Edward Mulhare on
Baywatch Nights
Edward Mulhare
("Devon Miles" on Knight Rider)
appeared in an episode of "Baywatch
Nights" the week of February 8,
1997. He played a scientist who helped
revive two frozen Vikings.
Obituary
Edward Mulhare; TV, Film,
Stage Actor
By Mack Reed Los
Angeles Times, May 25, 1997
Edward
Mulhare, the lanky Irish character actor
best known as the begrudging specter in
television's "The Ghost and Mrs.
Muir," died Saturday at home in Van
Nuys after a five-month battle with long
cancer. He was 74.
Mulhare
left behind a rich resume well peppered
with credits from stage, screen and TV,
ranging from his turn on a London stage
opposite Orson Welles' Othello to his
recent work with Jack Lemmon and Walter
Matthau in "Out to Sea" due in
theaters this July.
He played
in musicals, road shows and TV series,
switching readily from the haughty pomp
of professor Henry Higgins as the first
replacement for Rex Harrison in "My
Fair Lady" to a variety of roles in
early television dramas such as
"Studio One" and "Kraft
Theater."
"He
was brilliant to the end," said
spokeswoman and longtime friends Pegge
Forrest. "That wit and humor and
intelligence went just to the last
minute. He was waking up from deep
comas... and sayingsomething that would
blow everybody away."
Mulhare
began his acting career in Ireland at 19
and eventually moved to London, where he
played in the 1951 production of
"Othello" at the St. James
Theater directed by Laurence Olivier.
When Rex
Harrison bowed out of the lead in
"My Fair Lady" after a one-year
run on Broadway, Mulhare took over the
role, Forrest said.
"He
was a young man (in his 30's), way too
young to play the part," siad
Forrest, recalling the transformation
Mulhare made into the imperious professor
of dialect. "But he had a little bit
of the look of Rex Harrison," and
kept the role from 1957 to 1960, she
said.
Mulhare
went on to star in the "Devil's
Advocate" and "Mary, Mary"
on Broadway and later played Capt. Von
Trapp in "The Sound of Music"
for the Los Angeles Civic Light Opera.
He toured
nationally with such shows as
"Camelot," "My Fair
Lady" and "Deathtrap" with
lifelong friend Anne Rogers.
His
television credits included appearances
on "Murder, She Wrote,"
"MacGyver," "Outer
Limits" and "The Ed Sullivan
Show."
On the big
screen, his credits included roles in
"Von Ryan's Express," "Eye
of the Devil," "Carprice"
and "Our Man Flint."
Mulhare
also performed from 1982 to 1986 in the
TV series "Knight Rider" as
Devon Miles, a mentor to the lead
character played by David Hasselhoff.
His final
television appearance came in December
opposite Hasselhoff in "Baywatch
Nights."
Mulhare
returned from a trip to New York in
January feeling ill, and was diagnosed
with lung cancer soon thereafter, Forrest
said. He had been a heavy smoker earlier
in life; five packs a day until he quit
in 1979, she said.
"When
someone announced he was ill, he started
getting fan mail from all these people
who had seen 'The Ghost and Mrs. Muir'
when they were kids, and now were in
their 30s and 40s saying, 'We never
missed your show,'" Forrest said.
Mulhare
played Capt. Daniel Gregg, the ghost of a
New England mariner who found himself the
reluctant host to a recently widowed
mother of two played by Hope Lange.
Mulhare
was an avid reader, often devouring a
book a day, and was fascinated by
computers, including the five he tinkered
with in his Van Nuys home, Forrest said.
Mulhare is
survived by two brothers, Thomas and
John, in County Cork, Ireland.
Plans for
services are pending.
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