Patrick Wright(1939-2004)
- Actor
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
- Producer
Patrick M. Wright was a gruff, burly and intimidating constant presence
in an alarmingly large volume of delightfully down'n'dirty drive-in
exploitation pictures made in the 70s. Patrick was born on November 28,
1939 in San Francisco, California. Stocky and strong-looking, with a
thick mustache, a mass of curly brown hair, a husky, muscular, powerful
frame, and a blunt, scruffy, rough-around-the-edges demeanor, Wright
was frequently cast as stolid jerk cops, ramrod military men, prison
guards, assorted vicious villains, and various boorish blue collar
working class types. The brother of actress Mary Catherine Wright and
husband of 70s B-movie actress Talie Cochrane (they often acted
together in a sizable number of films), Wright first began acting in
the late 60s. He appeared in three films for director Russ Meyer: "Good
Morning ... and Goodbye!," "The Seven Minutes," and "Beneath the Valley
of the Ultra-Vixens." Wright's most memorable parts include the
ineffectual Sheriff Mack in the laughably lousy creature feature hoot
"Track of the Moonbeast," a lecherous high school football coach in the
hilariously bawdy "The Cheerleaders," the nasty leader of a white
slavery ring in the splendidly sleazy "The Abductors," a sadistic goon
in Matt Cimber's enjoyably trashy "The Candy Tangerine Man," a hostile
gay biker in "Bare Knuckles," the lord of the jungle in the amusingly
inane "Tarz and Jane and Boy and Cheetah," the crude patriarch of a
hillbilly family in "Sassy Sue," a friendly police sergeant in "Roller
Boogie," and the rich sponsor of an illegal cross country road race in
Paul Bartel's gloriously outrageous "Cannonball." Wright did guest
spots on the TV shows "Wizards and Warriors," "Dynasty," "The Dukes of
Hazzard," and "The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams." Moreover, Wright
directed the entertainingly lowbrow teen sex comedy "Hollywood High,"
produced the failed horror spoof "Frightmare," and worked on several
movies and TV shows in minor behind-the-scenes production capacities.
He also acted under the pseudonyms Silver Foxx, Bal Johnson and Michael
Wright. Patrick ended his lengthy and extensive film career with a few
small parts in a handful of straight-to-video items. Wright died at age
65 on December 9, 2004 in Palmdale, California.