Jameson Parker

Jameson Parker
Born Francis Jameson Parker Jr.
(1947-11-18) November 18, 1947
Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.
Occupation Actor
Years active 1966–2009
Spouse(s) Anne Taylor Davis
(m. 1969; div. 1974)
Bonnie Parker
(m. 1976; div. 1992)

Darleen Carr
(m. 1992)
Children 4
Cast of One Life to Live (1977). Front, L–R: Jameson Parker and Teri Keane. Back: Julia Montgomery and Farley Granger

Francis Jameson Parker Jr. (born November 18, 1947) is an American actor, best known for his role of A.J. Simon on the 1980s television series Simon & Simon.

Early life and education

Jameson Parker, Jr. was born in Baltimore, Maryland, on November 18, 1947. He was the son of Jameson and Sydney Buchanan (née Sullivan) Parker. His father had been general legal counsel for the Parker family steel mill, an investment analyst, and government attorney (working first with the Maryland Public Expenditure Council and later with the United States Naval Reserve). In 1947, he was in private practice, but about to embark on a career as a diplomat with the United States Department of State.

His mother was the daughter of Mark Sullivan, Sr., a former editor of Collier's and later columnist with the New York Herald Tribune newspaper. She was a short story author (under a pen name), and a reporter for The Washington Post.[1] His parents eloped on June 8, 1933, and were married in Rockville, Maryland.[2]

Jameson Parker Sr. died in 1972. His widow married her husband's Harvard Law School friend, Lewis Metcalfe Walling, a former New Deal labor attorney, in 1974.[3]

Jameson Jr. attended St. Albans School, Washington, D.C., and a Swiss prep school.[4] He studied drama at Beloit College.[5]

Acting career

At Beloit College, he acted in student theater productions,[6] and, while living in Washington, D.C., he landed a job with a production of The Great White Hope at the Arena Stage and then acted in theatrical productions of Caligula and Indians. After completing his degree at Beloit College in 1971,[5] he performed in dinner theater and summer stock in the Washington, D.C., area.

In 1972, he moved to New York City, where he secured several television commercials and appeared in off-Broadway plays. He was cast as Dale Robinson in the daytime drama Somerset and created the role of Brad Vernon on One Life to Live. During this period, Parker guest-starred on the ABC series Family and Hart to Hart.

Parker made his motion picture debut in The Bell Jar (1979) and starred in A Small Circle of Friends (1980), in which he played one of three radical college students during the 1960s.[7] The United Artists film received a limited theatrical release and grossed under $1 million.[8] Another film from early in his acting career was the controversial White Dog (1982).

In addition, he played the leads in several CBS television movies: Women at West Point (1979),[9] Anatomy of a Seduction (1979),[10] The Gathering II (1979), The Promise of Love (1980), Callie and Son (1981), and A Caribbean Mystery (1983).

He became well-known by co-starring in Simon & Simon from 1981 to 1989.[5] Thanks to the hit show's popularity, in 1985, Beloit awarded him its Distinguished Service Citation.[6] With his Simon & Simon co-star Gerald McRaney he appeared in the theatrical movie Jackals, which Parker co-produced.[11] After completing this movie, he returned to Beloit College to star in a live summer stock theatrical production as Brick in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. In 1987, starred alongside Donald Pleasence in John Carpenter's horror movie Prince of Darkness.

Parker guest-starred on the CBS series Walker, Texas Ranger as a corrupt cop. He appeared in the television movies Who Is Julia? (1986), Dead Before Dawn (1993), and Violation of Trust (1991). He guest starred on the sitcom Major Dad with his Simon & Simon co-star Gerald McRaney.

Parker's last known acting work was in 2003–2004, after a four year hiatus, when he appeared in four episodes of JAG. Although he did voice over work as the narrator for the documentary Endangered Species: California Fish and Game Wardens in 2009, he seems to have effectively retired from acting without an official announcement. He now makes his living as a writer for a variety of hard-copy and on-line magazines and is the author of the critically acclaimed memoir, An Accidental Cowboy.[12]

Writing career

Parker has written five books:

  • Parker, Jameson (2003). An Accidental Cowboy. ebook. ISBN 9780984981236. recounts his life after Simon & Simon[13]
  • Parker, Jameson (2003). To Absent Friends: A Collection of Stories of the Dogs We Miss. Minocqua, WI: Willow Creek Press. ISBN 9781572237063.
  • Parker, Jameson (2012). American Riff. ebook. ISBN 9780984981298.
  • Parker, Jameson (2012). The Horseman at Midnight. ebook. ISBN 9780984981267.
  • Parker, Jameson (2016). Dancing with the Dead. BearManor Media. ISBN 9781593939946.

Personal life

Parker has often said that he was not the typical "Hollywood type," and that he is very much a homebody.

In fall 1992, Parker was shot in the left arm pit and right arm by a neighbor near his home after a verbal altercation where Parker was defending his wife's honor after she and the shooter argued earlier in the day. He made a full recovery, and the neighbor was convicted of attempted murder and sentenced to nine years in prison.[14]

Parker has been married three times. On July 19, 1969, he married Anne Taylor Davis in Fairfax County, Virginia,[15] with whom he has one daughter. The two divorced on August 7, 1975 in Alexandria, Virginia.[16] In 1976 Parker married Bonnie Dottley in New York City;[17] the couple had three children. They divorced in 1992. Later that same year, Parker married Darleen Carr.

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1975CrossfireTV movie
1975–76SomersetDale RobinsonDaytime serial
1976–78One Life to LiveBrad VernonDaytime serial
197779 Park AvenueTV miniseries
1978The ImmigrantsTV miniseries
1979Women at West PointJ.J. PalfreyTV movie
1979The Bell JarBuddy Willars
1979Anatomy of a SeductionEd TaggertTV movie
1979The Gathering, Part IIBudTV movie
1980FamilyJackEpisode: "Jack of Hearts"
1980Hart to HartWhitney RogersEpisode: "A Question of Innocence"
1980A Small Circle of FriendsNick Baxter
1980The Promise of LoveSam DanielsTV movie
1981Callie & SonRandy BordeauxTV movie
1981–89Simon & SimonAndrew Jackson "A.J." Simon156 episodes
1982Bret MaverickWhitney Delaworth IIIEpisodes: "Faith, Hope and Clarity" (Parts 1 & 2)
1982White DogRoland Grale
1982Magnum, P.I.A.J. SimonEpisode: "Ki'is Don't Lie"
1983A Caribbean MysteryTim KendallTV movie
1983Whiz KidsA.J. SimonEpisode: "Deadly Access"
1986JackalsDave Buchanon
1986Who Is Julia?Don NorthTV movie
1987Prince of DarknessBrian Marsh
1989SpyFrank HarveyTV movie
1990Waiting for the WindDavidShort
1991Major DadEvan ChartersEpisode: "Polly's Choice"
1991She Says She's InnocentEric ReillyTV movie
1991Curse of the Crystal EyeLuke Ward
1991Murder, She WroteGordon ForbesEpisode: "The Skinny According to Nick Cullhane"
1991Murder, She WroteDane KendersonEpisode: "Terminal Connection"
1991Pros and ConsJace NovakEpisode: "May the Best Man Win"
1992–1993The Legend of Prince ValiantSir Kay (voice)5 episodes
1993Dead Before DawnRobert EdelmanTV movie
1994Burke's LawBen HutchinsEpisode: "Who Killed Nick Hazard?"
1995Simon & Simon: In Trouble AgainA.J. SimonTV movie
1995ABC Afterschool SpecialJohn AtkinsEpisode: "Long Road Home"
1996Have You Seen My SonMike PritcherTV movie
1996Dead Man's IslandLyle StedmanTV movie
1996Walker, Texas RangerSgt. Bob HorneEpisode: "The Brotherhood"
1997Something Borrowed, Something BlueRichard IvesTV movie
1997Promised LandDr. SmithEpisode: "Take Back the Night"
1998The Secret of NIMH 2: Timmy to the RescueTroy (voice)Direct-to-video
2003–04JAGHarrison Kershaw4 episodes
2009Endangered Species: California Fish and Game WardensNarrator (voice)Documentary

References

  1. "Sydney Walling, Colonel Dames Member, Author". The Washington Post. November 29, 1982. p. D6. Retrieved January 13, 2017.
  2. "Miss Sullivan Wed to Jameson Parker". The Washington Post. June 9, 1933. p. 20.
  3. Saxon, Wolfgang (January 26, 1997). "L. Metcalf Walling, 88, Who Helped Set Labor Policy in New Deal". The New York Times. Retrieved January 13, 2017.
  4. New York Times: "Anne Davis Betrothed to Francis Parker 2d", June 4, 1969; accessed March 4, 2012
  5. 1 2 3 TV Guide: "Jameson Parker: Biography", accessed March 4, 2012.
  6. 1 2 Beloit College: "F. Jameson Parker II', accessed March 4, 2012
  7. New York Times: Vincent Canby, "Film: Small Circle of 3 College Friends", March 12, 1980, accessed March 4, 2012
  8. "50 Top-Grossing Films". (Week ending March 19, 1980). Variety, March 22, 1980
  9. The New York Times: Janet Maslin, "TV: Movie Tells Story Of West Point Women", February 27, 1979, accessed March 4, 2012
  10. The New York Times: John J. O'Connor, "TV: Film of an Affair, Anatomy of a Seduction," May 8, 1979, accessed March 4, 2012
  11. New York Times: Nina Darnton, "Film: American Justice," September 19, 1986, accessed March 4, 2012
  12. Parker, Jameson. "Homepage Biography". Jameson Parker Homepage. Jameson Parker. Retrieved 26 August 2016.
  13. ESPN Outdoors: James A. Swan, "A True Hero's Journey," October 2, 2003 Archived March 11, 2013, at the Wayback Machine., accessed March 4, 2012
  14. Los Angeles Times: Thom Mrozek, "Actor Testifies Against His Alleged Attacker Courts," September 4, 1993, accessed March 4, 2012
  15. Virginia Marriage Records, file 69 024277
  16. Virginia Divorce Records, file 75-010115
  17. New York, New York City Marriage Licenses Index, 1950-1995 https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QLS2-BFDM
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