Harry Guardino

Harry Guardino

actor, soundtrack

Harry Guardino was born on Dec 23, 1925 in USA. Harry Guardino's big-screen debut came with Sirocco directed by Curtis Bernhardt in 1951, strarring Lt. Collet (uncredited). Harry Guardino is known for Jessie directed by Corey Allen, Lindsay Wagner stars as Dr. Jessie Hayden and Tony Lo Bianco as Lieutenant Alex Ascoli. Harry Guardino has got 1 awards and 2 nominations so far. The most recent award Harry Guardino achieved is Western Heritage Awards. The upcoming new movie Harry Guardino plays is The Neon Empire which will be released on Dec 03, 1989.

Brash, virile Italian-American lead and supporting "tough guy" Harry Guardino, with dark, wavy hair and a perpetual worried look on his craggy-looking mug, was born Harold Vincent Guardino on December 23, 1925, in Manhattan but raised as a Brooklynite. Serving with the U.S. Navy during World War II, he joined the Merchant Marine.He would start out in the late 1940's in the school hard knocks, training in dramatic workshops and slumming for nearly half a decade in small, obscure 'tough guy' film bits in early 50's Universal and Columbia pictures including an orderly in the service comedy Deux GI en vadrouille (1951); soldiers in both Sirocco (1951) and Purple Heart Diary (1951); and two Tony Curtis starrers (Le Fils d'Ali-Baba (1952) and Flesh and Fury (1952)).After making his Broadway debut in 1953 with a small cadet role in the play "End as a Man," Harry earned his first big break as the Broadway understudy to Ben Gazzara in the acclaimed drama "A Hatful of Rain." He later took over the role and then went on the national tour. Although it did little to elevate his bit part standing in Hollywood, he figured in more prominently on the smaller screen with parts on "I Led Three Lives," "The Millionaire," "Alfred Hitchcock Presents," "Suspect" and several TV anthologies.Making a play for film once again, Harry received "second lead" status in the family comedy La péniche du bonheur (1958), stealing scenes from both stars Cary Grant and Sophia Loren. As Italianate truck driver/handyman Angelo, he earned a Golden Globe nomination for his hilarious supporting turn as the guy who sells Cary the titled boat after completely destroying their other home in a truck accident.With and without a comic edge, Harry played several other guy-guy co-star types after this in such crime/war stories as La gloire et la peur (1959), Cinq femmes marquées (1960), L'enfer est pour les héros (1962), Police sur la ville (1968), L'Inspecteur Harry (1971) and L'inspecteur ne renonce jamais (1976), the last two pairing him up with Clint Eastwood as his beleaguered superior, Lt. Bressler. At one point, the New Yorker even played "Barabbas" in the classic biblical epic Le roi des rois (1961) and a scurrilous poacher in the Ivan Tors African adventure Sur la piste du rhinocéros blanc (1964), just for a distinct change of pace and scenery.Harry returned to the Broadway stage and was Tony nominated for the play "One More River" in 1960 despite its extremely short run. He would return again again to Broadway throughout the rest of the 1960's in "Natural Affection" (1963), the musical "Anyone Can Whistle," "The Rose Tattoo" (1966) and "The Seven Descents of Myrtle" (1968).TV, he became more and more, however, the favorite medium of choice. Progressing to top guest parts in such TV programs as "Johnny Staccato," "Checkmate," "The Untouchables," "Dr. Kildare," "Route 66," "Naked City," "The Outer Limits," "Ben Casey," "The Virginian," "Twelve O'Clock High" and "Run for Your Life," Harry was given three short-run series to star or co-star in -- as an overly gregarious newsman in The Reporter (1964); the title government agent Monty Nash (1971); and the perpetually losing district attorney "Hamilton Burger" in The New Perry Mason (1973) revival.Harry co-starred in dozens of TV projects as a scruffy, hard-nosed, street-smart cop or detective. These included the TV movie The Lonely Profession (1969), plus the shows "McCloud," "The Name of the Game," "Get Christie Love!," "Kojak," "Police Story," "Fantasy Island," "The Sophisticated Gents" and "Murder, She Wrote." He also enjoyed an unlikely outlet in musical theatre in later years, co-starring in the Broadway production of "Woman of the Year" (1981) opposite and as Billy Flynn in stock production of "Chicago."Harry died of lung cancer on in 1995 at age 69, and was survived by his third wife and four children from various marriages.

  • Birthday

    Dec 23, 1925
  • Place of Birth

    New York City, New York, USA

Known For

Awards

1 wins & 2 nominations

Western Heritage Awards
1966
Fictional Television Drama
Winner - Bronze Wrangler

Movies & TV Shows

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Movies
TV Shows