Lloyd Gough


Actor
Lloyd Gough

About

Birth Place
New York, USA
Born
September 21, 1907
Died
July 23, 1984
Cause of Death
Aortic Aneurysm

Biography

New York-born character actor Lloyd Gough got his start in theater and walked the boards of Broadway before breaking into film in the 1940s. He balanced stage and screen performances throughout that decade and even snagged a supporting role in the classic Billy Wilder Hollywood drama "Sunset Blvd." Then with the 1950s came the Red Scare, when the fear of communism in the United States hi...

Biography

New York-born character actor Lloyd Gough got his start in theater and walked the boards of Broadway before breaking into film in the 1940s. He balanced stage and screen performances throughout that decade and even snagged a supporting role in the classic Billy Wilder Hollywood drama "Sunset Blvd." Then with the 1950s came the Red Scare, when the fear of communism in the United States hit Hollywood and led to many talented people being blacklisted and barred from working in the film industry. In 1952, both Gough and his wife, actress Karen Morley, were blacklisted after refusing to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee. That year Gough's previously shot appearance as the villainous Kinch in Fritz Lang's Western "Rancho Notorious" hit theaters. Sadly, because of the blacklist, his name was expunged from the film's credits. Cast out from the fearful film community, Gough returned to Broadway where he performed "Ondine" opposite up-and-coming ingénue Audrey Hepburn. In the 1960s, after McCarthyism subsided, Gough resumed his onscreen career, taking to television. It was during this time that he joined the cast of the superhero TV series "The Green Hornet." Notably, in 1976, along with a number of other formerly blacklisted actors, he appeared in Woody Allen's Red Scare farce "The Front." The accomplished and tenacious actor made his final screen appearance in 1982 as a judge on the long-running coroner crime drama "Quincy M.E." He died two years later from an aortic aneurysm. He was 76 years old.

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Front, The (1976) -- (Movie Clip) Make It A Firing Squad Howard (Woody Allen) enjoying the fruits of his work "fronting" for blacklisted writers, has a meeting with Delaney (Lloyd Gough) foiled, then arrives at the studio where Florence (Andrea Marcovicci) and Sussman (Herschel Bernardi) have an emergency, in The Front. 1977.
Executive Action (1973) -- (Movie Clip) Much Of This Film Is Fiction Opening credits with unusual content and attribution, from the 1973 John F. Kennedy assassination drama, written by the leading conspiracy theorist Mark Lane, with Donald Freed and Dalton Trumbo, Executive Action, starring Burt Lancaster, Robert Ryan and Will Geer.
Executive Action (1973) -- (Movie Clip) Labor, Negroes, Jews, Liberals Robert Ryan, who would die of lung cancer four months before the film was released, is the host, with fellow Hollywood liberals Will Geer, hearing the pitch, and Burt Lancaster in the background, Gilbert Green the professor, with Walter Brooke and John Anderson, opening the JFK-assassination thriller, Executive Action, 1973.
Executive Action (1973) -- (Movie Clip) Our Presidents Are Killed By Madmen Burt Lancaster is Farrington, presumably ex-CIA, taking the lead now in convincing Will Geer, as tycoon Ferguson, to support the assassination of John F. Kennedy, Robert Ryan, Walter Brooke and John Anderson backing him up, in the speculative thriller Executive Action, 1973.
Rancho Notorious -- (Movie Clip) When We Get The Ranch Opening scenes, director Fritz Lang not messing around, Vern (Arthur Kennedy) with fiancee Beth (Gloria Henry), he leaves and villain Kinch (Lloyd Gough) arrives, in the Technicolor Western Rancho Notorious, 1952.
Rancho Notorious -- (Movie Clip) What Are You Staring At? Vengeful Vern (Arthur Kennedy) brought by Frenchy (Mel Ferrer) to the hideout, meets elusive Altar Keane (Marlene Dietrich) and fellow fugitives (Frank Ferguson, Francis McDonald, George Reeves et al) in Fritz Lang's Rancho Notorious, 1952.
Tulsa (1949) -- (Movie Clip) Thousand Dollars An Hour News of a gusher empties out a downtown social event, whereupon Cherry (Susan Hayward) gets splattered in oil and embraces engineer Brad (Robert Preston), to the chagrin of beau Jim (Pedro Armendariz), in Tulsa, 1949.
Storm Warning (1951) -- (Movie Clip) They Blame The Klan Still on the night of the Klan killing of a nosey reporter, small town prosecutor Rainey (Ronald Reagan) visits local big shots at the bowling alley, Barr (Hugh Sanders) suspected, Faulkner (Raymond Greenleaf) thinking P-R, in Storm Warning, 1951.
Tulsa (1949) -- (Movie Clip) You Oil Men Oil man Tanner (Lloyd Gough) fails to charm rancher Cherry (Susan Hayward) or her ally Jim Redbird (Pedro Armendariz) out of their oil leases, in producer Walter Wanger's Tulsa, 1949.

Bibliography