Times Colonist

Actors Walker, Greene seem very much alike

- RICH HELDENFELS

You have questions. I have some answers.

Q: I watch the Hallmark Channel’s movies. Two actors, Andrew Walker and Paul Greene, look very much alike. Are they related?

A: Not as far as I can find. But they are both Canadian, as are many Hallmark actors. Between them Greene and Walker have about two dozen Hallmark credits, many of them for Christmas movies.

Q: There is an episode of Law & Order called “Baby It’s You.” The episode never named the offender but I remember an additional episode in which the offender was finally revealed. Do you know why the second episode has never been shown?

A: It has, but not as a Law & Order episode. “Baby It’s You,” from 1997, was the first part of a crossover between L&O and Homicide: Life on the Streets. Baltimore detectives from Homicide appeared on L&O, then stars of the latter series appeared in the Homicide episode, also called “Baby It’s You.” Since the shows are distribute­d separately, you don’t as a rule find Homicide mixed with L&O. But DVD sets of Homicide and Law & Order have included both parts of this story and other crossovers as extras.

Q: I know 2020 was the final year for the series Supernatur­al. Did it end? It just disappeare­d months ago. Any more episodes?

A: As happened with many shows, production on the series was stalled by the pandemic. Only 13 of the final 20 episodes have aired. Five more finished shooting but, as TVLine.com reported, visual effects and sound still needed work and those department­s had shut down. Two other episodes had not been shot as of mid-May. Because of this and other COVID-19 delays, The CW will not officially start a new network season until January. But it will have some fresh programmin­g in the fall, including those remaining Supernatur­al episodes, assuming they have been finished. Then the 2021 lineup will include a new series with Supernatur­al costar Jared Padalecki: a reworking of the Chuck Norris drama Walker, Texas Ranger.

Q: Everywhere I look on TV, there is the late Richard Anderson, who appeared in countless TV series and films going back to Forbidden Planet in 1956. I remember him best as Travers in a first-season episode of my favourite TV Western, The Big Valley. Can you furnish anything on his life and career?

A: Richard Anderson (not to be confused with Richard Dean Anderson) was best known to many as Oscar Goldman on The Six Million Dollar Man and The Bionic Woman, the rare actor regularly playing the same character on two series at the same time.

Born in New Jersey but brought up in New York and California, he was drawn to acting by his love of Westerns, particular­ly ones with Gary Cooper. The Hollywood Reporter noted that Cary Grant was a fan; with his help Anderson landed a movie contract and close to 30 credits leading up to his most significan­t early role in Forbidden Planet.

Other noteworthy films include Paths of Glory and The Long Hot Summer although, as Variety noted, by the end of the ’50s he had begun concentrat­ing on television work, and a lot of it. (He played five different roles on The Big Valley alone.) Twice married and divorced, he had three daughters.

He collected classic cars, was an active philanthro­pist and had the class and style that prompted actor friend Lee Majors to nickname him “Old Money.” He died in 2017 at the age of 91.

 ??  ?? Richard Anderson: Best known as Oscar Goldman on The Six Million Dollar Man.
Richard Anderson: Best known as Oscar Goldman on The Six Million Dollar Man.

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