Frank S. Ferguson (December 25, 1899 – September 12, 1978)[1] was an American character actor with hundreds of appearances in both film and television.
Background
Ferguson was the younger of two children of W. Thomas Ferguson, a native Scottish merchant, and his American wife Annie Boynton. He grew up in his native Ferndale, California.[2] He graduated from Ferndale Union High School in 1917.[3] He earned a bachelor's degree in speech and drama at the University of California and a master's degree from Cornell University. He also taught at UCLA and Cornell.[4]
As a young man, he became connected with Gilmor Brown, the founder and director of the Pasadena Community Playhouse, and became one of its first directors. He directed as well as acted in many plays there.[5] He also taught at the Playhouse.[4]
He made his film debut in 1939 in Gambling on the High Seas (released in 1940), and appeared in nearly 200 feature films and hundreds of TV episodes subsequently.
In 1952, Ferguson played the part of a music professor at Pomona College in the second of two short films starring Jascha Heifetz, produced by Rudolph Polk and Bernard Luber. The set-up was that Heifetz and his accompanist, Emanuel Bay, had visited the college in order to see a collection of music/music scores. As they are leaving, the professor catches them and asks if Heifetz will come to his class and say a few words. He does, but when there are no questions immediately, he starts to leave. Suddenly there are some questions, and then it turns into a recital.
In 1964–1965, Ferguson portrayed Pa Stockdale in the ABC-TV comedy No Time for Sergeants.[6]: 769–770
He guest starred in all three of Rod Cameron's crime series, City Detective (1955), State Trooper (in the 1957 episode "No Blaze of Glory", the story of a presumed arson case with a surprise ending, co-starring Vivi Janiss as his wife) and Coronado 9 (1960). He also guest starred, in the role of a hobo Beaver befriends, during the final season of ABC's Leave It to Beaver sitcom in 1963.
Ferguson played the role of Eli Carson in the primetime ABC serial Peyton Place[6]: 828–829 and reprised the role in the later daytime version Return to Peyton Place.[6]: 890 Ferguson also appeared in an episode of Green Acres in 1969.
Death
Ferguson died in Los Angeles of cancer on September 12, 1978.
^Social Security Death Index, Source Citation: Number: 459-07-0712; Issue State: Texas; Issue Date: Before 1951.
^Fifteenth Census of the United States: 1930, Ferndale Town, Pacific Township, Humboldt County, California, Enumeration District No. 12-34, Sheet No. 3A, p. 271
^ abPolson, Dorothee (May 2, 1973). "Celebrities Cook". Arizona Republic. Arizona, Phoenix. p. 91. Retrieved May 18, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
^Alexander, Diane. Playhouse, Los Angeles, California: Dorleac-MacLeish, 1984
^ abcdTerrace, Vincent (2011). Encyclopedia of Television Shows, 1925 through 2010 (2nd ed.). Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. p. 730. ISBN978-0-7864-6477-7.