Product Code Database
Example Keywords: call of -radiant $84
   » » Wiki: Alfred Ryder
Tag Wiki 'Alfred Ryder'.
Tag

Alfred Ryder (born Alfred Jacob Corn; January 5, 1916 – April 16, 1995) was an American television, stage, radio, and film actor and director, who appeared in over one hundred television shows.


Career
Ryder began to act at age eight and later studied with Robert Lewis and . He eventually became a life member of .
(1980). 9780025426504, MacMillan Publishing Co., Inc.. .

During the 1930s and 40s, Ryder blended Broadway appearances with two memorable roles during the Golden Age of Radio, as Molly Goldberg's son Sammy in The Goldbergs; and as Carl Neff in . During World War II he served in the United States Army Air Forces and appeared in the Air Force's play and film Winged Victory. In 1946 he secured a one-year film contract with Paramount and had a role in the -directed (1947).

(2025). 9780823088478, Back Stage Books.
Retrieved July 12, 2022.

Ryder was an ambitious and intense theater performer who aspired to be "the definitive of his generation." In the 1940s he joined the American Repertory Theatre, founded by and Eva Le Gallienne; Webster's follow-up troupe, the Margaret Webster Shakespeare Company—for which he toured as Hamlet;

(2025). 9780472026036, University of Michigan Press.
Retrieved October 18, 2022. and ultimately The Actors Studio. In the 1950s he continued appearing on Broadway (supplemented with television work), his most fruitful years coinciding with his 1958-1964 marriage to renowned stage actress (and fellow Actors Studio member) , whom he would direct in the 1961 hit A Far Country.

In 1956, released the album This Is My Beloved with Ryder reciting the popular poetry of Walter Benton.

Notably, Ryder was chosen to be 's standby when The Entertainer moved to Broadway from London in 1958.

He won the 1959 for Best Actor, playing D.H. Lawrence in Tennessee Williams' one-act play I Rise in Flame, Cried the Phoenix. Kim Stanley hosted the awards presentation, but her husband was away in rehearsals for a adaptation of Billy Budd, having been cast as Claggart as a rush replacement for an ailing Ryder's growing association with the less-vaunted medium was reflected in TIME's announcement of their marriage; Stanley was feted as "star of Broadway's Bus Stop, and of Hollywood's The Goddess, whose training at the Actors' Studio sic made her the standard of U.S. actresses," while Ryder was solely and dismissively identified as "TV actor Alfred Ryder," without even a mention of Ryder's own association with The Actors Studio.

In 1961 Ryder was cast as 's first replacement as Bérenger (a role originated in London by Olivier) in the Broadway production of Eugène Ionesco's Rhinoceros. Ryder also would tour in the part with , who had won a in the play's other starring role.

In 1964, 48-year-old Ryder was selected by impresario to realize his dream and perform Hamlet in a high-profile production: a three-week engagement for Papp's Shakespeare in the Park. Notoriously, he was replaced on June 17, the day after opening night by Robert Burr, who was understudying in the same role on Broadway. According to press reports, Ryder was suffering from by the premiere, which was broadcast on , but co-star also recounted Ryder’s erratic performances and difficulty remembering lines in rehearsals due to drinking.

(2025). 9780762791453, Lyons Press.
Actress stated that Ryder’s stage career was “ruined”
(2025). 9780399169304, Penguin.
by the fact that the performance was televised and that Ryder was replaced afterward, compounded by Papp’s public refusal to allow Ryder to return to the role following his recovery from the throat infection.

The disappointment to Ryder was "acute," according to Ellen Adler, daughter of famed acting coach . "He was sort of promised he would be a great Broadway star, and somehow it never happened." Ryder would never again act on or , though he subsequently directed two more Broadway plays—1968's and a 1971 production of The Dance of Death—both of which closed in less than one week. (In Los Angeles, Ryder would direct for UCLA's Theatre Group as a member of the Actors Studio Directors Unit; for the U.S. government's Educational Laboratory Theatre Project; and for the Los Angeles Free Shakespeare Festival as its artistic director.)

Nevertheless, Ryder remained an A-list television guest star throughout the 1960's, as his eccentric, theatrical style and vaguely Germanic accent were well-suited for the sci-fi, spy, and fantasy shows that were popular at the time. He appeared in multiple episodes of The Wild Wild West and The Man from U.N.C.L.E., and he played the main alien leader, Mr. Nexus, in the TV series (two seasons, 1967-68). He starred as a British criminal who could not be killed in episode "The Devil's Laughter" (1959). He appeared in "The Man Trap", the first-aired episode of , on September 8, 1966, as a scientist who is hiding the fact that a shapeshifting alien is masquerading as his late wife. He also guest-starred as the ghost of a World War I German captain in two episodes of 's ABC-TV series Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea. He then acted in an episode of another Irwin Allen series on ABC, as a cantankerous orphanage operator, Parteg, in "Night of Thrombeldinbar", an episode of Land of the Giants in February 1969. Later he appeared in the episode "A Hand for Sonny Blue" in the series Quinn Martin's Tales of the Unexpected (1977; known in the as Twist in the Tale).

Ryder's film work was more sporadic; his highest-profile role was the defense attorney who cross-examines in True Grit (1969).

By the 1970s, Ryder's credits (and billing) had diminished, with his last significant role coming in 1979, on 's faux- Meeting of Minds, for which he also co-directed two episodes. Despite an energetic performance as Machiavelli with extensive dialogue, Ryder only appeared once more onscreen, as restaurateur in the 1980 TV-biopic .

In his later years Ryder lived with his sister, actress , eventually moving to the Actors Home in New Jersey, where he died of liver cancer in 1995.


Personal life
Born to Jewish parents, he was married to actress from 1958 until 1964. The couple had a child, Laurie Ryder, a California and . He was the brother of actress Olive Deering.

Ryder was a Democrat who supported the campaign of Adlai Stevenson during the 1952 presidential election.


Select list of appearances
  • 1944: Winged Victory - Milhauser
  • 1947: - Tony Genaro - aka Tony Galvani
  • 1959: (episode "Passive Resistance") - Hank Voyles
  • 1959: The Story on Page One - Lt. Mike Morris
  • 1959: (episode "The Devil's Laughter") - John Marriott
  • 1960: Route 66 (episode "The Man on the Monkey Board") - Palmer
  • 1961: Bus Stop (episode "I Kiss Your Shadow") - Doug Gibson
  • 1963: The Raiders - Capt. Bentonn
  • 1963: The Outer Limits (episode "") - Edgar Price
  • 1964: Combat! (episode "The Hunter") - Capt. Heismann (Season: 2 Episode: 24)
  • 1964: Invitation to a Gunfighter - Doc Barker
  • 1964: Hamlet - Hamlet
  • 1965: (episode "Death Watch") - Newspaperman Flint
  • 1965: The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (episode "The See-Paris-and-Die Affair") - Corio
  • 1965: The Wild Wild West (TV Series) (season 1, episode 13) (air date: December 10, 1965) "The Night of the Torture Chamber" - Professor Horatio Bolt / (season 2, episode 22) (air date: February 24, 1967) "The Night of the Deadly Bubble" - Captain Philo
  • 1966: The Virginian (S5:E5 "Jacob Was A Plain Man") - Ketch
  • 1966: Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (episodes "The Phantom Strikes" / "The Heat Monster") - U-boat Captain Gerhardt Krueger / Dr Bergstrom
  • 1966: (S1:E1 "The Man Trap") - Professor Robert Crater
  • 1967: Hotel - Capt. Yolles
  • 1967: - Mr. Nexus (3 episodes)
  • 1967: The Rat Patrol (episode "The Darkest Raid") - Col. Rudolf Gerschon in Season: 2 - Episode: 6
  • 1967: (episode "The Diplomat") - Col. Valentin Yetkoff
  • 1969: Ironside (episode "Up, Down and Even") - Sgt John Darga
  • 1969: True Grit - Goudy
  • 1971: (episode "The Party") - Gregor Mishenko
  • 1972: The Legend of Hillbilly John - O. J. Onselm
  • 1973: The Stone Killer - Tony Champion
  • 1974: W - Investigator
  • 1975: Escape to Witch Mountain - Mr. Michael-John - Astrologer
  • 1977: Tracks - The Man
  • 1979: Buck Rogers In The 25th Century (episode "Escape From Wedded Bliss") - Garridan (former chief engineer for The Draconia)


External links
Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
1s Time