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{{Sidebar actor|
[[Image:Nilva.jpg|thumb|'''Henry Gibson''' as Nilva.]]
 
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| Name = Henry Gibson
'''Henry Gibson''' {{born|21|September|1935}} is a prolific character actor who played [[Nilva]] in the ''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine]]'' episode "[[Profit and Lace]]".
 
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| image = Nilva.jpg
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| imagecap = ...as Nilva
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| Birth name = James Bateman
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| Gender = Male
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| Date of birth = {{d|21|September|1935}}
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| Place of birth = Germantown, Pennsylvania, USA
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| Date of death = {{d|14|September|2009}}
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| Place of death = Malibu, California, USA
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| Awards for Trek =
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| Roles =
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| Characters = [[Nilva]]
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| image2 =
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| imagecap2 =
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| image3 =
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| imagecap3 =
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}}
 
'''Henry Gibson''' {{born|21|September|1935|died|14|September|2009}} was the prolific character actor who played [[Nilva]] in the ''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine]]'' episode {{e|Profit and Lace}}. He was also an occasional songwriter.
   
Outside of ''[[Star Trek]]'', he is best remembered as a regular performer on the television variety series ''Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In'' from 1968 through 1971. He went on to appear in a large number of [[film]]s, including several from Robert Altman and Joe Dante. His best known film role is country singer "Haven Hamilton" in Altman's acclaimed 1975 musical drama ''Nashville''. Also starring in this film were fellow ''Trek'' performers [[Robert Doqui]] and [[Bert Remsen]].
+
Outside of ''[[Star Trek]]'', he is best remembered as a regular performer on the television variety series ''Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In'' from 1968 through 1971. He went on to appear in a large number of films, including several from Robert Altman and Joe Dante. His best known film role is country singer "Haven Hamilton" in Altman's acclaimed 1975 musical drama ''Nashville''.
   
  +
[[Douglas S. Cramer]], the Executive in Charge of Production on ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series]]'' who worked with Gibson on the television series ''Wonder Woman'', referred to Gibson as a comic genius of the 1960s and 1970s. <ref>"Henry Gibson - Biography." The Internet Movie Database, [http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0002099/bio], (16 September 2009)</ref>
Gibson actually made his film debut in the classic 1963 [[Jerry Lewis]] comedy ''The Nutty Professor'', in which he and [[TOS]] guest actresses [[Julie Parrish]] and [[Celeste Yarnall]] played college students. The following year, he appeared in the comedy ''Kiss Me, Stupid'', also featuring [[Ray Walston]] and [[John Fiedler]], and the year after, he appeared in the [[The Three Stooges|Three Stooges]] film ''The Outlaws Is Coming'', with [[Nancy Kovack]] and [[Rex Holman]].
 
   
  +
== Early life ==
Like his fellow DS9 co-star [[Rene Auberjonois]], Gibson would work with director Robert Altman on several films, beginning with ''The Long Goodbye'' in 1973. Gibson and Altman would reteam on the aforementioned ''Nashville'', 1979's ''A Perfect Couple'' (starring fellow DS9 guest star [[Paul Dooley]]), and 1980's ''HealtH'' (with Dooley, [[Alfre Woodard]], and [[Robert Fortier]]). Gibson also appeared in several Joe Dante films, along with ''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]'' star [[Robert Picardo]], including ''Innerspace'' (1987, with [[Wendy Schaal]], [[William Schallert]], [[Dick Miller]], [[Kenneth Tobey]], [[Andrea Martin]]) and ''Gremlins 2: The New Batch'' (1990, with [[Zach Galligan]], [[John Glover]], Dick Miller, [[Keye Luke]], [[Jerry Goldsmith]], and Kenneth Tobey).
 
  +
Gibson was [[Star Trek birthdays#September|born]] '''James Bateman''' in Germantown, Pennsylvania. When he was eight years old, he began touring with the Philadelphia-based Mae Desmond Theater Company. He earned a bachelor's degree from Catholic University in 1957, after which he served in the US Air Force as an intelligence officer stationed in France.
   
  +
As a struggling actor in the early 1960s, Bateman shared an apartment with his college friend and fellow rising actor {{w|Jon Voight}}. Together, Bateman and Voight thought of an idea to launch their careers: they would pose as "two brothers from the Ozarks who represented the United States on cultural tours and caused riots wherever they went."<ref>Grimes, William, "Henry Gibson, 'Laugh-In' Star, Dies at 73." The New York Times, [http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/17/arts/17gibson.html?hp] , (16 September 2009) </ref> Voight gave Bateman the name "Henry Gibson," while he would assume the identity of Harold. The two ultimately booked an appearance on [[NBC]]'s ''The Tonight Show'', but Voight opted not to continue the act, leaving Bateman to continue solo. Nonetheless, Bateman kept the name Henry Gibson as his stage name.
Other notable films in which he has appeared include ''The Blues Brothers'' (1980, with [[Charles Napier]]), ''Magnolia'' (1999, with [[Pat Healy]]), and ''Wedding Crashers'' (2005, with [[Ron Canada]], [[Ellen Albertini Dow]], [[Noel De Souza]], [[Richard Riehle]], and [[Tiffany Turner]]). He has also become prominent in voiceover roles in animated films and TV series, most notably as the voice of Wilbur the pig in the 1973 classic ''Charlotte's Web''.
 
   
  +
== Early career ==
Gibson now has a recurring role on ''Boston Legal'', starring [[William Shatner]] and Rene Auberjonois.
 
  +
At the start of his career, Gibson became known for an act in which he portrayed a poet with a Southern accent who would recite comic poems while clutching a stuffed alligator. In 1963, Gibson made his film debut in the the 1963 [[Jerry Lewis]] comedy ''The Nutty Professor'', in which Gibson and [[TOS]] guest actresses [[Julie Parrish]] and [[Celeste Yarnall]] played college students.
   
  +
In 1964, Gibson appeared in the comedy film ''Kiss Me, Stupid'', also featuring [[Ray Walston]] and [[John Fiedler]]. Gibson had worked with Walston earlier that year on an episode of ''My Favorite Martian'', in which Walston played the star role. In 1965, Gibson appeared in the {{w|Three Stooges}} film ''The Outlaws Is Coming'', with [[Nancy Kovack]] and [[Rex Holman]]. Gibson also made appearances on various television shows throughout the 1960s, including ''The Beverly Hillbillies'', ''The Dick Van Dyke Show'', and ''Bewitched''.
==Other Trek connections==
 
  +
  +
Gibson joined the cast of ''Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In'' in 1968, where he often played "The Poet," reciting satirical poems while wearing a Nehru jacket and "hippie" beads and brandishing an outlandishly large artificial flower. For his act, Gibson emerged from behind a stage flat, stated the title of his poem, noted that it was "by Henry Gibson", bowed stiffly from the waist, recited his poem, and returned behind the flat. Gibson departed ''Laugh-In'' in 1971, but not before receiving a Golden Globe nomination for his performance on the show.
  +
  +
== Notable film work ==
  +
Like his fellow DS9 co-star [[Rene Auberjonois]], Gibson worked with director Robert Altman on several films, beginning with ''The Long Goodbye'' in 1973. Gibson and Altman reunited on the aforementioned ''Nashville'', in which Gibson performed with fellow ''Star Trek'' alumni [[Keith Carradine]], [[Robert DoQui]], and [[Bert Remsen]]. Gibson's portrayal in ''Nashville'' as country music singer Haven Hamilton earned him a National Society of Film Critics Award as Best Supporting Actor as well as a second Golden Globe nomination. Gibson also wrote and performed several songs for the film, which allowed him to share a Grammy Award nomination for Album of Best Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or Television Special.
  +
  +
Gibson again worked with Altman on 1979's ''A Perfect Couple'' (starring fellow DS9 guest star [[Paul Dooley]]) and 1980's ''HealtH'' (with Dooley, [[Alfre Woodard]], [[Georgann Johnson]], and [[Robert Fortier]]). Along with [[Robert Picardo]] and [[Dick Miller]], Gibson also appeared in several Joe Dante films, including ''Innerspace'' (1987, with [[Pat Kehoe]], [[Mark L. Taylor]], [[Wendy Schaal]], [[William Schallert]], [[Kenneth Tobey]], [[Andrea Martin]], and [[Bruce Botnick]]), ''The 'burbs'' (1989, with [[Cory Danziger]], [[Charles L. Hughes]], [[Pat Kehoe]], [[Wendy Schaal]], [[Carey Scott]], Bruce Botnick, and [[Tom Cranham]]), and ''Gremlins 2: The New Batch'' (1990, with [[Zach Galligan]], [[John Glover]], [[Keye Luke]], Kenneth Tobey, [[Leslie Neale]], [[Ron Fassler]], and [[Time Winters]]); of interesting note, all three movies featured music composed by [[Jerry Goldsmith]], orchestrated by [[Arthur Morton]], and edited by [[Kenneth Hall]].
  +
 
Other films in which Gibson has appeared include ''The Blues Brothers'' (1980, with [[Charles Napier]]), ''National Lampoon's Vacation'' (1983, with [[Miriam Flynn]]), ''Magnolia'' (1999, with [[Jim Beaver]], [[April Grace]], [[Pat Healy]], and [[Don McManus]]), and ''Wedding Crashers'' (2005, with [[Ron Canada]], [[Ellen Albertini Dow]], [[Noel De Souza]], [[Richard Riehle]], and [[Tiffany Turner]]). His final movie was the 2007 comedy ''Big Stan'', which also featured Richard Riehle and starred [[Jennifer Morrison]].
  +
  +
== Later television work ==
  +
''Star Trek: Deep Space Nine'' was not Gibson's only foray into science fiction television. In 1999, he guest-starred on ''Total Recall 2070'', and he subsequently appeared on ''[[stargate:Stargate SG-1|Stargate SG-1]]'', playing [[stargate:Marul|Marul]] in the 2002 episode "[[stargate:The Sentinel|The Sentinel]]". Gibson has also appeared in a number of fantasy-based shows ranging from ''Fantasy Island'' (working with series star [[Ricardo Montalban]] and fellow guest star [[John Schuck]]) and ''Wonder Woman'' (including the pilot and an episode with [[Vaughn Armstrong]]) to ''Sabrina, the Teenage Witch'' (in the recurring role of the Witch Judge) and ''Charmed'' (in an episode directed by [[John Kretchmer]] and co-starring [[Tim Kelleher]]).
  +
  +
Other television shows on which Gibson has guest-starred include ''Love, American Style'' (on which he was a frequent guest), ''The Dukes of Hazzard'', ''Magnum, P.I.'' (in an episode with [[Claudette Nevins]]), ''Quincy M.E.'' (which starred [[Robert Ito]] and [[Garry Walberg]]), ''Knight Rider'', ''Murder, She Wrote'' (with [[Ron Glass]] and [[William Windom]]), ''Newhart'', ''MacGyver'', ''Sisters'' (with [[Ashley Judd]]), and ''The [[John Larroquette]] Show''. One episode of ''MacGyver'' in which he appeared also featured TOS star [[James Doohan]]. Gibson had previously worked with Doohan's TOS co-star, [[William Shatner]], on an episode of Shatner's first post-TOS series, ''Barbary Coast'', in 1975.
  +
  +
Gibson also lent his voice to a number of animated television series, including the short-lived science fiction-oriented ''Galaxy High School'', in which he and [[David L. Lander]] were part of the regular cast. Years later, Gibson voiced the recurring role of eye-patched reporter Bob Jenkins on the animated Fox series ''King of the Hill'', which also featured the voices of [[Pamela Segall]] and [[Stephen Root]]. Gibson voiced on many other series, including ''Aaahh! Real Monsters'' (as Mayor Lendt) and ''Grim & Evil'' (as Lord Pain).
  +
  +
Most recently, Gibson had a recurring role on ''Boston Legal'', which starred the aforementioned William Shatner. Rene Auberjonois and John Larroquette, both of whom Gibson worked with in the past, also starred on the show at different points. On this series, Gibson played a peculiar, elderly judge who frequently tried cases involving Shatner's Denny Crane, who took delight in calling Gibson's character a "namby pamby." Gibson's DS9 co-star [[Armin Shimerman]] played a fellow judge in two of Gibson's ''Boston Legal'' episodes.
  +
  +
== Death ==
  +
Gibson [[Star Trek deaths#September|died]] on 14 September 2009 at his home in Malibu, California, following a brief battle with cancer. He was 73 years old. <ref>Lang, Derrik J., "'Laugh-In' Actor Henry Gibson Dies at 73." NBC Los Angeles, [http://www.nbclosangeles.com/entertainment/celebrity/Laugh-In-Actor-Henry-Gibson-Dies-at-73-59524362.html], (16 September 2009) </ref> He is survived by three sons from his 41-year marriage to Lois Joan Geiger, who passed away in 2007, as well as three sisters and two grandchildren.<ref>Grimes, William, "Henry Gibson, 'Laugh-In' Star, Dies at 73." The New York Times, [http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/17/arts/17gibson.html?hp] , (16 September 2009) </ref> Gibson was remembered in the "In Memoriam" section at the 16th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards on {{d|23|January|2010}}.
  +
 
== Other ''Trek'' connections ==
 
Additional projects in which Gibson appeared with other ''Star Trek'' performers include:
 
Additional projects in which Gibson appeared with other ''Star Trek'' performers include:
  +
=== Film ===
* ''Evil Roy Slade'' (1972 TV movie, with [[Arthur Batanides]], [[Larry Hankin]], and [[Ed Begley, Jr.]])
 
* ''The New Original Wonder Woman'' (1975 TV pilot, with [[Kenneth Mars]] and [[Ian Wolfe]])
+
* ''The Last Remake of Beau Geste'' (1977) with [[Ted Cassidy]]
* ''The Halloween That Almost Wasn't'' (1979 TV movie, with [[John Schuck]])
+
* ''The Incredible Shrinking Woman'' (1981) with John Glover
* ''The Incredible Shrinking Woman'' (1981 film, with John Glover)
+
* ''Monster in the Closet'' (1987) with Paul Dooley and [[Arlee Reed]]
* ''Monster in the Closet'' (1987 film, with Paul Dooley and [[Arlee Reed]])
+
* ''Long Gone'' (1987) with [[Katy Boyer]], [[Robert Easton]], and [[Virginia Madsen]]
* ''Long Gone'' (1987 film, with [[Virginia Madsen]] and [[Robert Easton]])
+
* ''The 'burbs'' (1989) with Robert Picardo, Dick Miller, and Wendy Schaal
* ''The 'burbs'' (1989 film, with Robert Picardo, Dick Miller, and Wendy Schaal)
+
* ''Night Visitor'' (1989) with [[Michael J. Pollard]]
* ''Tune in Tomorrow...'' (1990 film, with [[John Larroquette]])
+
* ''The Magic Balloon'' (1990 short) with [[Frank Langella]]
* ''Tom & Jerry: The Movie'' (1992 film, with [[David L. Lander]]) (voice only)
+
* ''Tune in Tomorrow...'' (1990) with John Larroquette
* ''Escape to Witch Mountain'' (1995 TV movie, with [[Brad Dourif]] and [[Vincent Schiavelli]])
+
* ''Tom & Jerry: The Movie'' (1992) with [[Michael Bell]], [[Tony Jay]], and [[David L. Lander]] (voice only)
* ''Asylum'' (1997 film, with [[Malcolm McDowell]])
+
* ''Bio-Dome'' (1996) with [[Paul Eiding]] and [[Tucker Smallwood]]
* ''Teddy Bears' Picnic'' (2002 film, with Kenneth Mars and [[Kurtwood Smith]])
+
* ''Asylum'' (1997) with [[Malcolm McDowell]] and [[Debra Wilson]]
  +
* ''Mullitt'' (2000 short) with Pat Healy
* ''The Commission'' (2003 film, with [[Corbin Bernsen]], [[Stephen Collins]], and [[Jim Beaver]])
 
  +
* ''Teddy Bears' Picnic'' (2002) with [[Kenneth Mars]], [[Michael McKean]], [[Kurtwood Smith]], and [[Brenda Strong]]
  +
* ''No Prom for Cindy'' (2002 short) with [[Brock Peters]]
  +
* ''The Goldfish'' (2003 short) with [[Matt Malloy]]
 
* ''The Commission'' (2003) with [[Corbin Bernsen]], [[Stephen Collins]], [[Sam Anderson]], [[Terrence Beasor]], and Jim Beaver
  +
* ''Never Die Alone'' (2004) with [[Tommy "Tiny" Lister, Jr.]] (uncredited)
  +
* ''Trapped Ashes'' (2006) with Dick Miller
   
  +
=== Television ===
==External Links==
 
  +
* ''77 Sunset Strip'' episode "The Toy Jungle" (1963) directed by [[Lawrence Dobkin]]
  +
* ''Grindl'' episode "Grindl, Girl Wac" (1964) with [[John Hoyt]]
  +
* ''Mister Roberts'' episode "Liberty" (1965) directed by [[James Komack (director)|James Komack]]
  +
* ''Mister Roberts'' episode "Physician, Heal Thyself" (1965) directed by [[Robert Butler]]
  +
* ''Mister Roberts'' episode "Carry Me Back to Cocoa Island" (1965) directed by Lawrence Dobkin
  +
* ''F Troop'' episode "Wrong Starr and the Lady in Black" (1966) with [[Sarah Marshall]]
  +
* ''Love, American Style'' segment "Love and the Shower" (1969) directed by [[Jud Taylor]]
  +
* ''Love, American Style'' segment "Love and the Sweet Sixteen" (1971) with [[Susan Howard]], [[Barbara Luna]], and [[Lee Meriwether]]
 
* ''Evil Roy Slade'' (1972 TV movie) with [[Arthur Batanides]], [[Larry Hankin]], and [[Ed Begley, Jr.]]
  +
* ''Love, American Style'' segment "Love and the Christmas Punch" (1972) with [[Paul Carr]]
  +
* ''Every Man Needs One'' (1972 TV movie) with [[Louise Sorel]]
  +
* ''Love, American Style'' segment "Love and the Spendthrift" (1973) with [[Garry Walberg]]
  +
* ''McCloud'' episode "Showdown at Times Square" (1975) with [[Allan Miller]]
  +
* ''The New Original Wonder Woman'' (1975 TV pilot) with Kenneth Mars and [[Ian Wolfe]]
  +
* ''Police Woman'' episode "Don't Feed the Pigeons" (1977) directed by [[Herschel Daugherty]]
  +
* ''Escape from Bogen County'' (1977 TV movie) with [[Mitch Ryan]]
  +
* ''The Night They Took Miss Beautiful'' (1977 TV movie) with [[Jonathan Banks]] and [[Gregory Sierra]]
  +
* ''Amateur Night at the Dixie Bar and Grill'' (1979 TV movie) with Ed Begley, Jr.
  +
* ''The Halloween That Almost Wasn't'' (1979 TV movie) with [[Mariette Hartley]] and John Schuck
  +
* ''The Nashville Grab'' (1981 TV movie) with [[Larry Cedar]] and [[Bill Zuckert]]; directed by [[James L. Conway]]
  +
* ''Trapper John, M.D.'' episode "Candy Doctor" (1982) with [[Paul Comi]], [[Paddi Edwards]], and [[Madge Sinclair]]
  +
* ''Simon & Simon'' episode "Fowl Play" (1982) with [[Stephen Liska]]
  +
* ''Small & Frye'' episode "Endangered Detectives" (1983) with [[Jason Evers]]
  +
* ''The Biskitts'' (1983-84) with Kenneth Mars (voice only)
  +
* ''Cover Up'' episode "The Million Dollar Face" (1984) with [[Gary Lockwood]] and [[Andrew Prine]]
  +
* ''The Pound Puppies'' (1985 TV movie) with Ed Begley, Jr., [[Alan Oppenheimer]], and [[Frank Welker]] (voice only)
  +
* ''The Twilight Zone'' segment "Welcome to Winfield" (1986) with [[Elisha Cook, Jr.]] and [[Gerrit Graham]]
  +
* ''Around the World in 80 Days'' (1989 mini-series) with [[Julia Nickson]] and [[James B. Sikking]]
  +
* ''Return to Green Acres'' (1990 TV movie) with [[Lycia Naff]]
  +
* ''Evening Shade'' episode "Chip Off the Old Brick" (1991) with [[Brian Keith]]
  +
* ''Eerie, Indiana'' episode "The Losers" (1991) with Dick Miller
  +
* ''The Bears Who Saved Christmas'' (1994 TV movie) with [[Paul Williams]] (voice only)
  +
* ''Daisy-Head Mayzie'' (1995 TV movie) with Paul Eiding and [[George Hearn]] (voice only)
  +
* ''Escape to Witch Mountain'' (1995 TV movie) with [[Brad Dourif]], [[Vincent Schiavelli]], and [[Kevin Tighe]]
  +
* ''Duckman: Private Dick/Family Man'' episode "A Room with a Bellevue" (1996) with [[Jason Alexander]], [[Joel Brooks]], and [[Robert Costanzo]] (voice only)
  +
* ''Providence'' episode "You Bet Your Life" (1999) with [[Michael Reilly Burke]], [[Rick Scarry]], [[Concetta Tomei]]
  +
* ''She Spies'' episode "The Martini Shot" (2002) directed by John Kretchmer
  +
* ''Becker'' episode "Chock Full O'Nuts" (2003) with [[Brad Blaisdell]]
  +
  +
== References ==
  +
<references/>
  +
 
== External links ==
  +
* {{wikipedia}}
 
*{{IMDb-link|page=nm0002099}}
 
*{{IMDb-link|page=nm0002099}}
*{{Wikipedia|Henry Gibson}}
 
   
[[Category:Performers|Gibson, Henry]]
 
[[Category:DS9 performers|Gibson, Henry]]
 
   
  +
 
[[de:Henry Gibson]]
 
[[es:Henry Gibson]]
 
[[es:Henry Gibson]]
 
[[Category:Performers|Gibson, Henry]]
 
[[Category:DS9 performers|Gibson, Henry]]

Revision as of 13:46, 3 September 2014

Template:Realworld

Henry Gibson (21 September 193514 September 2009; age 73) was the prolific character actor who played Nilva in the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "Profit and Lace". He was also an occasional songwriter.

Outside of Star Trek, he is best remembered as a regular performer on the television variety series Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In from 1968 through 1971. He went on to appear in a large number of films, including several from Robert Altman and Joe Dante. His best known film role is country singer "Haven Hamilton" in Altman's acclaimed 1975 musical drama Nashville.

Douglas S. Cramer, the Executive in Charge of Production on Star Trek: The Original Series who worked with Gibson on the television series Wonder Woman, referred to Gibson as a comic genius of the 1960s and 1970s. [1]

Early life

Gibson was born James Bateman in Germantown, Pennsylvania. When he was eight years old, he began touring with the Philadelphia-based Mae Desmond Theater Company. He earned a bachelor's degree from Catholic University in 1957, after which he served in the US Air Force as an intelligence officer stationed in France.

As a struggling actor in the early 1960s, Bateman shared an apartment with his college friend and fellow rising actor Jon Voight. Together, Bateman and Voight thought of an idea to launch their careers: they would pose as "two brothers from the Ozarks who represented the United States on cultural tours and caused riots wherever they went."[2] Voight gave Bateman the name "Henry Gibson," while he would assume the identity of Harold. The two ultimately booked an appearance on NBC's The Tonight Show, but Voight opted not to continue the act, leaving Bateman to continue solo. Nonetheless, Bateman kept the name Henry Gibson as his stage name.

Early career

At the start of his career, Gibson became known for an act in which he portrayed a poet with a Southern accent who would recite comic poems while clutching a stuffed alligator. In 1963, Gibson made his film debut in the the 1963 Jerry Lewis comedy The Nutty Professor, in which Gibson and TOS guest actresses Julie Parrish and Celeste Yarnall played college students.

In 1964, Gibson appeared in the comedy film Kiss Me, Stupid, also featuring Ray Walston and John Fiedler. Gibson had worked with Walston earlier that year on an episode of My Favorite Martian, in which Walston played the star role. In 1965, Gibson appeared in the Three Stooges film The Outlaws Is Coming, with Nancy Kovack and Rex Holman. Gibson also made appearances on various television shows throughout the 1960s, including The Beverly Hillbillies, The Dick Van Dyke Show, and Bewitched.

Gibson joined the cast of Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In in 1968, where he often played "The Poet," reciting satirical poems while wearing a Nehru jacket and "hippie" beads and brandishing an outlandishly large artificial flower. For his act, Gibson emerged from behind a stage flat, stated the title of his poem, noted that it was "by Henry Gibson", bowed stiffly from the waist, recited his poem, and returned behind the flat. Gibson departed Laugh-In in 1971, but not before receiving a Golden Globe nomination for his performance on the show.

Notable film work

Like his fellow DS9 co-star Rene Auberjonois, Gibson worked with director Robert Altman on several films, beginning with The Long Goodbye in 1973. Gibson and Altman reunited on the aforementioned Nashville, in which Gibson performed with fellow Star Trek alumni Keith Carradine, Robert DoQui, and Bert Remsen. Gibson's portrayal in Nashville as country music singer Haven Hamilton earned him a National Society of Film Critics Award as Best Supporting Actor as well as a second Golden Globe nomination. Gibson also wrote and performed several songs for the film, which allowed him to share a Grammy Award nomination for Album of Best Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or Television Special.

Gibson again worked with Altman on 1979's A Perfect Couple (starring fellow DS9 guest star Paul Dooley) and 1980's HealtH (with Dooley, Alfre Woodard, Georgann Johnson, and Robert Fortier). Along with Robert Picardo and Dick Miller, Gibson also appeared in several Joe Dante films, including Innerspace (1987, with Pat Kehoe, Mark L. Taylor, Wendy Schaal, William Schallert, Kenneth Tobey, Andrea Martin, and Bruce Botnick), The 'burbs (1989, with Cory Danziger, Charles L. Hughes, Pat Kehoe, Wendy Schaal, Carey Scott, Bruce Botnick, and Tom Cranham), and Gremlins 2: The New Batch (1990, with Zach Galligan, John Glover, Keye Luke, Kenneth Tobey, Leslie Neale, Ron Fassler, and Time Winters); of interesting note, all three movies featured music composed by Jerry Goldsmith, orchestrated by Arthur Morton, and edited by Kenneth Hall.

Other films in which Gibson has appeared include The Blues Brothers (1980, with Charles Napier), National Lampoon's Vacation (1983, with Miriam Flynn), Magnolia (1999, with Jim Beaver, April Grace, Pat Healy, and Don McManus), and Wedding Crashers (2005, with Ron Canada, Ellen Albertini Dow, Noel De Souza, Richard Riehle, and Tiffany Turner). His final movie was the 2007 comedy Big Stan, which also featured Richard Riehle and starred Jennifer Morrison.

Later television work

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine was not Gibson's only foray into science fiction television. In 1999, he guest-starred on Total Recall 2070, and he subsequently appeared on Stargate SG-1, playing Marul in the 2002 episode "The Sentinel". Gibson has also appeared in a number of fantasy-based shows ranging from Fantasy Island (working with series star Ricardo Montalban and fellow guest star John Schuck) and Wonder Woman (including the pilot and an episode with Vaughn Armstrong) to Sabrina, the Teenage Witch (in the recurring role of the Witch Judge) and Charmed (in an episode directed by John Kretchmer and co-starring Tim Kelleher).

Other television shows on which Gibson has guest-starred include Love, American Style (on which he was a frequent guest), The Dukes of Hazzard, Magnum, P.I. (in an episode with Claudette Nevins), Quincy M.E. (which starred Robert Ito and Garry Walberg), Knight Rider, Murder, She Wrote (with Ron Glass and William Windom), Newhart, MacGyver, Sisters (with Ashley Judd), and The John Larroquette Show. One episode of MacGyver in which he appeared also featured TOS star James Doohan. Gibson had previously worked with Doohan's TOS co-star, William Shatner, on an episode of Shatner's first post-TOS series, Barbary Coast, in 1975.

Gibson also lent his voice to a number of animated television series, including the short-lived science fiction-oriented Galaxy High School, in which he and David L. Lander were part of the regular cast. Years later, Gibson voiced the recurring role of eye-patched reporter Bob Jenkins on the animated Fox series King of the Hill, which also featured the voices of Pamela Segall and Stephen Root. Gibson voiced on many other series, including Aaahh! Real Monsters (as Mayor Lendt) and Grim & Evil (as Lord Pain).

Most recently, Gibson had a recurring role on Boston Legal, which starred the aforementioned William Shatner. Rene Auberjonois and John Larroquette, both of whom Gibson worked with in the past, also starred on the show at different points. On this series, Gibson played a peculiar, elderly judge who frequently tried cases involving Shatner's Denny Crane, who took delight in calling Gibson's character a "namby pamby." Gibson's DS9 co-star Armin Shimerman played a fellow judge in two of Gibson's Boston Legal episodes.

Death

Gibson died on 14 September 2009 at his home in Malibu, California, following a brief battle with cancer. He was 73 years old. [3] He is survived by three sons from his 41-year marriage to Lois Joan Geiger, who passed away in 2007, as well as three sisters and two grandchildren.[4] Gibson was remembered in the "In Memoriam" section at the 16th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards on 23 January 2010.

Other Trek connections

Additional projects in which Gibson appeared with other Star Trek performers include:

Film

Television

References

  1. "Henry Gibson - Biography." The Internet Movie Database, [1], (16 September 2009)
  2. Grimes, William, "Henry Gibson, 'Laugh-In' Star, Dies at 73." The New York Times, [2] , (16 September 2009)
  3. Lang, Derrik J., "'Laugh-In' Actor Henry Gibson Dies at 73." NBC Los Angeles, [3], (16 September 2009)
  4. Grimes, William, "Henry Gibson, 'Laugh-In' Star, Dies at 73." The New York Times, [4] , (16 September 2009)

External links