
Gary Grimes
Acting • Born 1955-06-02
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Gary Grimes (born June 2, 1955, in San Francisco) is an American actor. Gary Grimes' first major role was in the 1971 motion picture Summer of '42, playing a teenager who has an affair with a beautiful older woman, played by Jennifer O'Neill. For that role, Grimes was nominated in 1972 for a Golden Globe Award as Most Promising Newcomer—Male and a BAFTA Award as Best Newcomer. Grimes also starred in the sequel Class of '44 (1973), which followed his character to college. Grimes' other movie credits include Cahill U.S. Marshal (1973) alongside John Wayne, The Spikes Gang (1974) with Lee Marvin and Ron Howard and the cult Disney film Gus (1976), about a mule that kicks field goals. He was offered a TV series during that time period, but turned it down. Grimes retired from show business in the late 1970s, still lives in Los Angeles and has remained out of public view since that time. "I got to the point where the work wasn't up to the quality that I wanted," Grimes told American Profile magazine in 2011. "I'm very happy in my decision." Description above from the Wikipedia article Gary Grimes, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Filmography
19 credits
Gus
Movie • 1976
Andy Petrovic

Cahill: United States Marshal
Movie • 1973
Daniel "Danny" Cahill

Summer of '42
Movie • 1971
Hermie

The Culpepper Cattle Co.
Movie • 1972
Ben Mockridge

The Spikes Gang
Movie • 1974
Will

Class of '44
Movie • 1973
Hermie

Concrete Angels
Movie • 1987
Beatles (voice)

Shenandoah
Movie • 1965
Choirboy

La Classe américaine
Movie • 1993
George's Friend (archive footage) (uncredited)

Cotter
Movie • 1973
Woody

My Three Sons
TV • 1960

The Brady Bunch
TV • 1969

The Mike Douglas Show
TV • 1961
Self

Owen Marshall: Counselor at Law
TV • 1971
Howie Bowers

Once an Eagle
TV • 1976
Jack Devlin

McClain's Law
TV • 1981
Dr. Scott Baylor

Matt Houston
TV • 1982
Buddy Young

Gunsmoke
TV • 1955
Bede

The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson
TV • 1962
Self