Luke Halpin

Luke Halpin
Flipper_Halpin_Norden_1965.jpg
Luke Halpin, May 1965
Born Luke Austin Halpin
(1947-04-04) April 4, 1947
Astoria, Queens, New York, U.S.
Occupation Actor, stuntman, marine coordinator
Years active
  • 1955–1996 (actor)
  • 1980–present (stuntman)
  • 1985–present (marine coordinator)
Spouse(s) Patricia Warren Ott (1971-?) (divorced)
Judy Suzanne Meyer (1977-1987) (divorced) 2 children
Deborah Jane Durrell (1991-present) 1 child
Children
  • Kyle A. Halpin
  • Blair L. Halpin
  • Courtney L. Halpin

Luke Austin Halpin (born April 4, 1947) is an American actor. Beginning a prolific career as a child actor at the age of eight, Halpin is perhaps best known for his role as Sandy Ricks in the feature films Flipper and Flipper's New Adventure, as well as for reprising his role for the television series adaptation, also titled Flipper.

Early life

Halpin was born in Astoria, Queens, New York City, the son of Helen Joan (née Szczepanski) and Eugene A. Halpin. His father was of Irish and German descent, and his maternal grandparents were Polish. He grew up with his family in Long Island City.[1] He has an older brother, Eugene, Jr., and an older sister, Joan. He and his siblings were raised as Roman Catholics.[2][3]

Career

Early career

Halpin's career began when a music teacher, impressed by Halpin's "all-American" look, encouraged him to try acting.[4] In 1955 he co-starred with Natalie Wood in an episode of Studio One entitled "Miracle at Potter's Farm". Numerous roles followed, and by his mid-teens, Halpin had appeared on many of the major TV series of the day: Armstrong Circle Theatre, The United States Steel Hour, Studio One, Kraft Television Theatre, Hallmark Hall of Fame, The Phil Silvers Show, Harbormaster, The Defenders, Route 66, Naked City, The Everglades, and had a recurring role for six months on the soap opera Young Doctor Malone.

Halpin's early career also included several stage roles. He made his Broadway debut in Take Me Along starring Jackie Gleason, and appeared in Sunrise at Campobello, and with Mary Martin in both Annie Get Your Gun and Peter Pan. Halpin also acted in plays that were televised on The Play of the Week including starring with Broadway luminaries Burgess Meredith and Zero Mostel in the critically acclaimed avant-garde play Waiting for Godot.

Flipper

Halpin in the 1963 feature film Flipper

Halpin's most famous role came when at age 15 he was picked to play the 12-year-old Sandy Ricks in producer Ivan Tors' 1962 (released 1963) feature film Flipper (filmed in the Florida Keys and Miami), starring alongside Chuck Connors, who played Sandy's father and fisherman Porter Ricks. The successful film spawned a sequel, Flipper's New Adventure (filmed in the Bahamas), released in 1964, and with new co-star Brian Kelly as Porter Ricks, a trainee Park Ranger who, after his training, is assigned to the fictitious Coral Key Park, and young widowed father to Sandy (although in reality Halpin was only sixteen years younger than Kelly). Kelly and Halpin kept the same roles for the Flipper (1964 TV series) that commenced filming in the summer of 1964 (when Halpin was 17) adding younger brother Bud, played by Tommy Norden when Norden was 11. Famous character actor Andy Devine appeared in the first season and Swedish actress Ulla Strömstedt appeared in the second season along with guest appearances from a number of veteran actors such as Huntz Hall, Jean-Pierre Aumont and Gloria DeHaven, as well as several actors who would become famous in later years such as Burt Reynolds, Martin Sheen, Barbara Feldon, Jessica Walter, Cheryl Miller, Lynda Day George, David Soul and Daniel J. Travanti.

Halpin was chosen by Tors for the role of Sandy Ricks because of his skills in the water as well as his extensive prior acting experience. He also proved able to bond quickly with the dolphins who played Flipper. This chemistry paved the way for the launching of the TV series after the two feature films. By the time filming of the TV series commenced, Halpin had become an expert skin and scuba diver and exhibited an easy athleticism that enabled him to perform many of his own stunts in and below the water including a number of dangerous scenes involving sharks. His popular TV character became defined by many water-activity related plots with him often wearing nothing more than what came to be his signature cut-off blue jeans shorts.

The Flipper (1964 TV series) ran for eighty-eight episodes from 1964 to 1967 (with Halpin appearing in all but three episodes) and is still in syndication.[5] It was filmed in the park and waters around Key Biscayne, Florida, at the Ivan Tors (now Greenwich) Studios and the Miami Seaquarium, both in Miami. The series performed strongly in the hotly-contested Saturday night TV slot, rating in the Top 25 of all TV shows in its debut 1964-65 season. The series made Halpin a famous teen idol especially among adolescent viewers. He was often featured in such magazines as Bravo, Teen Life, 16 Magazine, and the earliest issues of Tiger Beat. On the basis of his appearances in the original Flipper feature films, Halpin was a guest 'contestant' on the CBS panel show To Tell the Truth just prior to the beginning of filming of the Flipper (1964 TV series), on March 30, 1964. He appeared on the show again just prior to the filming of the second season, on April 15, 1965.

Young actor Luke Halpin tips his hat in this publicity still for the television series Death Valley Days, 5 Oct 1968.
Publicity still promoting Luke Halpin's celebrity guest-star performer appearance at the Six-Gun Territory theme park in Silver Springs, Florida, 1967.

Later work

After Flipper ended, Halpin appeared in feature films, including as Stu MacRae (teen son of Richard Greene's starring character) in Ivan Tors' Island of the Lost (1967), as Bo (student radical who befriends a teenage girl travelling on a European bus tour) in If It's Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium (1969), as Keith (First Mate on a shabby vessel chartered for a tour that stumbles on 'living dead' Nazis) in iconic niche horror movie Shock Waves (1977) and as Ken Wilson in Flipper co-creator Ricou Browning's Mr. No Legs (1979). TV guest appearances in the years shortly after Flipper include as Kenny Carter Jr. in the Carl Betz series Judd, for the Defense (1968), as a celebrity contestant on The Dating Game (1968), as Ben Cabot Jr. in Bracken's World (1969), as Greg in Ivan Tors' Primus (1972) and as Eric Bates in Caribe (1975).

He appeared in Death Valley Days in 1968, where he played Sandy King, a young member of the Curly Bill Brocius gang, who is befriended by a United States Army lieutenant, played by Sam Melville.[6]

A notable later appearance was in the 1980 television movie The Ordeal of Dr. Mudd, a dramatization about Samuel Mudd (played by Dennis Weaver), the Maryland physician who was imprisoned as an accomplice to John Wilkes Booth in the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, where Halpin played David Herold, the conspirator who brought Booth, suffering from a broken leg incurred in the process of assassinating Lincoln, to Dr. Mudd for treatment.[7]

After acting

Following an acting career that spanned three decades, Halpin began working as a stuntman, marine coordinator, diver, and speedboat pilot for such feature films as Never Say Never Again, Porky's Revenge!, Flight of the Navigator and Speed 2: Cruise Control as well as for the television series Miami Vice.[8][9] He also continued to make cameo appearances, most notably, on the television series Key West, Miami Vice and in the 1996 feature film remake, Flipper, starring a 15-year-old Elijah Wood as Sandy Ricks.[8][10]

Halpin lives in Rotonda West in Charlotte County on the west coast of Florida with his third wife, Deborah.[11] He has three sons, Kyle Austin Halpin (born October 1980), Blair Luke Halpin (born December 1982), and Courtney Luke Halpin (born April 1990).[8][11]In 2015 it was announced that Luke Halpin was suffering from Stage IV head and neck cancer. A website to assist in his care has been established. In June 2016 a family friend announced that the cancer was in remission but that he was suffering from the early stages of Alzheimer's disease.[12]

References

  1. "Luke Halpin Answers 40 Intimate Questions", 16 Magazine, February 1965
  2. "Ten Things You Never Knew about ME, by Luke Halpin", 16 Magazine, December 1966
  3. My Whole Life Story 16 (magazine), June 1965.
  4. "This Is Me!...Luke Halpin", Teen Life Magazine, November 1965
  5. "Antenna TV Saturday afternoons 4pm".
  6. "Death Valley Days: "A Mule ... Like the Army's Mule", October 5, 1968". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved October 26, 2012.
  7. "The Ordeal of Dr. Mudd". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved October 27, 2012.
  8. 1 2 3 Kevin D. Thompson (May 17, 1996). "Will The Real Flipper Please Swim By?". The Palm Beach Post.
  9. Sally Kestin (June 12, 2004). "Stars From The Flipper TV Series Return To Miami". South Florida Sun-Sentinel.
  10. "Tales Of The Human Heart: Flipper". Bangor Daily News. December 6, 1996.
  11. 1 2 Associated Press (June 14, 2004). "Flipper's 40th Is Celebrated In Miami". Ocala Star-Banner.
  12. "Luke Halpin: „Meine Frau ist mein Halt im Leben"?". das Neue. April 2, 2016.
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