

Richard Chamberlin, who died today at the age of 90, became famous in the 1960s as Dr. Kildar, as the heart of television.
Hes Dashing Good Looks Won Him Legions of Female Fans, and Guaranteed Him Work in a Plethora of Forgettable Television Movies.
But, in the middle age, his profession rose again.
Chamberlin became the king of the minor television series of the 1980s: the role of a Western prisoner in Shogon and a Catholic priest who was tempted from thorns.
He refused to be gay when he faced a French magazine in 1989, and did not openly mention his homosexuality until he was
In his interviews, which advanced memories of 2003, he advised other key actors to keep their sexuality.
“There are still a lot of homophobia in our culture,” he said. “Please, don’t pretend that we all suddenly accepted in a surprising way, happily accepted.

George Richard Chamberlin was born on March 31, 1934 in Beverley Hills, California. He died the day before his 91st birthday.
The seller’s father had a drinking problem, which affected the young Richard’s child. He described himself as a “shy child, serious and lustfulness, with pain thin, with a long and sad face.
He admitted that he had no “nests of unprecedented children in school” but found a taste for sports.
At Pomona College, he was caught by the acting in the arms of Bernard Shaw and the man was convinced that he had found the call.
Paramonet studios liked it, but the thinking of acting was focused on after being summoned to serve the US military for 16 months, rose to military ranks while stationed in Korea.
When he out of his job, he made a number of cameras on television programs, including a ring of The Popular Western, Gunsmoke.

Everyone had chosen Chamberlain as a future star.
He was just handsome: With the profile of the time spilling on the face of accurate aristocratic, he suggests that a young Florence – out of the Renaissance.
However, it was naturally difficult to work in his favor when he driven it for the role of Dr. James Kildar, who was in a medical training to learn his profession, in the new drama Time Medical Medicine NBC.
“It may have been inevitable,” said one of the friends and competitors. “Who else could look so anti-suspicious like Kir?”
The series was held for about 200 programs in five seasons.
It broke a new ground by raising issues such as drug addiction – which had not been shown on US television before.
There was a big reaction from female fans.
Chamberlin received 12,000 messages a week. In Pittsburg, 450,000 people appeared to see in a show, in New York, close to the creation of chaos when a child saw and named.

The studio benefited the most of the comments, published novels, comics and games that contained pictures of Chamberlin.
Even the fans wrote at the request of Dr. Kildar to solve their various medical problems.
Chamberlin is an unknown song that is unlikely: Three stars shine tonight, in which the word romantic was added to the different music of the play.
He won the Golden Globe for Best Actor in 1963. But, three years later, the audience began to decrease, and NBC drew the platform.
Now he is an international star, Chamberlin was fighting for leaving Kildar.
In 1966, he hoped to enter the films, but the reviews of the performance in light romantic comedy, morning, morning, talked about the screening.
The audience said they were laughing at “all the wrong places”. Therefore, he decided to ignore Hollywood and earn a living on stage.

He began a rocky beginning when a version of the musical version of breakfast in Tivaniz – in which his role was closed to Marie Tyler Moore – after only four performances.
The production is still seen as one of the largest Brado Turks in Brado. But his transfer to England gave him a chance to invent himself as a ‘serious actor’
In 1967, he played the main role in the image of a woman and against Catherine Hepburn in a satirical comedy called The Mad Women of Cheallot.
Two years later, he became the first American to play Hamlet in Birmingham Repertor after the Great John Barrimore in
This time, the reviews were excellent and visited the role of the Danish tortured prince for a television version for Holmark.

But Chamberlain played the role of Xikovsky in Ken Russell’s biography, The Music Lovers, in which he played the lead against Glennda Jackson.
Critics broke the film, in which a big play was made of a composer with a repressed gay tenure and his nephew’s wife, although it later became a success of Kult.
Chamberlain played Lord Bayron against Sarah Miles in Lady Carrollin Lamb and French sword shook in Richard Leicester’s The Three Musketeers.
It also turned out to be – with half of the Hollywood – in high infruit, as an electrical enthusiastic engineer whose angel causes the impressive destruction of a 138-story building.

In 1977, the television series Roths-free-free-based Roots attracted a lot of viewers for about 40 Amy Awards.
It led to the revival of the small chain that Chamberlin withdrew to television.
He beat Roger Moore and Albert Fine to play a role like John Blactor – a 17th-century English-lived tourist in Shogon.
The series was screened in 1980 on NBC on five nights, with viewers about 30 million.
After a Golden Globe, Chamberlin, another like Father Ralph de Brikasart, carried thorns, a priest who was torn between God and his sexual desire, and ancestry.
He even won 60% of the audience of television and 16 Amm candidates.

In the 1990s, Chamberlin’s work began to decrease.
There were one consecutive, not excellent, not excellent.
These include The Thorn Birds, called the Lost Years, Amanda Donohoe replaced the descent.
In 2003, much after he abandoned the role of leading romantic men, Chamberlin released his biography, which he confirmed for the first time that he was gay.
Despite the 30 years of relationship with actors and directors Martin, which was once starring in Alan Quttermain and the Lost Gold, they had kept their private lives in particular.
“I thought something very deep was wrong in me, and I wanted to cover it. I remember making a covenant with me that I would never reveal this secret, never,” he said.
Chamberlin and Rabet followed in different ways in 2010.

In the following years, Chamberlin was happy with the role of a gay man, especially in the hopeless women, wheels and grays.
He continued his performance in the music theatre, including Spamalott’s tour products, my just lady and the sound of music.
But he never regretted hiding his sexuality to protect his profession.
In 2024, he told El Pais: “I would be happier to get out of the mattress and be free.
He is forgotten like the king of the small television series: a strict leading man in everything, from Dr. Kildar to the thorns.
Despite his efforts to invent himself as a serious actor, he was at his best on a small screen, seeing millions of dollars at home at home.
Because, although there were always better actors than Richard Chamberlin, few people competed with his ability to carry a television audience.