- Born
- Died
- Birth nameWilliam de Clerq Reynolds
- Height6′ (1.83 m)
- William de Clerq Reynolds, born in Los Angeles, began his film career in 1951, one year after his marriage to Molly Sinclair. The handsome actor portrayed many authority figures, both in the movies and on television. He managed to display a wide emotional range, as evidenced by his tour-de-force performance as "Lt. Fitzgerald" in the 12 February 1960 episode of The Twilight Zone (1959), episode The Purple Testament (1960).
Reynolds also had a close relationship with Jack Webb. He had the lead role in Pete Kelly's Blues (1959), and had a memorable guest spot as "Sgt. William Riddle" on Dragnet 1967 (1967). His last role was on the Webb-produced series, Project U.F.O. (1978). His greatest success was as "Special Agent Tom Colby" (1967-1973) on The F.B.I. (1965).- IMDb Mini Biography By: Timothy Forbes - Dark-haired American actor William Reynolds was Ivy-League material, a handsome, clean-cut, up-and-coming contract player during the 1950s who seemed to play everybody's son at one point or another--sometimes studious, sometimes loyal, sometimes spoiled--in predominantly "B" pictures. He was born William de Clerq Reynolds of Norwegian descent in 1931 in Los Angeles, California. He lost his mother at age 5 and was sent to boarding schools. His first taste of show biz came while enrolled at the Pasadena City College in their radio department. After being noticed in some minor theater roles by a talent agent, he was briefly signed by Paramount at age 18 but his more noticeable work was done at Universal when that studio signed him in 1952. He seemed to specialize for a while in playing everyone's son, as he did with Laurence Olivier in Carrie (1952). He played one of the Dalton boys in The Cimarron Kid (1952), Jane Wyman's son in All That Heaven Allows (1955), and Fred MacMurray's son in There's Always Tomorrow (1956). Overshadowed by the studio's push for glamor guys Rock Hudson and Tony Curtis, Reynolds was left struggling in the secondary ranks along with other overlooked Universal players such as Clint Eastwood and David Janssen. As he matured, the quality of his pictures at Universal did not get any better, with rather bland, antiseptic parts in Cult of the Cobra (1955), The Land Unknown (1957), The Big Beat (1958), and The Thing That Couldn't Die (1958). His best "second lead" role at the time was arguably Mister Cory (1957), starring Curtis. By the late 1950s Reynolds pulled away from films and found a niche in TV series. After disappointing one-season failures such as Pete Kelly's Blues (1959), The Islanders (1960) and The Gallant Men (1962), he finally hit pay dirt co-starring with Efrem Zimbalist Jr. as Special Agent Tom Colby on the highly successful Quinn Martin series The F.B.I. (1965) for Warner Bros., staying with the show for six seasons. He pretty much dropped out of sight after this and went into business. Reynolds was married to actress/model Molly Sinclair, whom he met while under contract at Paramount, from 1950 until she passed away in 1992.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Gary Brumburgh / [email protected]
- SpouseMolly Sinclair(June 18, 1950 - May 21, 1992) (her death, 3 children)
- Rarely displayed his physique in "beefcake" scenes. However, his bare chest can be seen in 1956's Away All Boats (1956) as he sits up in bed while having his injured leg bandaged, and again in Baron of Broken Lance (1959) (in which, as a newlywed on a wagon train, he sits at the back end of a covered wagon.
- Interviewed in Tom Weaver's book, "I Talked with a Zombie" (McFarland & Co., 2008).
- He and wife Molly Sinclair have a son, Eric, and a daughter, Carrie, who was named after the movie Carrie (1952). A son, Robert, died shortly after birth in 1964.
- Interviewed by Michael Barnum for the February 2005 issue of Classic Images (issue 356).
- I loved working as an actor. But I was one of those folks with more talent than ambition. When I was working regularly, I am sorry to say, I took it all for granted. Good actors work at their craft, look for challenging parts, and opportunities to act. I think I knew that. But, in retrospect, I didn't want it enough to pay the price.
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