Haig was born in Fresno, California to Armenian parents.[5] He was the son of Roxy (Mooradian) and Haig Mosesian, an electrician.[6][7] As a young man, his rapid growth interfered with his motor coordination, prompting him to take dancing lessons.[8] At seven years old, he worked as a paid dancer in a children's Christmas show and later joined a vaudeville revival show.[9]
Haig was also a musician, playing a wide range of music styles on the drums, including swing, country, jazz, blues and rock and roll. Haig began to earn money from music, and signed a recording contract one year out of high school. Still a teenager, Haig went on to record the single "Full House" with the T-Birds in 1958, which reached No. 4 in the charts.[8][10][11]
The Pasadena Playhouse
While Haig was in high school, the head of the drama department was Alice Merrill, who encouraged him to pursue an acting career.[8] Merrill had been a Broadway actress who had maintained her contacts in the business. During his senior year, a play was produced in which Merrill double cast the show, to have one of her Hollywood friends assess the actors in order to select the final cast.[8]
Dennis Morgan, a musical comedy personality from the 1940s, saw Haig perform, and chose him for a prominent role in the play. Two weeks later, he returned to see the show and advised Haig to continue his education in the San Fernando Valley and to consider acting as a career. Two years later, Haig enrolled in the Pasadena Playhouse,[9] the school that trained such noted actors as Robert Preston, Gene Hackman, and Dustin Hoffman.[12] He later moved to Hollywood with longtime friend and Pasadena Playhouse roommate Stuart Margolin.[9]
Career
Haig's first acting role was in a 1960 short student film titled The Host, directed by Jack Hill at UCLA. This launched Haig's more-than-four-decade acting career in over fifty films and 350 television episodes.[8] Haig became a staple in Hill's films, such as Spider Baby, Coffy and Foxy Brown.[13][14] In 1971, Haig appeared in THX 1138, the feature film directorial debut of George Lucas, as well as the James Bond film Diamonds Are Forever.[15]
Haig temporarily retired from acting in 1992, feeling typecast: "I just didn't want to play stupid heavies anymore. They just kept giving me the same parts but just putting different clothes on me. It was stupid, and I resented it, and I wouldn't have anything to do with it".[8] Haig did not work in acting for five years, instead training and becoming a certified hypnotherapist.[8] During this time, he was offered the role of Marsellus Wallace (later to be played by Ving Rhames) in Pulp Fiction, the second feature film directed by Quentin Tarantino.[19][20] At the time, Haig was concerned that low-budget television had been detrimental to his career and, at seeing the shooting script and the short number of days dedicated for each locale, he reportedly passed on the project; he is said to have later regretted this decision.[21][22][17] Haig later appeared as a judge in Tarantino's 1997 film Jackie Brown, a part written specifically for Haig by Tarantino.[8][23]
In 2003, Haig starred in Rob Zombie's debut film House of 1000 Corpses, as a psychotic clown named Captain Spaulding.[24] The role revived Haig's acting career, earning him a "Best Supporting Actor" award in the 13th Annual Fangoria Chainsaw Awards, and an induction into Fangoria's Horror Hall of Fame.[1][25] Haig reprised his role as Spaulding in the 2005 film The Devil's Rejects, a continuation of House of 1000 Corpses, in which Spaulding is portrayed as the patriarch of the murderous Firefly family.[1] Captain Spaulding has since been considered a modern icon of horror cinema, and Haig himself has been called a "horror icon".[15][16][24][26] For his reprisal of the role in The Devil's Rejects, he received the award for "Best Actor" in the 15th Annual Fangoria Chainsaw Awards, and shared the award for "Most Vile Villain" at the First Annual Spike TV Scream Awards with Leslie Easterbrook, Sheri Moon, and Bill Moseley as the Firefly family.[1][27] Haig was also nominated as "Best Butcher" in the Fuse/Fangoria Chainsaw Awards, but lost to Tobin Bell's Jigsaw from Saw II.[28]
In 2019, Haig appeared as Captain Spaulding for the final time in the Rob Zombie film 3 from Hell, a sequel to House of 1000 Corpses and The Devil's Rejects.[32] He posthumously appeared in the 2020 slasher film Hanukkah,[33][34] as well as the 2023 film Abruptio.[26][35]
Personal life
On November 2, 2007, Haig married Susan L. Oberg.[36]
Death
In early September 2019, Haig was hospitalized after falling at his home in Thousand Oaks, California.[37] While recovering, he contracted Aspergilluspneumonia after aspirating vomit in his sleep.[37] He died on September 21, 2019, at the age of 80.[38][3][39]
^According to the State of California. California Birth Index, 1905-1995. Center for Health Statistics, California Department of Health Services, Sacramento, California. At Ancestry.com
McIver, Joel (2015). Sinister Urge: The Life and Times of Rob Zombie. Backbeat. ISBN978-1617136160.
Muir, John Kenneth (2008). The Encyclopedia of Superheroes on Film and Television. McFarland. ISBN978-0786437559.
Parish, James Robert (1990). The Great Combat Pictures: Twentieth-Century Warfare on the Screen. Scarecrow Press. ISBN978-0810823150.
Paul, Louis (2007). Tales from the Cult Film Trenches: Interviews with 36 Actors from Horror, Science Fiction and Exploitation Cinema. McFarland. ISBN978-0786429943.
Pitts, Michael R. (1997). Western Movies: A TV and Video Guide to 4200 Genre Films. McFarland. ISBN978-0786404216.
Senn, Bryan (2013). The Most Dangerous Cinema: People Hunting People on Film. McFarland. ISBN978-0786435623.