Leonard Stone


Leonard Stone was an American character actor who played supporting roles in over 120 television shows and 35 films.

Early life

Stone was born in Salem, Oregon, the son of Jewish parents Julia Marguerite and Albert Michael Steinbock.
He was a graduate of Salem High School. He majored in speech and drama at Willamette University, graduating cum laude.

Military service

He was a midshipman during training with the U.S. Navy, going on to serve as "skipper on a minesweeper in Japanese waters" during World War II.

Stage

Stone started his career as a young actor studying at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London He performed in the West End, on Broadway, and toured the world. He traveled for eight years in Australia and New Zealand with the musical South Pacific.
In 1959, he won the Tony Award for Best Supporting Actor in Redhead, a Bob Fosse musical. He also was in the Tony Award-nominated cast of Look Homeward, Angel in 1957, which premiered at the Ethel Barrymore Theater in New York. The play, based on the Thomas Wolfe novel, won the Pulitzer Prize.

Film and television

One of Stone's more notable film roles came in 1971, when he played Mr. Beauregarde, the father of Golden Ticket winner Violet Beauregarde, in Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory. He was the last surviving adult character who toured the factory in the movie, but Diana Sowle, who played Mrs. Bucket, was still alive at the time of his death. In 1973's Soylent Green, he played Charles, the manager of the building where the murdered character portrayed by Joseph Cotten lived.
In 1956, Stone appeared in a minor role as a crew member on the in a TV adaptation of Walter Lord's book A Night to Remember.
He was the bartender in The Shakiest Gun in the West, and a congressman in , which starred James Earl Jones as the first Black president of the United States. He appeared in the Jerry Lewis vehicle The Big Mouth in 1967. Other films he appeared in include The Mugger, A Man Called Dagger, Angel in My Pocket, Zig Zag, Getting Straight, I Love My Wife, Mame, and The Man from Independence.
Stone appeared in the TV movies The Ghost of Sierra de Cobra, A Step Out of Line, Terror in the Sky, Beg, Borrow or Steal, The Runaways, The Girl in the Empty Grave, The Other Side of Hell, Zuma Beach, See Arnold Run, and Surrender, Dorothy.
Between 1961 and 1985, Stone appeared in dozens of popular American television series, including Peter Gunn, The Untouchables, Gunsmoke, The Rifleman, The Defenders, The Real McCoys, The Outer Limits, Dr. Kildare, McHale's Navy, Rawhide, The F.B.I., The Doris Day Show, The High Chaparral, Lost in Space, Gomer Pyle: USMC, Dragnet 1967, The Partridge Family, Nanny and the Professor, Mod Squad, The Virginian, Love, American Style, The Waltons, Mission: Impossible, Adam-12, Barney Miller, Hawaii Five-O, Ironside, Kojak, Mannix, Police Story, Cannon, The Blue Knight, The Bob Newhart Show, Sanford and Son, M*A*S*H, Eight Is Enough, The Six Million Dollar Man, All in the Family, The Dukes of Hazzard, General Hospital, ''One Day at a Time, Quincy M.E., Cagney & Lacey, Alice, Night Court, Hill Street Blues, Falcon Crest, Simon & Simon, and L.A. Law.
In 1961 and 1962, Stone was cast twice in different roles on
The Real McCoys in the episodes "Money from Heaven" and "You Can't Beat the Army". Between 1962 and 1966, Stone made four guest appearances on Perry Mason, including his season-six, 1962 role as murderer Jerel Leland in "The Case of the Hateful Hero".
Stone played Farnum the Great in two episodes of
Lost in Space.. He appeared twice on The Donna Reed Show, as Mr. Trestle in "The Good Guys and the Bad Guys" and as Harlan Carmody, Jr., in "Joe College". In the 1965–1966 season, he appeared as Doc Joslyn on Camp Runamuck. In 1967, he had the role of Judge Gilroy in Cimarron Strip. In 1971, Stone appeared as Tom Wagner on The Men from Shiloh in the episode titled "The Town Killer".
Between 1988 and 1994, he was cast as Judge Paul Hansen in 10 episodes of
L.A. Law.
On September 22, 2000, he appeared on an episode of
Wheel of Fortune.
Stone's final role came in 2006 at the age of 83, when he played a minor character in the TV movie
Surrender Dorothy''.

Personal life and death

Stone married Carole H. Kleinman in 1964 and they had four children. He died on November 2. 2011, in Encinitas, California, just one day before his 88th birthday, after suffering a brief bout with cancer.

Filmography

Select film

The Mugger as Jim KellyReturn to Peyton Place as Steve Swanson Toys in the Attic as Hotel Clerk Shock Treatment as Psychiatrist The Big Mouth as FongA Man Called Dagger as Karl RainerThe Shakiest Gun in the West as Bartender Angel in My Pocket as Paul GreshamZig Zag as Jim HarrisGetting Straight as LysanderI Love My Wife as Dr. NeilsonWilly Wonka & the Chocolate Factory as Sam BeauregardeTerror in the Sky as Harry BurdickThe Man as Congressman ParmelSoylent Green as CharlesMame as Stage ManagerThe Man from Independence as WernerHardly Working as Ted MitchellAmerican Pop as Leo Stern Nankyoku Monogatari as NarratorSee Arnold Run as Warren BuffettSurrender, Dorothy as Neighbor

Select television

The Rifleman as Gambler/K.C. PetersThe Untouchables as Louis ManzakThe Real McCoys as Lieutenant/Captain LewisPerry Mason as Various RolesThe Outer Limits as Dr. Phillip GainerDr. Kildare as Fred PaysonGunsmoke as Various RolesRawhide as Sorry Brownstead/Leroy MeansMission: Impossible as Various RolesThe F.B.I. as Harry PalmerThe Virginian as Tom WagnerThe Waltons as George AndersonSanford and Son as Otto/Mr. GraysonHawaii Five-O as Herman SteinThe Six Million Dollar Man as Lt. TannerThe Bob Newhart Show as Dr. Ned PodbillionM*A*S*H as Colonel BidwellThe Dukes of Hazzard as GregBarney Miller as Mr. LunGeneral Hospital as Packy/Packie/PackeyFalcon Crest as Harrison Albright/Judge Carl FullerL.A. Law as Judge Paul HansenDays of Our Lives as Judge RandolphAvatar: The Last Airbender as Canyon Guide