Philip Abbott (March 21, 1923; Lincoln, Nebraska – February 23, 1998; Tarzana, California) was an American character actor and occasional voice actor. Abbott was a secondary lead in several films of the 1950s and 1960s. Miracle of the White Stallions (1963). He made more than one hundred guest appearances on various television programs from 1952–1995, including NBC's Justice about the Legal Aid Societ of New York and The Eleventh Hour, a medical drama about psychiatry. He appeared on the CBS anthology series Appointment with Adventure and The Lloyd Bridges Show. In 1965, he appeared in Dennis Weaver's NBC sitcom, Kentucky Jones, in the episode "The Music Kids Make". Abbott is best remembered as Assistant Director Arthur Ward on the TV series The F.B.I. He died of cancer in 1998. Description above from the Wikipedia article Philip Abbott, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Birthday: March 21, 1923
Death: February 23, 1998
January 01, 1976
September 23, 1981
January 01, 1973
August 31, 1978
September 01, 1981
August 31, 1978
October 31, 1978
September 01, 1978
September 01, 1978
September 01, 1981
September 01, 1981
September 01, 1981
March 21, 1962
October 18, 1957
January 28, 1965
July 01, 1980
May 04, 1993
March 28, 1978
March 14, 1965
February 01, 1998
April 05, 1968
July 03, 1956
January 01, 1999
February 06, 1977
April 09, 1957
March 29, 1963
April 06, 1990
August 03, 1962
October 07, 1977
April 09, 1982
February 10, 1984
April 02, 1964
November 06, 1994
September 19, 1965
December 04, 1981
September 20, 1977
January 04, 1984
November 19, 1994
October 10, 1958
October 01, 1982
September 19, 1961
November 04, 1977
September 29, 1987
September 27, 1963
September 11, 1974
October 10, 1963
January 14, 1976
January 22, 1984
October 03, 1976
September 19, 1984
October 02, 1959
January 12, 1981
November 09, 1952
September 30, 1958
September 10, 1955
September 21, 1957
October 02, 1962
February 01, 1953
September 17, 1962
November 20, 1985
October 22, 1988
October 02, 1955
September 29, 1961
October 01, 1961
January 09, 1959
September 20, 1978
September 17, 1963
January 19, 1955
March 23, 1977
October 02, 1950
October 05, 1951
January 20, 1959
September 15, 1991
October 03, 1948
January 10, 1959
October 02, 1961
October 16, 1959
March 20, 1980
October 01, 1962
September 30, 1962
September 28, 1959
September 27, 1961
September 16, 1961
September 16, 1963
September 15, 1971
October 07, 1960
September 30, 1984
October 27, 1954
May 07, 1947
September 24, 1969
September 21, 1976
September 17, 1960
January 18, 1974
November 07, 1948
September 24, 1994
September 11, 1962
September 09, 1976
September 12, 1959
January 12, 1958