James Carroll Pickett(1949-1994)
- Actor
- Writer
- Make-Up Department
James Carroll Pickett III was born on December 17, 1949 near
Louisville, Kentucky. He first gained local fame after playing Daniel
Boone in a Louisville pageant and worked behind the scenes at the
Actors Theatre while in his early twenties. Pickett acted in three
entertaining 1970's low-budget drive-in exploitation movies for director
William Girdler: After making his film debut with a small part in
Asylum of Satan (1972) (James also did some of the gruesome make-up f/x for
this particular picture), he essayed more substantial roles as the
troubled Billy Townsend in Three on a Meathook (1972) and deranged vengeful
psycho Mac in The Get-Man (1974). He moved to Los Angeles, California
in the mid-1970's. James soon established himself as a noted poet,
playwright, and community activist in the Los Angeles area. Pickett was
the writer in residence at the Beverly Hills Playhouse; his stage plays
were performed all over the world and won awards from both "The LA
Weekly" and Drama Logue. His acclaimed and groundbreaking gay play
"Dream Man" was adapted into a film in 1991. He started the Gay Men's
Writer series at A Different Light Bookstore, was both co-founder of
and the executive director for Artists Confronting AIDS, and both
founded and produced the STAGE benefits for AIDS Project Los Angeles.
James Carroll Pickett III died at the tragically young age of 44 from
AIDS-related complications on July 4, 1994 in Los Angeles, California.