Birthday:
Birthday:

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Scott Gregory Marlowe (born Ronald Richard DeLeo; November 28, 1932 – January 6, 2001) was an American film, stage and television actor. Marlowe was born Ronald DeLeo in Newark, New Jersey, the son of Emil and Constance Severini DeLeo. He had a half-sister, Claudia, and half-brothers Dean and Robert, known as the guitarist and bassist of the popular grunge band Stone Temple Pilots. He debuted on television in 1951 on Pulitzer Prize Playhouse (1950–52) in the episode "Hostage" (June 8, 1951) His first feature film role was in the 1954 production of Attila. Two years later, he starred as John Goodwin in an episode "In Summer Promise" on General Electric Theater. He appeared as Jimmy Budd, along with Ronald Reagan and his wife Nancy Davis, in the episode "The Long Shadow" in Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater directed by Budd Boetticher, which aired on January 19, 1961. Marlowe often took film roles of dysfunctional juveniles in a series of films made during the 1950s and 1960s, including The Scarlet Hour (1956), The Restless Breed (1957), Riot in Juvenile Prison (1959), The Subterraneans (1960), and A Cold Wind in August (1961). Beginning in 1956 with the film The Young Guns, Marlow appeared in a number of Western films and television shows. In the 1960s, he continued to appear in drama and adventure series, often as a young man in trouble with the law or unwilling to adjust to societal mores. He appeared twice in 1961 on ABC's Target: The Corruptors! in episodes "A Man's Castle" (as Tito) and "Mr. Meglomania" (as Phil Manzak). In 1961, he starred as Armand Fontaine a serial killer on the episode "Effigy in Snow" of CBS's Route 66. He guest starred as Eliot Gray in the 1961 episode "The Throwback" of CBS's Alfred Hitchcock Presents. He appeared on Thriller, Dr. Kildare, and The Detectives. Marlowe died of a heart attack at age 68 in Los Angeles, California. Marlowe, who was bisexual, never married.
Birthday: June 24, 1932
Death: January 06, 2001

April 22, 1994

April 10, 1998

September 23, 1983

May 09, 1956

September 12, 1956

December 27, 1954

August 08, 1975

July 26, 1961

December 03, 1989

June 23, 1960

September 29, 1970

April 24, 1958

May 04, 1964

April 01, 1956

April 01, 1959

May 22, 1994

May 01, 1957

January 07, 1993

March 11, 1971

May 03, 1957

March 01, 1958

April 12, 1982

November 28, 1994

September 09, 1966

September 30, 1984

September 20, 1955

September 29, 1987

September 28, 1987

March 13, 1982

October 10, 1963

January 07, 1982

September 19, 1965

September 20, 1968

September 25, 1987

October 03, 1976

October 07, 1960

September 23, 1972

September 16, 1967

September 24, 1968

September 10, 1955

November 07, 1975

February 01, 1953

September 26, 1987

September 17, 1966

September 14, 1971

May 04, 1964

September 18, 1984

November 04, 1981

October 02, 1955

October 06, 1961

September 29, 1961

September 17, 1965

January 09, 1959

September 14, 1957

March 20, 1973

September 24, 1968

September 13, 1960

January 20, 1959

December 15, 1983

September 23, 1958

September 17, 1982

October 02, 1961

October 01, 1959

October 04, 1956

October 16, 1959

October 05, 1956

October 01, 1962

September 27, 1961

September 16, 1963

September 15, 1972

September 18, 1968

September 17, 1960

September 13, 1974

June 13, 1994

March 27, 1990

September 11, 1978

January 28, 1973

March 28, 1967

October 09, 1988

March 03, 1986

September 26, 1982