
Birth name: John Lincoln Freund
Born: on 01/29/1918 in Penns Grove, New Jersey
Height: 5' 11" (1.80 m)
Job Titles: Actor, Director, Producer, Baseball announcer
Father: Samuel Jeremiah Freund
Mother: Blanche Materson Freund
Son: Dall Forsythe (mother, Parker McCormick)
Daughter: Brooke Forsythe (mother, Julie Warren)
Daughter: Page Forsythe (mother, Julie Warren)
Parker McCormick (1938 - 1940) (divorced)
Julie Warren (1943 - 1994) (her death)
Nicole Carter (2002 - present)
United Nations Association
American
National Theatre and Academy
American Cancer Society
Golden Globe Awards 1983, 1984
Soap Opera Digest Award 1984
1934 Graduated Abraham Lincoln High School, Brooklyn, New York
1936 Began his career as an announcer for the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbets Field
1939 Stage debut as Captain in "Dick Whittington and his Cat" in Chappaqua, New York
1942 Broadway debut as Private Cootes in "Vickie"
1943 Film acting debut as Soldier in "Northern Pursuit"
1944 First significant film role, "Destination Tokyo"
1947 Replaced Arthur Kennedy on Broadway as Chris Keller in the Arthur Miller play, "All My Sons"
1950 Replaced Henry Fonda on Broadway in title role in "Mister Roberts"
1953 Originated starring role as Captain Frisby in "The Teahouse of the August Moon" on Broadway
1955 Male lead in Alfred Hitchcock's "The Trouble with Harry"
1956 Directed "Mister Roberts" at the City Center Theatre in New York City
1957-1962 First TV series as star, "Bachelor Father"
1962 TV producing debut, "The First Hundred Years" for "Vacation Playhouse"
1967 He played the part of Alvin Dewey in the popular movie “In Cold Blood” in 1967.
1969 Starred in Alfred Hitchcock's "Topaz"
1971-1974 Host of Hollywood Park Feature Race
1971-1977 Hosted the syndicated documentary weekly "The World of Survival”
1976-1981 Starred in TV series, "Charlie's Angels "
1979 He had quadruple bypass surgery
1981-1989 Starred in TV series, "Dynasty"
1987 Executive producer of "On Fire", an ABC-TV movie
1995 Briefly returned to the stage during the pre-Braodway run of "Sacrilege"
2000 Signed a $5,000,000 contract deal with the director of “Charlie's Angels” 1 & 2
2000 Reprised his role as Charlie in “Charlie’s Angels” (2000) and its sequel “Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle” (2003)
2006 Appeared alongside his Dynasty co-stars on one-hour CBS special “Dynasty Reunion: Catfights & Caviar”.
John Forsythe (born January 29, 1918 in Penns Grove, New Jersey), is an American stage, television and character actor who starred in three television series that spanned three decades such as single playboy father Bentley Gregg in the 1950's sitcom, Bachelor Father (1957 – 1962), as the unseen millionaire Charles Townsend on the popular 197'0s crime drama, Charlie's Angels (1976 – 1981) and as conniving and beloved patriarch Blake Carrington on the popular 1980s soap opera, Dynasty (1981 – 1989). He’s also well-known for hosting World of Survival during the 1970's
Forsythe, the older of three children, was born as John Lincoln Freund in Penns Grove, New Jersey to a factory worker. He was raised in Brooklyn, New York where his father worked as a Wall Street Businessman during the great depression of 1929.
At only 16 years of age he graduated from Abraham Lincoln High School in Brooklyn and began attending the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In 1936 at age 18, he took a job as the announcer at Ebbets Field Stadium in Brooklyn, New York confirming a childhood love of baseball.
Despite showing initial reluctance, he moved to an acting career at the suggestion of his father. While there he met actress Parker MacCormick and the two were married in 1939. The couple had their first son, Dall in 1941 but divorced the following year. Despite this, Forsythe kept in contact with Dall.
As a bit player for Warner Brothers, Forsythe appeared promising in several small roles. As a result he was given a starring role in Destination Tokyo (1943). Leaving his movie career for service in World War II, he worked to recover injured soldiers who had developed speech problems. His time in the military ended before year end.
Also in 1943 he met Julie Warren, initially a theatre companion but later a successful actress in her own right, landing a role on Broadway in Around The World in 80 Days. Julie became Forsythe's second wife and in the early 1950s the marriage produced two daughters - Page and Brooke, the latter four years younger.
In the late 1940s Forsythe helped found and worked at the prestigious Actors Studio where he met other promising young actors such as Marlon Brando, Julie Harris, Tab Hunter, Richard Egan, Rod Serling and a 14-year-old future British young actress Joan Collins who would later co-star with him on Dynasty.
During this time he appeared successfully on Broadway in Mister Roberts and The Teahouse of the August Moon.
In 1955 Alfred Hitchcock hired him to star in the movie The Trouble with Harry (1955) alongside a young Shirley MacLaine. This movie did not do well at the box office, and Forsythe found high profile movie work increasingly hard to find.
On one episode he had the pleasure of working with a young Linda Evans and she immediately formed a crush on the much older actor. This one-time episode would lead both him & Evans to star together in the popular 1980s soap opera, Dynasty, almost 20 years later. During the 1961 season, Bachelor Father moved to ABC but was cancelled that season due to declining ratings.
In the early 1960s he made further movies including Kitten with a Whip (1964) and In Cold Blood (1967) but made several attempts at developing new television series - including The John Forsythe Show (1965) and To Rome with Love (1969), but neither were successful.
Between 1971 and 1977 he served as narrator on the syndicated nature series, The Wildlife of Survival.
His big break came in 1976, he began of what would be a 13 year relationship with Aaron Spelling with the role of a mysterious millionaire and private investigator, Charles Townsend, on the crime drama Charlie’s Angels for ABC. The character of Charlie never appeared on-screen and so Forsythe wasn't required on the set at all. Instead he would record his voice on tape which was presented as a speaker phone conversation in the show, instructing the eponymous Angels of their mission for the episode. Though he wasn't needed much for the set, he did in fact become friends before and after the show. His real co-star on the show was Jaclyn Smith who played one of his leading ladies, Kelly Garrett, who stayed with the show until its end, and Kate Jackson who met him at a race track in the 1970s, won the role of Sabrina Duncan, who was the "smart" angel. Jackson stayed with Angels for 3 seasons until she left in 1979 due to other projects.
Charlie's Angels was almost immediately a huge success much as Bachelor Father had been before, and was exported to over 90 countries. Forsythe quickly became the highest paid actor on television and the show even survived the departure in 1977 of its biggest visible star, Farrah Fawcett - replaced by Cheryl Ladd after a contract dispute. Ladd, a neighbor and good friend of Forsythe's, was immediately offered the role of Kris Monroe, Jill's younger sister, and she would often hear his voice over the loudspeaker for the next four seasons.
Following heart problems, Forsythe underwent quadruple bypass surgery in 1979. This was so successful that he safely returned to work on Charlie’s Angels and also appeared in the courtroom drama ... And Justice for All later that year.
By 1980, Charlie's Angels was starting to decline in ratings but Forsythe remained under contract to Spelling.
During 1981 and his last working days on Charlie’s Angels, Forsythe beat George Peppard to play the role of conniving and beloved patriarch Blake Carrington in Dynasty (actually, Peppard got the part and quit over differences with the writers) – ABC's answer to the highly successful CBS series Dallas and another Aaron Spelling production. Between 1985 and 1987 Forsythe also appeared as Blake Carrington in the short-lived spin-off series The Colbys.
The show was another hit for Forsythe and proved his most successful role yet as his name and character became a pop culture icon of the 1980s and made him one of Hollywood’s leading men and sex symbols. Typical episodes might include family feuds, revolutionaries gunned down in the palace chapel, illegitimate children, sex or drugs but would always feature glitz and glamorous clothes.
He was nominated for Emmy awards three times between 1982 and 1984 for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series but each time failed to win. He was also nominated six times for Golden Globes, winning twice, and five times for Soap Opera Digest Awards, winning twice.
On screen, he was reunited with Bachelor Father guest star, Linda Evans who had beaten Angie Dickinson to play Blake’s compassionate and caring younger wife Krystle. The chemistry of Forsythe and Evans clicked and were together promoted as the principal married couple on the show, appearing on numerous talk shows and news magazine shows.
The show also reunited Forsythe with Joan Collins who had been one of his students during the 1940s.
During his time on Dynasty, Forsythe celebrated his 45th marriage anniversary to Julie Warren.
Dynasty lasted until 1989, a total of 9 seasons and Forsythe was the only actor to appear in all 220 episodes.
In 1992, after a three-year absence, Forsythe returned to series television starring in Norman Lear’s situation comedy, The Powers That Be for NBC. The show wasn’t a ratings winner, and was cancelled after only 1 year.
On August 15, 1994, Forsythe's wife of 51 years, the former Julie Warren, died in hospital after he made the difficult decision to remove her life-support system. She had been in a coma following severe breathing difficulties.
In 2002 - eight years after Julie’s death - Forsythe married businesswoman Nicole Carter who is 22 years his junior. Forsythe has 1 son, Dall, 2 daughters, Page and Brooke, 6 grandchildren and 4 great-grandchildren from his previous marriages.
Forsythe reprised his role as Charlie for the film version of Charlie’s Angels (2000) and its sequel Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle (2003) but is now retired from acting. Besides spending time with his family, he now enjoys ownership of an art gallery.
On May 2, 2006, Forsythe appeared alongside his Dynasty co-stars Linda Evans, Joan Collins, Pamela Sue Martin, Al Corley, Gordon Thomson and Catherine Oxenberg in Dynasty Reunion: Catfights & Caviar. The one-hour reunion special aired on CBS.
It was announced that Forsythe was being treated for colorectal cancer on 13 October 2006, but was discharged from hospital in a month.
I am an amiable fellow with no mind of my own.
I'd rather be what I am, a reasonably simple happy kind of fellow.
I am a good journeyman actor and I always do my best, but I'm not jealous of Henry Fonda or George C. Scott or Brando because they have 'touched by the hand of God' talent and I don't.
I laugh very often, you know, especially when I receive home the cheque of ABC-TV, every week. Then, I'm neither grim, nor melancholic.
The only way to quieten me is to invite me to a tennis match.
I'm not a gambling-man. I have never bet a dollar in all my life.
Sixty-eight! What an age to be a sex symbol!
I always said life consists of love and work. I tried to balance fifty-fifty. And, of course, now I'm so happy I did.
Man is not the lord of all the world's animals. He is the protector.