight Zone: "Queen of the Nile" (2) 12 Angry Men - Original Live TV Version 1954 (Full version) |
This actor profile is a part of the
Ellery Queen a website on deduction.
The actor above played Ellery Queen in the
1958 TV series of
Ellery Queen.
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Page first published on July 1. 2017 Last updated July 19. 2024 |
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