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Thursday, April 3, 2025

Richard Chamberlain, TV actor who starred in ‘Dr. Kildare,’ dies at 90

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3 days ago
20250330
FILE - This June 27, 2012, photo shows actor Richard Chamberlain in Los Angeles. (Photo by Matt Sayles/Invision/AP, file)

FILE - This June 27, 2012, photo shows actor Richard Chamberlain in Los Angeles. (Photo by Matt Sayles/Invision/AP, file)

Matt Sayles

Richard Cham­ber­lain, the hand­some hero of the 1960s tele­vi­sion se­ries “Dr. Kil­dare” who found a sec­ond ca­reer as an award-win­ning “king of the minis­eries,” has died. He was 90.

Cham­ber­lain died Sat­ur­day night in Waimana­lo, Hawaii, of com­pli­ca­tions fol­low­ing a stroke, ac­cord­ing to his pub­li­cist, Har­lan Boll.

“Our beloved Richard is with the an­gels now. He is free and soar­ing to those loved ones be­fore us,” Mar­tin Rab­bett, his life­long part­ner, said in a state­ment. “How blessed were we to have known such an amaz­ing and lov­ing soul. Love nev­er dies. And our love is un­der his wings lift­ing him to his next great ad­ven­ture.”

Tall, with clas­sic good looks and ro­man­tic style, Cham­ber­lain be­came an in­stant fa­vorite with teenage girls as the com­pas­sion­ate physi­cian on the TV se­ries that aired from 1961 to 1966. Pho­to­play mag­a­zine named him most pop­u­lar male star for three years in a row, from 1963-65.

Not un­til 2003 did he ac­knowl­edge pub­licly what Hol­ly­wood in­sid­ers had long known, that he was gay. He made the rev­e­la­tion in his au­to­bi­og­ra­phy, “Shat­tered Love.”

The ac­tor be­came known as “king of the TV minis­eries” in 1978 when he land­ed the star­ring role in “Cen­ten­ni­al,” an epic pro­duc­tion 24 hours long and based on James Mich­en­er’s sprawl­ing nov­el. He fol­lowed that in 1980 with “Shogun,” an­oth­er cost­ly, epic minis­eries based on James Clavell’s pe­ri­od piece about an Amer­i­can vis­i­tor to Japan.

He scored his great­est minis­eries suc­cess in 1983 with an­oth­er long-form dra­ma, “The Thorn Birds,” based on Colleen Mc­Cul­lough’s best-sell­er. He played Fa­ther Ralph de Bric­as­sart, a Ro­man Catholic priest in Aus­tralia who falls in love with beau­ti­ful Meg­gie Cleary (Rachel Ward). The ABC pro­duc­tion, which al­so starred Bar­bara Stan­wyck, re­port­ed­ly at­tract­ed 100 mil­lion view­ers.

Cham­ber­lain won Gold­en Globes for his work in “Shogun” and “The Thorn Birds.” Years ear­li­er, he re­ceived one for “Dr. Kil­dare.”

When the pub­lic be­gan to lose in­ter­est in minis­eries, Cham­ber­lain turned to the the­ater, where he dis­played a fine singing voice. He ap­peared as Hen­ry Hig­gins in a 1994 Broad­way re­vival of “My Fair La­dy” and as Cap­tain von Trapp in a 1999 re­vival of “The Sound of Mu­sic.”

He reprised his role of de Bric­as­sart in the 1996 TV movie “The Thorn Birds: The Miss­ing Years.”

He al­so ap­peared in nu­mer­ous films, in­clud­ing “The Mu­sic Lovers” (as Tchaikovsky), “The Mad­woman of Chail­lot,” “The Tow­er­ing In­fer­no” and “The Three Mus­ke­teers” and its se­quels.

The “Kil­dare” se­ries was based on a string of suc­cess­ful 1930s and ‘40s films that had starred Lew Ayres in the ti­tle role.

Cham­ber­lain’s hunky, all-Amer­i­can ap­pear­ance made him an overnight star. An­oth­er med­ical show that de­buted the same sea­son, “Ben Casey,” al­so was a smash and made its lead­ing man, the dark­ly hand­some Vince Ed­wards, a star, too.

The “Ben Casey shirt” be­came a fash­ion item, both shows’ theme songs made the pop Top 40 (the Kil­dare song per­formed by Cham­ber­lain him­self) and there was even a pop song called “Dr. Kil­dare! Dr. Casey! You Are Want­ed for Con­sul­ta­tion.”

But in his book, Cham­ber­lain re­count­ed how he was forced to hide his sex­u­al­i­ty. He would es­cort glam­orous ac­tress­es to movie pre­mieres and oth­er pub­lic events at the re­quest of stu­dio ex­ec­u­tives and dodge re­porters’ ques­tions about why he had nev­er mar­ried with a stock re­ply: “Get­ting mar­ried would be great, but I’m aw­ful­ly busy now.”

“When I grew up, be­ing gay, be­ing a sis­sy or any­thing like that was ver­boten,” he said in an NBC in­ter­view. “I dis­liked my­self in­tense­ly and feared this part of my­self in­tense­ly and had to hide it.”

The book al­so de­scribed a trou­bled child­hood and an al­co­holic fa­ther, and Cham­ber­lain said that writ­ing it fi­nal­ly lift­ed a heavy emo­tion­al bur­den. He al­so ex­pressed re­lief that he was no longer hid­ing his sex­u­al­i­ty.

“I played a cat-and-mouse game with the press. Game over,” said Cham­ber­lain.

Born George Richard Cham­ber­lain in Bev­er­ly Hills on March 31, 1934, the ac­tor orig­i­nal­ly stud­ied at Pomona Col­lege to be a painter. But af­ter re­turn­ing from the Army, where he had served as an in­fantry clerk in the Ko­re­an War, Cham­ber­lain de­cid­ed to try act­ing.

He stud­ied voice and dra­ma, and af­ter ap­pear­ing in guest roles in a hand­ful of TV shows and in the 1960 film “The Se­cret of the Pur­ple Reef,” he won the Dr. Kil­dare role.

When “Dr. Kil­dare” was can­celed he ini­tial­ly found it dif­fi­cult to shake the im­age of the hand­some young physi­cian.

He moved to Eng­land for a time to find work and hone his act­ing skills. While there, he ap­peared in three of di­rec­tor Richard Lester’s films, “Petu­lia” (1968), “The Three Mus­ke­teers” (1973) and “The Four Mus­ke­teers” (1974). He re­unit­ed with Lester in 1989 for “The Re­turn of the Mus­ke­teers,” once more play­ing Aramis.

In 1969, Cham­ber­lain played the ti­tle role in “Ham­let” at Eng­land’s Birm­ing­ham Reper­to­ry Com­pa­ny and re­peat­ed it in a TV adap­ta­tion that ap­peared on NBC in the Unit­ed States. He al­so ap­peared as Oc­tavius in a film ver­sion of “Julius Cae­sar,” which co-starred Charl­ton He­s­ton and Ja­son Ro­bards.

He con­tin­ued to act well in­to the 21st cen­tu­ry, ap­pear­ing on such tele­vi­sion shows as “Will & Grace,” “The Drew Carey Show” and “Touched by an An­gel.”

Bob Thomas, a long­time As­so­ci­at­ed Press jour­nal­ist who died in 2014, was the prin­ci­pal writer of this obit­u­ary.

By BOB THOMAS

LOS AN­GE­LES (AP)


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