1952 Topps
Baseball Cards

Kevin Joseph (Chuck) Connors
Connors was born Kevin Joseph Aloysius Connors in
Brooklyn, NY,, a son of Allan and Marcella (Lundrigan) Connors,
immigrants from the Dominion of Newfoundland.
His father was a longshoreman and his mother a homemaker. He was reared Roman
Catholic and served as an altar boy at the
Basilica of Our Lady of Perpetual Help in the Sunset Park neighborhood of
Brooklyn.
Connors's athletic abilities earned him a scholarship to
the private high school Adelphi Academy, and then to the Catholic college,
Seton Hall University in South Orange, New Jersey. He left college after two
years, and in 1942 enlisted in the Army at Fort Knox, Kentucky.
He spent most of the war as a tank-warfare instructor, stationed at Camp
Campbell, Kentucky, and later at West Point, New York.
During his army service, Connors moonlighted as a
professional basketball player. Following his military discharge in 1946,
he joined the newly-formed Boston Celtics of the Basketball Association of
America. Connors left the team for spring training with
Major League Baseball's Brooklyn Dodgers. He played for numerous minor league
teams before joining the Dodgers in 1949, for whom he played
in just one game; and the Chicago Cubs in 1951, for whom he played in 66 games
as a first baseman and occasional pinch hitter.
In 1952 he was sent to the minor leagues again, to play for the Cubs' top farm
team, the Los Angeles Angels. Connors was also drafted
by the Chicago Bears, but never suited-up for the team. He is one of only 12
athletes in the history of American professional sports to have played
for both Major League Baseball and in the NBA. He is also credited as the first
professional basketball player to break a backboard.
During warm-ups in the first-ever Boston Celtics game on November 5, 1946, at
Boston Arena, Connors took a shot which caught the front of the rim
and shattered an improperly installed glass backboard.
Connors realized that he would not make a career in
professional sports, so he decided to become an actor.
Playing baseball near Hollywood proved to be fortuitous, as he was spotted by an
MGM casting director and signed for the
1952 Tracy-Hepburn film Pat and Mike. In 1953, he starred opposite Burt
Lancaster, playing a rebellious Marine private in the film South Sea Woman.
Connors starred in 1957's Old Yeller as Mr. Sanderson. That same year he
co-starred in The Hired Gun.
Although he was in feature films, such as The Big
Country and Soylent Green, with Charlton Heston, Connors was best
known for his television work.
He appeared in a 1954 episode of Adventures of Superman titled Flight
to the North, in which he played a good-natured (and very strong)
backwoodsman
named Sylvester J. Superman. He was featured in an episode of the syndicated
crime drama, City Detective starring Rod Cameron, and a segment
of CBS's fantasy drama, The Millionaire. In 1956, he appeared with Regis
Toomey in the episode "The Nevada Nightingale" of the
NBC anthology series, The Joseph Cotten Show. He portrayed George Aswell
in the 1960 episode "Trial by Fear" of CBS's anthology series,
The DuPont Show with June Allyson.
He achieved stardom when cast as "Lucas McCain" in the ABC
television Western series The Rifleman (1958-1963), with Johnny Crawford
as his son, Mark.
Connors portrayed a veteran of Berdan's Sharpshooters, a special unit of
marksmen in the Civil War, who used a Winchester carbine with
an enlarged trigger guard (like that of Rooster Cogburn, in the 1970 film True
Grit) to serve up justice to lawbreakers in every episode, helping Marshal
Micah Torrence (actor Paul Fix) as part of his civic duty. The Rifleman
was a creation of Dick Powell's Four Star Television.
Connors next starred in NBC's post-Civil War-era series
Branded (1965-1966) and the 1967-1968 ABC series Cowboy in Africa,
alongside British actor Ronald Howard and Tom Nardini. In 1973 and 1974 he
hosted a television series called Thrill Seekers.
He had a key role as a slaveowner in the 1977 miniseries Roots.
The actor achieved notoriety for an incident on an NBC
prime-time baseball telecast in the 1970s. The network regularly invited a
celebrity commentator
to join the regular play-by-play crew in the broadcast booth. Connors
accidentally said the "f-word" during the live national telecast,
stunning both the announcers and the audience.
Connors hosted a number of episodes of Family Theater
on the Mutual Radio Network. This series was aimed at promoting prayer as a path
to
world peace and stronger families, with the motto, "The family which prays
together stays together."
In 1983, Connors joined Sam Elliott and Cybill Shepherd in
the short-lived NBC series The Yellow Rose, about a modern Texas ranching
family. In 1985,
he guest starred as "King Powers" in the ABC TV series Spenser: For Hire,
starring Robert Urich. In 1987, he co-starred in the FOX series Werewolf,
as drifter Janos Skorzeny. In 1988, he guest starred as "Gideon" in the TV
series Paradise, starring Lee Horsley.
In 1991, Connors was inducted into the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City.
Connors was a supporter of the Republican Party and attended several fundraisers for campaigns of U.S. President Richard M. Nixon.
Connors was introduced to Secretary General Leonid Brezhnev
of the Soviet Union at a party given by Nixon at the Western White House in
San Clemente, California, in June, 1973. Upon boarding his airplane bound for
Moscow, Brezhnev noticed Connors in the crowd and went back to him
to shake hands, and jokingly jumped up into Connor's towering hug. The
Rifleman was one of the few American shows allowed on
Russian television at that time; that was because it was Brezhnev's favorite.
Connors and Brezhnev got along so well that Connors traveled to the
Soviet Union in December 1973. In 1982, Connors expressed an interest in
traveling to the Soviet Union for Brezhnev's funeral, but the
U.S. government would not allow him to be part of the official delegation.
On November 10, 1992, Chuck Connors died in Los Angeles at the age of 71. Cause of death was listed as pneumonia stemming from lung cancer.