Tim McIntire(1944-1986)
- Actor
- Composer
- Soundtrack
Tim McIntire was a remarkably fine, versatile and underrated actor-composer-singer-songwriter-musician who gave consistently strong,
impressive and charismatic performances in both movies and TV shows
alike. The son of character actor
John McIntire and actress
Jeanette Nolan, McIntire was born on July
19, 1944. He was the brother of actress
Holly McIntire. McIntire first began
acting in plays while attending high school. He worked in gas stations
and men's stores in order to finance his early theatrical career.
Handsome and husky, with a deep, rich and commanding voice of
exceptionally exquisite sonority, McIntire made his film debut as
James Stewart's son in
Shenandoah (1965). MicIntire was
superb in a rare substantial starring part as passionate pioneering '50s
rock -'n'-roll disc jockey Alan Freed in the hugely enjoyable
American Hot Wax (1978).
McIntire's other notable movie roles include a raucous party hearty
college student in
The Sterile Cuckoo (1969), an
illegal cross-country car race participant in the funny
The Gumball Rally (1976), a
wild-man cop in
The Choirboys (1977), a shrewd top
con in the offbeat prison drama
Fast-Walking (1982), and a rugged
mountain man in
Sacred Ground (1983). McIntire
supplied the deliciously dry, growly and sardonic voice of the cruel
and cunning canine Blood in the terrific post-nuke sci-fi cult classic
A Boy and His Dog (1975).
McIntire also composed the score for the picture and even sings the
catchy ending-credits theme song. McIntire also composed the scores for
The Killer Inside Me (1976),
Win, Place or Steal (1974),
Kid Blue (1973), and
Jeremiah Johnson (1972)
(McIntire beautifully sings the lovely folk ballad which plays during
the ending credits). Among the TV shows McIntire did guest spots on are
Harry O (1973), Soap (1977) (the voice of the
Devil),
Kung Fu (1972),
The F.B.I. (1965),
Circle of Fear (1972),
The New Perry Mason (1973),
Bonanza (1959),
All in the Family (1971),
The Fugitive (1963),
Gunsmoke (1955),
Lassie (1954),
Ben Casey (1961), and
Wagon Train (1957). Outside of
acting, McIntire did voice-overs for numerous TV commercials and was a
prolific studio session musician. Alas, Tim McIntire had problems with
drug addiction and alcoholism which led to his untimely death from
heart failure at the tragically young age of 41 on April 15, 1986.