From Yahoo:
“Tommy Kirk Dies: Child Star
Of ‘Old Yeller’, ‘The Shaggy Dog’ Was 79”
Tommy Kirk, one of Disney’s major young stars
of the 1950s and early ’60s with performances in generational touchstone films
such as Old Yeller, The Shaggy Dog and Son of Flubber, died at his home in Las
Vegas, Nevada yesterday. He was 79. His death was announced on Facebook by
friend and fellow child star Paul Petersen. “My friend of many decades, Tommy
Kirk, was found dead last night,” wrote Petersen, who has long been an advocate
for child actors through his organization A Minor Consideration, adding, “Tommy
was intensely private. He lived alone in Las Vegas, close to his friend…and “Ol
Yeller” co-star, Bev Washburn…and it was she who called me this morning. Tommy
was gay and estranged from what remains of his blood-family. We in A Minor
Consideration are Tommy’s family. Without apology. We will take care of this.”
Kirk said in a 1993 interview
with Filmfax magazine writer Kevin Minton that he realized he was gay at age 17
or 18, and that his sexual orientation all but destroyed his career. “Disney
was a family film studio and I was supposed to be their young leading man.
After they found out I was involved with someone, that was the end of Disney. “I
consider my teenage years as being desperately unhappy,” Kirk added in the
interview. “I knew I was gay, but I had no outlet for my feelings. It was very
hard to meet people and, at that time, there was no place to go to socialize.
It wasn’t until the early ’60s that I began to hear of places where gays
congregated. The lifestyle was not recognized and I was very, very lonely. Oh,
I had some brief, very passionate encounters and as a teenager I had some
affairs, but they were always stolen, back alley kind of things. They were
desperate and miserable. “When I was about 17 or 18 years old,” he continued,
“I finally admitted to myself that I wasn’t going to change. I didn’t know what
the consequences would be, but I had the definite feeling that it was going to
wreck my Disney career and maybe my whole acting career. It was all going to
come to an end.” Though he left the Disney youth films behind by the mid-’60s –
following starring roles in Swiss Family Robinson (1960), The Absent Minded
Professor (1961), Babes in Toyland (1961), Moon Pilot (1962), Bon Voyage!
(1962), Savage Sam (an Old Yeller sequel in 1963), The Misadventures of Merlin
Jones (1964), and The Monkey’s Uncle (1965) – Kirk went on to appear in a
string of the popular beach party movies of that decade. He played a Martian in
the 1964 feature film Pajama Party, and also starred in The Ghost in the
Invisible Bikini (1966) and It’s a Bikini World (1967). In addition to the
beach movies, Kirk appeared in various low-budget sci-fi films that went from
drive-in fare to cult classic lists, including 1965’s campy Village of the Giants,
opposite Beau Bridges and Ron Howard, in in 1968, Mars Needs Women. He would
continue to make sporadic appearances throughout the 1990s and early 2000s in
films such as Billy Frankenstein (1998) and The Education of a Vampire (2001).
Born in Lexington, Kentucky, Kirk
hadn’t yet reached his second birthday when he and his family moved to Downey,
California, and at age 13 he accompanied his brother, Joe, to an audition of
Eugene O’Neill’s Ah, Wilderness! at the Pasadena Playhouse. Joe lost the part to
a young actor named Bobby Driscoll (who himself would become a Disney star,
voicing the title character of Peter Pan, before being let go by the studio. He
died in 1968 at age 31 after years of drug abuse). Though Joe didn’t land the
role at the Playhouse, Tommy was cast in a minor part, signed with an agent and
began working in television on such series as Gunsmoke and Matinee Theatre. In
1956, Kirk was cast as Joe Hardy, opposite Tim Considine’s Frank Hardy, in The
Mickey Mouse Club serialized adventure The Hardy Boys: The Mystery of the
Applegate Treasure. The popular serial featuring buried treasure, mysterious
clues and skeletons, remembered by countless Baby Boomers for its spooky theme
song “Gold Doubloons and Pieces Of Eight,” appeared in 19 episodes in its first
year on The Mickey Mouse Club in 1956, and returned for a second series the
following year.
In an obituary written and
released by the Disney studio today, Considine said of Kirk, “He was one of the
most talented people I ever worked with. Frighteningly talented. A friend of
mine who was a casting director told me that when Tommy Kirk came in to
audition, he had never seen a kid actor as good as he was, especially because
he could instantly cry on cue. He was a great talent and it was privilege to
work with him and call him a friend.” Both Kirk and Considine were named by the
studio as Disney Legends in 2006, an honor given to individuals in recognition
of their extraordinary contributions to The Walt Disney Company. At the Disney
Legends Award ceremony, Kirk said, “I want to be remembered for my Disney work,
like Swiss Family Robinson and Old Yeller.” He recalled a childhood encounter
with Walt Disney, noting that the famed studio chief was with gossip columnist
Hedda Hopper. “He put his arm around me, and he said, ‘This is my good-luck
piece here,’ to Hedda Hopper. I never forgot that. That’s the nicest compliment
he ever gave me.”
Kirk’s most lasting contribution
to Disney – and to his peers in the incipient youth culture of the 1950s –
certainly was as the child star of Old Yeller, also featuring Dorothy McGuire
and Fess Parker. Set in post-Civil War Texas, the film, based on a popular and
acclaimed novel, focused on Kirk’s Travis Coates, a young boy who adopts the
title character, a mischievous but ever-loyal stray dog. Like Disney’s Bambi
before it, Old Yeller included a heartbreaking scene that would become seared
into the psyches of children across the country: When Old Yeller becomes
infected with rabies, a sobbing Travis, with bravery and compassion, shoots and
kills the dog. Old Yeller was selected for preservation into the United States
National Film Registry by the Library of Congress in 2019.
In the studio obituary, film
historian Leonard Maltin said, “One of the reasons people remember Old Yeller
is not just the fate of a beloved dog, but the shattering grief expressed by
his owner, so beautifully played by Tommy. I think his talent and range as an
actor were taken for granted somewhat. He was really very versatile.” Also
quoted in the studio statement are Mouseketeers Tommy Cole and Bobby Burgess. “Tommy
and I palled around and even double dated as kids,” said Cole. “To me he was a
Disney icon.” Added Burgess, “When Tommy was filming Old Yeller, he went to
school on the lot with us Mouseketeers. I remember our teacher asked us what
language we would like to learn. We all chose Spanish except for Tommy who
wanted to learn German, and indeed he did!” Kirk by and large abandoned acting
in the 1970s, but years later would continue to meet fans at nostalgia
conventions. According to Disney, he was interviewed several months ago for an
upcoming book on the making of Swiss Family Robinson. In his Facebook post,
Petersen, who starred on the 1958-66 family sitcom The Donna Reed Show, writes
that his longtime friend was not embittered by his abbreviated career, and that
he found comfort in his church. “Please know that Tommy Kirk loved you, his
fans,” Petersen writes. “You lifted him up when an Industry let him down in
1965.”
^ I really liked "The Swiss
Family Robinson." He is the last actor or actress from that film to pass
away. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/tommy-kirk-dies-child-star-202715619.html
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