Garrett "Barry" Atwater (May 16, 1918 – May 24, 1978) was an American character actor who appeared frequently on television from the 1950s into the 1970s. He was sometimes credited as G.B. Atwater.
He appeared in the student film A Time Out of War, a Civil War allegory that won the Academy Awards as best short film of 1954.
He was awarded a Special Cinema Award for television work in 1958.
Atwater, a character actor, received positive notice in Variety for his role in The Hard Man (1957), The True Story of Jesse James (1957), The True Story of Lynn Stuart (1958), Vice Raid (1959), and As Young As We Are (1958). About his work in the television show Judd for the Defense, Variety wrote, "Barry Atwater succeeded in bringing some life and a peculiar believability to an impossible role."
By 1960, he had achieved enough stature to be named by host Rod Serling in the on-screen promo as one of the stars of the well-known CBS Twilight Zone episode "The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street". Atwater made six guest appearances on Perry Mason including as Robert Benson in the 1959 episode "The Case of the Dangerous Dowager" and as murder victim Dr. Stuart Logan in the 1965 episode "The Case of the Cheating Chancellor". A Variety review of the latter stated that Atwater played the part with "correct nastiness".
Those Perry Mason episodes were preceded by a 1956 appearance on Gunsmoke, in the episode "Robin Hood", where he shared the screen with future Mason regular William Hopper.
He appeared in the episode "The Riddle" in 1959, playing an Indian on a train who attracts the mysterious enmity of an American tourist. He played Benedict Arnold in an episode of Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea and received positive notice for an appearance on Playhouse 90.
Atwater in the mid-1960s spent three years on the ABC soap opera General Hospital while he also made prime-time appearances, billing himself as G.B. Atwater from 1963 to 1965, a period in which he was cast in supporting parts. About his nine-month stint on General Hospital, Atwater said, "It was a good experience and good income, but it got tiresome. Shows like that are written for women, and the men are all emasculated." In 1971 he guest-starred in a 2-part episode of Hawaii Five-0, "The Grandstand Play". By the late 1960s and early 1970s, Atwater was again scoring primary guest-star roles, particularly on fantasy and science fiction series, including The Man From U.N.C.L.E., The Invaders, The Wild Wild West, The Outer Limits ("Corpus Earthling"), Night Gallery and Kung Fu, where his altered facial appearance suited his grim and sinister countenance due to its menacing intensity.
Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times praised Atwater's performance in The Night Stalker, writing, "that gifted character actor Barry Atwater is terrific as the vampire". Keith Ashwell of the Edmonton Journal wrote that Atwater was "a prince among vampires".
He also guest starred in a 1963 episode of The Outer Limits, "Corpus Earthling", with Robert Culp as scientist Dr. Temple in 1963.
In 1956, Atwater's West Los Angeles home was burgled after thieves removed a Pet door to gain entry. Atwater was robbed of several hundred dollars' worth of clothes, jewelry, and other property.
Atwater died on May 24, 1978 after suffering a stroke, 8 days after his 60th birthday.
| Episodes: "Robin Hood" And "The Coward" |
| Uncredited |
| Uncredited |
| "Trail Pirate" (S1E12) |
| Episode: “The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street” |
| Back-to-Back Episodes: "Gold, Glory and Custer - Prelude" And "Gold, Glory and Custer – Requiem" |
| Season 6 Episode 15: "The Case of the Prankish Professor" |
| Uncredited |
| Season 2 Episode 4: "You'll Be the Death of Me" |
| Season 3 Episode 15: "Thanatos Palace Hotel" |
| Episode: "Twitch or Treat" |
| "Elena" (S01E13) |
| "Who will dig the graves?" (S02E08) |
| Episode: "The Organization" |
| S3:E22, "The Savage Curtain" |
| TV Movie |
| Episode: "The Doll of Death" |
| Episode: "Hotel of Fear" |
| (final film role) |
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