MovieWise

Unfiltered reviews. Cinematic depth.

Mode
William Reynolds Biography and Full Filmography - MovieWise

Quick Facts

Born:
1931-12-09

Birthplace:
Los Angeles, California, USA

Credits:
40 Total Roles

William Reynolds

Acting

The MovieWise Take

Refining cinematic analysis...

Biography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William de Clerq Reynolds (born December 9, 1931) is a retired American actor. He is best known for his film roles in the 1950s and his television roles in the 1960s and 1970s.

Reynolds signed with Universal Studios in 1952 and began appearing in pictures such as Carrie (1952), where he had a prominent role as the son of Laurence Olivier, and the Douglas Sirk melodramas All That Heaven Allows (1955) and There's Always Tomorrow (1956). He often played the son of the leading character.

Reynolds became tired of his dull, stereotyped roles in the movies and began his move to television in 1959, playing the title role in Pete Kelly's Blues. In 1960–1961, he starred as Sandy Wade on the ABC/Warner Brothers television series The Islanders. In 1962-1963, Reynolds costarred on ABC's The Gallant Men. Reynolds caught his big break co-starring with Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. in another ABC series, the long-running The F.B.I.. Reynolds first made guest appearances in seasons one and two in 1966, before he appeared as series regular Special Agent Tom Colby from 1967 to 1973. He made two appearances as Colby in the ninth season (1973–74).

Reynolds left show business after The F.B.I. ended its run and became a businessman.

Known For

Full Filmography

Year Title Role
2007 Contract Kid: William Reynolds on Douglas Sirk MOVIE Interviewee
1989 Hairway to the Stars MOVIE Detective
1967 Dragnet TV Sgt. William Riddle
1966 Follow Me, Boys! MOVIE Hoodoo Henderson - Man
1965 The F.B.I. TV Special Agent Tom Colby
1965 The F.B.I. TV SAC Kendall Lisbon
1964 A Distant Trumpet MOVIE 1st Lt. Teddy Mainwarring
1963 FBI Code 98 MOVIE Special Agent Edward P. Fox
1962 The Gallant Men TV Self
1960 The Roaring 20's TV Self

Cinema in your inbox.

Weekly deep-dives and cinematic perspectives delivered to you.

By joining, you agree to our Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe at any time.