Los Angeles Times

Star of TV’s ‘Green Hornet’

VAN WILLIAMS, 1934 - 2016

- By Steve Marble steve.marble@latimes.com Twitter: @stephenmar­ble

Van Williams, 82, never took to the Hollywood life.

Van Williams was teaching scuba diving in Waikiki when a man approached him and said he looked like Hollywood material.

The idea seemed comical to Williams. A Texas kid who’d chased adventure around the South Pacific and finally to Hawaii, his resume consisted of exactly one high school stage production and a whole lot of football.

Still, the guy seemed sincere and urged Williams to get his college degree and then look him up if he was ever in L.A. The man turned out to be movie producer Michael Todd, then married to Elizabeth Taylor, and though he died before Williams graduated from Texas Christian University and headed to Hollywood, his name alone seemed to open doors.

Williams was quickly cast as a private detective in “Bourbon Street Beat,” a short-lived show in which the main character worked out of an agency perched above a restaurant in the French Quarter, exploring the dark mysteries of New Orleans.

The character was resuscitat­ed the next year in “Surfside 6,” another private detective show, but this time set in a houseboat off Miami. He was cast alongside Troy Donahue. The series lasted two seasons. Williams later appeared with Walter Brennan in “The Tycoon,” the story of an eccentric and cranky millionair­e who helps people who show promise.

But the role that cemented Williams’ lasting reputation in prime-time television was as the emerald-suited superhero in “The Green Hornet.”

Though the series lasted only one season, collapsing in the ratings alongside “Batman,” Williams was never able to fully escape his brief stint as Britt Reid, the wealthy Los Angeles newspaper publisher who fought crime after hours alongside his personal manservant and karate pal Kato, played by a young Bruce Lee.

Williams, who died Nov. 28 at age 82 in Scottsdale, Ariz., continued to pick up occasional roles — “The Rockford Files,” “Barnaby Jones,” “The Streets of San Francisco” — but grew weary of Hollywood, the expectatio­ns and the glad-handing it seemed to take to land roles.

Willams was born outside Fort Worth in 1934 and was raised on a farm. He preferred straight-shooting common folk, not the plotting and scheming he witnessed in Hollywood.

And the fun he once found in location shooting had evaporated, to the point he turned down a role in “Falcon Crest” because it involved filming in Napa Valley.

“He never saw himself as an actor, it was just something he fell into,” his wife, Vicki, said. “He was tired of all the shenanigan­s, he just wouldn’t play along.”

Instead he launched a communicat­ions company in Santa Monica, renting out pagers and walkietalk­ies to Hollywood types when such devices were cutting-edge technology. He later licensed half a dozen repeater stations, renting out air time for customers to relay their own walkie-talkie conversati­ons.

And, he became a cop. Actually a reserve deputy in Malibu with the Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Department. He liked law enforcemen­t, his wife said, and found patrol work and search-and-rescue missions in the hillsides along the coast to be deeply satisfying jobs.

“The Green Hornet,” though, never fully loosened its grip.

He was occasional­ly drawn from his work to attend convention­s and superhero fan fests, signing autographs and posing alongside knockoffs of the Black Beauty, the Hornet’s sinister-looking, lowslung car that was outfitted with tubes under its chassis that could launch rockets, ‘infra-green” headlight that could reveal the all-but-invisible and — hard to fathom at the time — a car phone.

“I mean, it’s been what, 30some-odd years since the thing’s been on,” Williams told the Toronto Star in 2007 before attending a television collectibl­es convention, marveling at the show’s lasting appeal.

As “The Green Hornet” faded from the airwaves in America, it had a second life in Hong Kong, where it was branded as “The Kato Show.” Bruce Lee’s career began a rapid ascent after the show’s debut.

In the 1993 biographic­al drama “Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story” — years after Lee’s death — Williams took on a cameo role as the director of “The Green Hornet.” He said he found the experience dizzying.

“There was one scene where we’re all sitting around a table, and next to me is the Green Hornet’s wife, Vickie. And on my left side is my wife, the real Vickie, And next to her there’s this blond guy who’s playing me playing the Green Hornet,” Williams recalled. “Very strange.”

Tired of L.A.’s epic traffic and looking for fresh air after damaging his lungs fighting a brush fire in Malibu, Williams and his family moved to Sun Valley, Idaho, and began spending part of the year in Scottsdale.

He is survived by his wife and their three children, and two children from an earlier marriage.

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