Originally under contract to Capitol Records,[2] Ford was mentored by Nat "King" Cole. Later, recording for Philips Records the release of his singles, "Don't Keep It To Yourself"/"Blue Ribbons" which were noted in Billboard's Pop Spotlight's Top 60,[3] resulting in the song's appearance on many teen music television shows of the era, including American Bandstand,[4]Hullabaloo and Ninth Street West.
He eventually formed his own group, The Creations,[5] who appeared in various local clubs, as well as the Whisky a Go Go in West Hollywood and the El Cortez Club in Las Vegas.
In the early 1970s Ford began working at Fox and was cast as a series regular and dialogue director for Cade's County, which starred his father Glenn Ford, playing forensic lab deputy Pete Odom.[10][11] After Cade's County ended, Ford joined the Photo Unit of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department as a Reserve Deputy, rising to the rank of Lieutenant before retiring in 1996.
Building
In the mid-1970s Ford and his wife Lynda began remodeling and selling homes.
In 1989 Ford took over the building company and operated it as a sole proprietorship until his retirement from building in 1996. Blackoak/Ford was a respected custom residential construction firm. His work has been published in architectural magazines throughout the world, most notably the Schnabel House, designed by architect Frank Gehry. It was noted by Architectural Digest as "one of the greatest houses of the 20th century".[12]
Personal life
Ford married Lynda Gunderson (b. 1946) in 1970.[citation needed]
Ford and Lynda have three children: Aubrey Newton Ford (b. 1977), Ryan Welsie Ford (b. 1984) and Eleanor Powell Ford (b. 1988).[citation needed]
Hobbies and interests
Ford is a student and collector of Native American culture[13] who harbors an interest in genealogical research, with membership in the Society of Mayflower Descendants, Society of Colonial Wars, Society of the Sons of the Revolution, The Baronial Order of the Magna Charta, the Order of the Crusades (with 11 Crusaders in his direct line), the Crown of Charlemagne (Charlemagne is Ford's 38th Great Grandfather) and The Order of Founders and Patriots of America.[citation needed]
He also collects movie memorabilia from Hollywood's Golden Age, and maintains The Glenn Ford and Eleanor Powell Library and Archives and as a writer, he has published numerous articles. Ford's various interests led him to KIEV-AM 870 radio, where for nearly three years in the late 1990s he hosted a weekly nighttime political talk show in Los Angeles, The Peter Ford Show.[14]
Ford is also the author of Glenn Ford: A Life, a biography of his father published by the University of Wisconsin Press.[15]