Peter Hooten
Peter Hooten | |
---|---|
Born |
John Peter Hooten November 29, 1950 Clermont, Florida, United States |
Occupation | Actor, producer |
Years active | 1969–present |
Partner(s) | James Merrill (1983-1995, Merrill’s death) |
Peter Hooten (born November 29, 1950 as John Peter Hooten in Clermont, Florida); is an American actor and producer.[1]
Career
Hooten attended Ithaca College in upstate New York. His first TV role was a 1969 appearance on the TV drama Marcus Welby, M.D.. Later, he played the title character in the 1978 TV film Dr. Strange and appeared as a guest star in The Waltons, Mod Squad and Mannix.
TV and filmography
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1969 | Marcus Welby, M.D. | Richard Ross | TV Series |
1970 | The Bold Ones: The Protectors | Clancy Austin | TV Series |
1970 | Tribes | Scrunch | TV Movie |
1971 | Dan August | Troy Stedman | TV Series |
1972 | Night of Terror | Chris Arden | TV Movie |
1972 | Mod Squad | Jim Styles | TV Series |
1972 | Mannix | Don Wilkerson | TV Series |
1972 | The Waltons | Jamie | TV Series |
1975 | Sunburst | Robert | Movie |
1975 | One of Our Own | Dr. Madison | TV Movie |
1975 | Prisoners | Unknown | Independent Film |
1975 | A Woman for All Men | Paul McCoy | Movie |
1975 | Bronk | Unknown | TV Series |
1976 | The Student Body | Carter | Movie |
1977 | Orca | Paul | Movie |
1978 | The Inglorious Bastards[2] | Tony | Movie |
1978 | The Fifth Commandment | Leo Redder | Movie |
1978 | Dr. Strange | Dr. Stephen Strange | TV Movie |
1980 | Dan August: Once Is Never Enough | Troy Stedman | TV Movie |
1981 | Fantasies | Damir | Movie |
1982 | 2020 Freedom Fighters | Halakron | Movie |
1982 | The Soldier | The Soldier's Force | Movie |
1982 | Born Beautiful | Tony | TV movie |
1987 | Tempi di guerra | Capt. Rosen | Movie |
1987 | Brothers in Blood | Charlie | Movie |
1988 | Just a Damned Soldier | Unknown | Movie |
1990 | Non aprite quella porta 3 | Axel | Movie |
2007 | In Search of Steve Ditko | Dr. Strange (Archive footage) | TV Movie Documentary |
2013 | House of Blood | Frank Martin | Movie |
2014 | Souleater | Sheriff Buford Talley | Movie (Post-Production) |
Personal life
![](../I/m/JamesMerrillPeterHooten.jpg)
Peter Hooten (right) with poet James Merrill, his partner from 1983-1995 (photo: Judith Moffett)
After 16 years in New York City, and some time in Connecticut, Hooten moved to St. Augustine, Florida.[2] He was in a relationship with poet James Merrill, his partner from 1983 until Merrill's death in 1995. As of 2009, Hooten lived in a 1924 Indian Beach cottage in Sarasota, Florida.[2]
References
- ↑ Hollywood.com: Peter Hooten
- 1 2 3 Bardi, Joe (August 19, 2009). "A "spaghetti war" film classic: Sarasota's Peter Hooten on his role in the original Inglorious Bastards". Creative Loafing.
I felt really good and I worked a long time on it," Hooten says, lingering over a double espresso and chocolate cake in the dining room at the Sarasota Ritz-Carlton. And I got really good people together. And we shot it in Cambridge; it was the right atmosphere. … It's not mainstream, but God, it was a labor of love. So who's going to see that? But it will be in the libraries when Inglorious Bastards goes bye-bye. Nobody's going to remember anybody for that.
External links
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