Hal Douglas(1924-2014)
- Actor
Voiceover artist par excellence Hal Douglas was born Harold Cone on
September 1, 1924 in Stamford, Connecticut. The son of Samuel and
Miriam Levenson Cone, Hal and his brother Edwin were primarily raised
by their grandparents Sarah and Tevya Levenson after their mother died
when Hal was only nine. (Their father later remarried.) Douglas trained
as a pilot and served three years in the Navy during World War II. Hal
wrote fiction in his spare time and upon finishing his tour of duty
enrolled on the G.I. Bill at the University of Miami, where he studied
acting. He changed his last name to Douglas after moving to New York
and began supplementing his slight income from acting gigs with
voiceover and announcer work on both radio and television. Hal soon
became one of the most sought after (and instantly recognizable) vocal
talents for commercials and lead-ins for TV shows. Douglas worked
steadily out of New York and not only continued to lend his distinctive
gravelly baritone to television, but also narrated the occasional
documentary and countless film trailers in a diverse array of genres.
Hal was still working two years prior to his death from pancreatic
cancer at age 89 at his home in Lovettsville, Virginia on March 7,
2014. He's survived by his wife of forty-three years, Ruth Francis
Douglas; their daughter Sarah Douglas; and two sons from a previous
marriage, Jon and Jeremy.