Air Patrol


06:00 am - 07:15 am, Tuesday, December 9 on FX Movie Channel HD (East) ()

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About this Broadcast
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L.A. detective Sgt. Castle and his two partners investigate the theft of a valuable Fragonard painting by a thief who pilots a helicopter.

1962 English
Drama Crime

Cast & Crew
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Willard Parker (Actor) .. Lt. Vern Taylor
Merry Anders (Actor) .. Mona Whitney
Robert Dix (Actor) .. Sgt. Bob Castle
John Holland (Actor) .. Arthur Murcott
Russ Bender (Actor) .. Sgt. Lou Kurnitz
Douglas Dumbrille (Actor) .. Millard Nolan
George Eldredge (Actor) .. Howie Franklin
Ivan Bonar (Actor) .. Oliver Dunning
Jack Younger (Actor) .. Paper Boy
Glen Marshall (Actor) .. Security Guard
Ray Dannis (Actor) .. Security Guard
Stacey Winters (Actor) .. Mrs. Hortense Jackter
LaRue Farlow (Actor) .. Nolan's Associate

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Willard Parker (Actor) .. Lt. Vern Taylor
Born: February 05, 1912
Died: December 04, 1996
Trivia: Anyone born with a name like Worster Van Eps probably had no choice but to become a top tennis pro. But when he entered films in 1937, Van Eps altered his name to the more hero-friendly Willard Parker. A leading man at Columbia in the 1940s, Parker, a handsome hunk in the Sonny Tufts mold (though a far better actor), never quite reached the summit. His best-remembered performance was as the bombastic, clueless "other man" in the 1953 musical Kiss Me Kate. From 1955 through 1957, Parker built up a kiddie fan following as co-star (with Harry Lauter) of the TV series Tales of the Texas Rangers. Retiring from acting in the late '60s to become a thriving real estate agent, Willard Parker was married from 1951 to actress Virginia Field, with whom he co-starred in The Earth Dies Screaming (1966) -- the last film for both.
Merry Anders (Actor) .. Mona Whitney
Born: May 22, 1932
Trivia: American actress Merry Anders was a professional model when she signed her first studio contract in 1951. After two years of uncredited bits in such 20th Century-Fox features as Belles on Their Toes (1952) and Titanic (1953), Merry found more rewarding work on TV. From 1953 through 1955, she appeared in The Stu Erwin Show, replacing Ann Todd in the role of Joyce, Erwin's oldest daughter. While most of her film assignments were along the bargain-basement lines of The Dalton Girls (1957) and The Hypnotic Eye (1960), Merry built up a reputation as "queen" of the TV pilot films. If she appeared as guest star in the pilot episode of a potential series, that series would most likely be sold. Merry would be the last person to insist that she was a great actress; her "versatility" in her many TV roles consisted of changing her hair color as often as possible. It was as a redhead that Merry was cast in the lead of the syndicated sitcom How to Marry a Millionaire, which ran from 1958 through 1960. After this assignment, Merry continued to show up as a blonde, brunette and redhead in such deathless movie offerings as Women of the Prehistoric Planet (1966) and Legacy of Blood (1973). In the late 1960s, she had a semi-recurring role on Dragnet as a super-efficient policewoman; the character was meant to develop into a love interest for Joe Friday (Jack Webb), but the series never went in that direction. It can be argued that Merry Anders' most memorable performance (and the one most often seen these days) was as a woman who is drowned in a phone booth (!) on a 1966 episode of Get Smart.
Robert Dix (Actor) .. Sgt. Bob Castle
Trivia: The career of American character actor Robert Dix (son of leading man Richard Dix) has embraced both British and Hollywood productions since 1955. Many of Dix's earliest appearances were in swashbucklers and Westerns; among his larger roles was Frank James in 1960's Young Jesse James. He later showed up in low-budget cycle flicks bearing such titles as Satan's Sadists, Rebel Rousers, and Cain's Cutthroats. In 1970, Robert Dix penned the screenplay for the self-explanatory melodrama Five Bloody Graves.
John Holland (Actor) .. Arthur Murcott
Born: May 16, 1908
Russ Bender (Actor) .. Sgt. Lou Kurnitz
Born: January 01, 1910
Died: August 16, 1969
Trivia: Over his 14-year film career, actor Russ Bender appeared almost exclusively in low-budget horror films: The Amazing Colossal Man (1957), Invasion of the Saucer Men (1957), It Conquered the World (1957), Navy vs. the Night Monsters (1965), etc. One of his few "mainstream" assignments was the role of Edgar Llewellyn in 20th Century-Fox's Compulsion (1959). Russ Bender is also listed as screenwriter on such pinchpenny projects as Voodoo Woman.
Douglas Dumbrille (Actor) .. Millard Nolan
Born: October 13, 1890
Died: April 02, 1974
Trivia: Silver-tongued actor Douglas Dumbrille played just about every type in his long screen career, but it was as a dignified villain that he is best remembered. Born in Canada, Dumbrille did most of his stage work in the United States, breaking into films with His Woman in 1931. He bounced between supporting parts and unbilled bits in the early 1930s, usually at Warner Bros., where his sleek brand of skullduggery fit right in with the gangsters, shysters and political phonies popping up in most of the studio's 1930s product. Superb in modern dress roles, Dumbrille also excelled at costume villainy: it is claimed that, in Lives of the Bengal Lancers (1935), he was the first bad guy to growl, "We have ways of making you talk." The actor's pompous demeanor made him an ideal foil for such comedians as the Marx Brothers, with whom he appeared twice, and Abbott and Costello, who matched wits with Dumbrille in four different films. Sometimes, Dumbrille's reputation as a no-good was used to lead the audience astray; he was frequently cast as red-herring suspects in such murder mysteries as Castle in the Desert (1942), while in the Johnny Mack Brown western Flame of the West (1945), Dumbrille piqued the viewer's interest by playing a thoroughly honest, decent sheriff (surely he'd turn bad by the end, thought the audience -- but he didn't). In real life a gentle man whose diabolical features were softened by a pair of spectacles, Dumbrille mellowed his image as he grew older, often playing bemused officials and judges who couldn't make head nor tails of Gracie Allen's thought patterns on TV's The Burns and Allen Show. Late in life, a widowed Douglas Dumbrille married Patricia Mobray, daughter of his close friend -- and fellow screen villain -- Alan Mowbray.
George Eldredge (Actor) .. Howie Franklin
Born: September 10, 1898
Trivia: American actor George Eldredge began surfacing in films around 1936. A general hanger-on in the Universal horror product of the 1940s, Eldredge appeared in such roles as the village constable in Ghost of Frankenstein (1942) and the DA in Calling Dr. Death (1943). His bland, malleable facial features enabled him to play everything from tanktown sheriffs to Nazi spies. Devotees of the "exploitation" films of the 1940s will remember Eldredge best as Dan Blake in the anti-syphilis tract Mom and Dad (1949). George Eldredge was once again in uniform as a small-town police chief in his final film, Hitchcock's Psycho (1960)
Ivan Bonar (Actor) .. Oliver Dunning
Born: January 01, 1923
Died: January 01, 1988
Trivia: American actor Ivan Bonar was a versatile and highly competent supporting actor who worked on stage, screen, and television.
Jack Younger (Actor) .. Paper Boy
Glen Marshall (Actor) .. Security Guard
Ray Dannis (Actor) .. Security Guard
Stacey Winters (Actor) .. Mrs. Hortense Jackter
LaRue Farlow (Actor) .. Nolan's Associate
Lee Patterson (Actor)
Born: March 31, 1929
Died: February 14, 2007
Birthplace: Vancouver, British Columbia
Trivia: Born in British Columbia, Lee H. Patterson attended Ontario college. Briefly a stage manager and theatre publicist, Patterson made his mark beginning in 1951 playing virile American types in British films. His credits from the British phase of his career include Above Us the Waves (1955), Time Lock (1957) and Jack the Ripper (1960). In the U.S. from 1960 onward, Patterson briefly joined the "beach boy" set as preppy private eye Dave Thorne on the weekly adventure series Surfside 6. He later settled into daytime drama, first as Dr. Kevin Cooke in Another World. For well over a decade, Lee H. Patterson was seen as reporter Joe Riley, one-time husband of Victoria Lord (Erika Slezak), on the ABC soaper One Life to Live.

Before / After
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