Dayton Lummis
Dayton Lummis Sr. was an American actor of film and television who specialized in the genre of anthology and western series, often playing authority figures. From 1959-1960, he appeared as Marshal Andy Morrison in nine episodes of NBC's Law of the Plainsman western, with Michael Ansara and Robert Harland. In 1955, he portrayed General Douglas MacArthur in the film The Court Martial of Billy Mitchell.
Early years
A native of Summit, New Jersey, Lummis studied theatre arts in Los Angeles at the Martha Oatman School. His first professional engagement, at the age of twenty-four, was with the Russell Stock Company in Redlands, California. He remained a regional actor until his Broadway debut in 1943.Lummis was cast in his first screen role, a minor appearance, at the age of forty-two in a television play of Sorry, Wrong Number starring Mildred Natwick. After a few other motion picture appearances, some uncredited, Lummis was cast as a police superintendent in the television series Racket Squad in the 1952 episode "The Strange Case of James Doyle." Hugh Beaumont, later the father, Ward Cleaver, on the sitcom Leave It to Beaver, narrated a third of the episodes of this series, which starred Reed Hadley as Captain John Braddock. That same year, Lummis appeared as Paul Clarkson in the episode "Where There's a Will" in the detective series, Mr. and Mrs. North, starring Richard Denning. In 1954, he appeared as police Sergeant Jack Gotch in "The Big Trunk" episode of Jack Webb's Dragnet. In 1958, he appeared as Jonas Warman in the episode "The Healer" of NBC's M Squad crime drama, starring Lee Marvin.
Anthology series
Lummis appeared in numerous anthology series, including CBS's Four Star Playhouse anthology series as a prison warden in "Vote of Confidence" and as Whit Lonigan in "A Championship Affair". In 1955, he appeared twice on CBS's Schlitz Playhouse of Stars as a newspaper editor named Cartwright in "The Last Pilot Schooner" and as Arthur Healy in "Ambitious Cop". Between 1954 and 1956 Lummis was cast in four separate roles, two as a physician, on NBC's The Loretta Young Show. He appeared as the character Nigel in the 1956 episode "Temptation" on CBS's Lux Video Theatre In 1955, he portrayed an executive officer in the episode "Sky Pilot" of the CBS military anthology series, Navy Log. From 1953-1957, he was cast four times on the CBS anthology, General Electric Theater, in the episodes "Best Seller", "My Wife, Poor Wretch", "Too Good with a Gun", and "I Will Not Die". He was cast as Colonel Duncan Smuthe in "The Tichborne Claimant" of the NBC series the Joseph Cotten Show, also known as On Trial. In 1958, Lummis appeared on NBC's Shirley Temple's Storybook in the episode "The Nightingale". From 1956-1958, he appeared three times on CBS's Alfred Hitchcock Presents anthology, as Tom Ackley in "Crack of Doom", Charles Blanchard in "Mr. Blanchard's Secret", and as Police Sergeant Oliver in "Listen, Listen!" In 1958, he appeared twice - as Dr. Engle in "Before I Die" and as Colonel Brecker in "Bitter Heritage" - on CBS's Playhouse 90. In 1958 and 1959, he appeared as a prosecutor in "The Lady Takes the Stand" and as Lord Meredith in "A London Affair" of NBC's Goodyear TheatreWestern roles
Lummis was assigned his first western role as banker Jonathan Wilkins in the 1953 episode entitled "Trouble in Town" of The Lone Ranger series. Other western roles followed in 1956 as Stephen Austin in The First Texan and 1957 as General Rogers on the syndicated series The Adventures of Jim Bowie, loosely based on the life of the Alamo defender Jim Bowie. Also in 1957, he appeared in the episode "The Fugitive" of another syndicated western, Man Without a Gun, starring Rex Reason and Mort Mills. In 1958, Lummis was cast in an uncredited role as a padre in Audie Murphy's film, From Hell to Texas. That same year, he appeared as Jabez Lord in the episode "Hunter's Moon" of the NBC series Buckskin starring child actor Tommy Nolan. The next year, he guest starred in "Excitement at Milltown" of Rod Cameron's syndicated State Trooper. He was cast as a Judge Randall in the 1959 episode "Gone But Not Forgotten" of the CBS series Yancy Derringer, starring Jock Mahoney. In 1960, he appeared as Gideon Templeton in the episode "Path of the Eagle" of the NBC western series, Riverboat, starring Darren McGavin.His Law of the Plainsman episodes include the following :
- "Prairie Incident"
- "A Matter of Life and Death"
- "The Hostiles"
- "Blood Trails"
- "Appointment in Santa Fe"
- "The Gibbet"
- "The Innocents"
- "Endurance"
- "Dangerous Barriers"
In 1960, he appeared twice on Chuck Connors's ABC western The Rifleman as Colonel Craig in "The Lariat" and as Jake Shaw in "The Illustrator". That same year, Lummis appeared twice on the syndicated Death Valley Days, as the historical figure, Lew Wallace in "Shadows on the Window", with Martin Braddock as Billy the Kid, and as De La Mar in "City of Widows". In 1961, he played a judge in "Killer Without Cause" of the NBC series, Laramie. He appeared that same year in two Warner Brothers westerns on ABC: as Silas Rigsby in "Trouble at Sand Springs" of Will Hutchins's Sugarfoot and as Frank Collins, father of a wayward youth played by Richard Evans, in the episode "The Young Fugitives" of Clint Walker's Cheyenne His next western role was as Dr. Burroughs in the 1962 episode "The Ross Bennett Story" of NBC's The Wide Country, starring Earl Holliman and Andrew Prine.
In 1963, he was cast as Horatio Turner in "The Money Cage" of NBC's 90-minute western The Virginian. Lummis starred as Jasom Simms in "Green, Green Hills" and Thomas Fenton Giler in "Down There, the World" of NBC's modern western series, Empire, starring Richard Egan. In 1963, he was cast as Clayton Emory in episode "The Chooser of the Slain" of the short-lived Warner Brothers western series The Dakotas, starring Larry Ward and Chad Everett. Still another 1963 role was as Colonel Bob Grainger in "Fracas at Kiowa Flats" of the NBC series, Temple Houston, starring Jeffrey Hunter.
Lummis appeared three times in the NBC and ABC western, Wagon Train: as Major Barham in "the Martha Barham Story" with Ann Blyth in the title role, as T.J. Gingle in "The John Turnbull Story", with Henry Silva, and as the Reverend Philip Marshall in "The Myra Marshall Story", starring Suzanne Pleshette. He appeared four times on NBC's Bonanza: as Colonel Metcalfe in "Escape to Ponderosa", as attorney Hiram Wood in "the Secret", as Colonel Abel Chapin in "The Legacy", and as Judge O'Hara in "The Dilemma". The 1965 Bonanza appearance was Lummis' last western role for a full decade, when he appeared on February 3, 1975, as 71-year-old Mr. Holmby in the episode ""The Angry Land", one of the last episodes of CBS's longest-running western, Gunsmoke, starring James Arness. "the Angry Land" was the penultimate Gunsmoke appearance for Arness as well as Lummis's final screen role.
Filmography
Lummis appeared in other television series and films during his career, including:Film roles
- Red Planet Mars as Radio Commentator
- The Winning Team as Graham McNamee
- Breakdown as Prison Warden
- Les Misérables as Defense Lawyer
- Something for the Birds as Speaker of the House
- Operation Secret as French Radio Broadcaster
- Bloodhounds of Broadway as Chairman
- Because of You as Philip Arnold
- Ruby Gentry as Ruby's Attorney
- The Mississippi Gambler as John Sanford
- Tangier Incident as Henry Morrison
- Man in the Dark as Dr. Marston
- Port Sinister as Mr. Lennox
- Julius Caesar as Messala
- The President's Lady as Dr. May
- All I Desire as Col. Underwood
- The Golden Blade as Munkar
- China Venture as Dr. Masterson
- How to Marry a Millionaire as Justice of the Peace
- The Glenn Miller Story as Colonel Spaulding
- Dragon's Gold as Donald McCutcheon
- Loophole as Jim Starling
- Princess of the Nile as Prince Shamin
- Demetrius and the Gladiators as Magistrate
- The Caine Mutiny as Uncle Lloyd
- Return to Treasure Island as Capt. Flint
- The Yellow Mountain as Geraghty
- 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea as Reporter from The Bulletin
- Prince of Players as English Doctor
- The Prodigal as Caleb
- A Man Called Peter as Scottish Police Constable
- High Society as H. Stuyvesant Jones
- The Cobweb as Dr. Tim Carmody
- My Sister Eileen as Mr. Wallace
- The View from Pompey's Head as Charles Barlowe
- Sudden Danger as Raymond Wilkins
- The Spoilers as Wheaton
- The Court-Martial of Billy Mitchell as Gen. Douglas MacArthur
- Over-Exposed as Horace Sutherland
- The First Texan as Stephen Austin
- The Bad Seed as The Doctor
- Showdown at Abilene as Jack Bedford
- The Wrong Man as Judge Groat
- Monkey on My Back as J.L. McAvoy
- From Hell to Texas as Padre
- Compulsion as Dr. Allwyn - Psychiatrist
- Elmer Gantry as Eddington, the newspaper man
- The Music Box Kid as Father Gorman
- Spartacus as Senator Symmachus
- The Flight That Disappeared as Dr. Carl Morris
- Deadly Duo as Thorne Fletcher
- Jack the Giant Killer as King Mark
- Beauty and the Beast as Roderick
- Papa's Delicate Condition as Doctor
- Moonfire as Fuentes
Television roles
- I Love Lucy as Bill Parker in "Lucy Has Her Eyes Examined", as Mel Eaton in "Lucy Writes a Novel", and as Mr. Sherman in "Hollywood at Last"
- Lassie as Dr. Walter Stewart in three episodes, "Gramps" and "The Injury" and "The Snake"
- Crusader as Ray Talbot in "Nine Priceless Objects"
- You Are There, Walter Cronkite's "The Bank Holiday Crisis of March 6, 1933"
- Markham as Howard Fulton in "The Father"
- Angel as Mr. Mathews in "Angel's Temper" and "The Museum"
- The Lawless Years as a judge in "The Prantera Story"
- Adventures in Paradise as Charles Fouchet in "Please Believe Me"
- Thriller as Clarence in "The Cheaters" and as Millard Braystone in "Cousin Tundifer"
- 77 Sunset Strip as Guy Winters in "Shadow on Your Shoulder"
- Ripcord as Dr. Chapman in "Flight for Life"
- Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color as a commissioner in the two-part "The Mooncussers"
- Arrest and Trial as Dr. Murray in "Funny Man with a Monkey"
- Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea as Gustave Reinhardt in "The Last Battle"
- The Time Tunnel as Gladstone in "Night of the Long Knives"
- This Is the Life as Judge Brandt in "Parents, Too, Can Be Delinquents"