Frank Doubleday(1945-2018)
- Actor
- Art Department
Thin, intense, antsy, and often unnerving character actor Frank
Doubleday usually portrayed creepy villains in both movies and TV
shows alike from the mid-1970's up until the early 1990's. Frank was born on January 28, 1945 in Norwich, Connecticut and came with his family to Los Angeles, California at age six. Doubleday made
his film debut as an aggressive switchblade-wielding punk thug in the
hilariously raunchy comedy
The First Nudie Musical (1976).
Doubleday's lean, hollow-eyed, sunken-cheeked face, closely cropped
light blonde hair, skinny limbs, and slim build gave him a striking and
potent screen presence that was put to especially effective use in two
pictures for director
John Carpenter: He's genuinely
scary as the vicious street gang leader who kills little girl
Kim Richards in cold blood in the
terrific urban action classic
Assault on Precinct 13 (1976)
and was likewise memorably freaky as
Isaac Hayes' ghoulish flunky "Romero" in the
excellent futuristic science fiction cult favorite
Escape from New York (1981).
Doubleday's other noteworthy parts are a mob kingpin's conceited jerk
son in Avenging Angel (1985), a
fidgety prison inmate in the nifty science fiction item
Space Rage (1985), a ferocious member
of a roving murderous band of supernatural Eskimo spirits in the spooky
Nomads (1986), a mercenary in
Broadcast News (1987), and a
sweaty, twitchy hoodlum who holds a bunch of fat ladies hostage in a
laundromat in the funky urban science fiction hoot
Dollman (1991). Among the TV
shows Doubleday did guest appearances on are
Amazing Stories (1985),
Sledge Hammer! (1986),
Stingray (1986),
T.J. Hooker (1982),
Hill Street Blues (1981),
CHiPs (1977),
The Incredible Hulk (1977),
Charlie's Angels (1976),
Wonder Woman (1975) and
Starsky and Hutch (1975).
Outside of acting, Frank also directed stage plays and
taught acting at the Hollywood Court Theater. Doubleday died at age 73 from esophageal cancer on March 3, 2018 in Los Angeles, California.