Veteran actor Richard Anderson appeared in over 200 films and television shows throughout his career. But for Anderson, who turned 89 on August 8, it’s not just his well-known role as security chief Oscar Goldman in “The Six Million Dollar Man” that elicits fan questions at classic film/TV conventions.

“They always ask about ‘Curse of the Faceless Man’ which we made in 1958 and was my first lead film role,” said Anderson from Los Angeles. “It was a low-budget remake of ‘The Mummy’ two decades earlier, featuring a stone monster rather than one wrapped in bandages. We spent a week filming in a big old house on the way up to Malibu – the house is still there. I really just learned my lines and tried not to bump into the furniture.”

Alan Oppenheimer, Lee Majors and Richard Anderson in The Six Million Dollar Man

Alan Oppenheimer, Lee Majors and Richard Anderson in The Six Million Dollar Man

Two years earlier, Anderson appeared in the venerable sci-fi classic “Forbidden Planet.”

“That was the last of two dozen movies I did for MGM,” he said. “Sci-fi feature films were rather new in 1956 and it changed the genre forever. The whole movie was shot on one stage and as filming progressed, the studio gave us more money and the best production staff. We turned out a first-class movie that’s still impressive today.”

Born in New Jersey and raised in New York, young Dick and his brother Bob were weekend matinee regulars at the 96th Street Motion Picture Theater, absorbed in their favorite films: westerns.

“The stories had heroes and happy endings – I really wanted to live in that world,” recalled Anderson. “I was especially drawn to one actor who never said much, but used his body language to tell the story. That was Gary Cooper, who inspired me to get into the business.”

Anderson never worked with Cooper, but the two met years later at a Mexico City film festival. “When I asked him about acting he said he didn’t know much about it, and advised me to never get caught doing it!”

He also co-starred with other greats, including Spencer Tracy and Clark Gable.

“Tracy would mumble his lines in rehearsal, then do it perfectly in one take when the camera rolled,” he recalled. “Gable left work at 5 o’clock; it was in his contract. But on the set, he worked very hard rehearsing and made it look easy on the screen.”

Curse of the Facelss Man - provided by Richard Anderson

Curse of the Facelss Man – provided by Richard Anderson

More anecdotes from Anderson’s career appear in his May biography, co-written with Alan Doshna, “Richard Anderson: At Last … A Memoir, From the Golden Years of M-G-M to The Six Million Dollar Man to Now”(see www.bionik.com).

Anderson wasn’t the only celebrity in his family.
“Katharine, my second wife, was the daughter of Norma Shearer and MGM producer Irving Thalberg,” noted Anderson.

Richard and Katharine were married in 1961, so he never knew Thalberg who died in 1936, but says he was close to his mother-in-law.

“Norma Shearer was very nice to me, she liked and respected me,” he said. “She gave us a party when we were married – Judy Garland was one of the guests. Norma had a house on the beach and when we visited her, she would talk about her career and how she ‘had it all’ at one time. She won a Best Actress Oscar (‘The Divorcee’ in 1930) and we still have it.”

While Shearer found fame in film and retired just as television was coming of age in the early ‘40s, it was TV that made Anderson a household name when “The Six Million Man” exploded on the small screen in 1974 for five seasons.
“It was a show that brought back the hero and happy endings, so I told my agent I wanted the part even if I had to pay the producers to let me do it!” laughed Anderson, who also narrated the show’s famous introduction.

“‘Gentlemen, we can rebuild him, we have the technology,’” quoted Anderson. “You can’t imagine how many fans come up to me and say that. It’s the best TV show introduction ever written.”
Anderson continued his Oscar Goldman role in three seasons of “The Bionic Woman,” becoming one of the few actors to portray the same character in different television series.

And on September 17, Anderson will be a guest at the Mid-Atlantic Nostalgia Convention in Churchville, MD, where he can expect more questions from admirers, including why he took so long to write a book about his life.

“My answer is simple,” he says. “I’m still living it.”

Nick Thomas teaches at Auburn University at Montgomery, Ala., and has written features, columns, and interviews for over 600 magazines and newspapers. Follow @TinseltownTalks