David Doyle(1929-1997)
- Actor
- Director
- Soundtrack
David Fitzgerald Doyle was born in Lincoln, Nebraska December 1, 1929.
He was the son of Mary Ruth Fitzgerald and Lewis Raymond (Lum) Doyle, a
prominent Lincoln attorney. His maternal grandfather was John
Fitzgerald, a prominent banker and railroad builder in Nebraska. His
paternal grandfather was T. J. Doyle, also an attorney. He was one of
three children, including brother John, an attorney, and sister Mary,
an actress. He grew up in Lincoln and attended Cathedral grade school.
He then went to Campion, a Jesuit prep school in Wisconsin. He made his
acting debut at age six and played children's roles in local
productions. He was a member of the Community Theater in Lincoln. He
was in Life with Father (1947). Doyle entered the University of Nebraska in 1945 and
he was expected to become a lawyer, as had four generations of Doyles.
But the young Doyle preferred to spend him time in the theater
department. A fellow classmate at the University of Nebraska was Johnny
Carson. Doyle appeared frequently on his college buddy's late night
talk show during the 1960s. Doyle ranked sixth in the state on his law
school entrance exams. But the theater still called him and he chose
acting over a career in law. He moved to New York after college. He got
his break in 1956 when he replaced Walter Matthau in the Broadway
production of
Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (1957).
His first wife, Rachel, died after injuries in a freak fall from a
stairway in 1968. While doing a revival of "South Pacific" a year
later, he met Anne Nathan and they were married. After Broadway, Doyle
moved to California and was cast as Walt Fitzgerald in the television
series,
Bridget Loves Bernie (1972).
A string of character roles followed, and Doyle is probably best
remembered as the lovable private detective, Bosley, on the
Charlie's Angels (1976)
series. Doyle couldn't escape the legal profession and portrayed an
attorney, Ted Holmes, on the daytime soap opera,
General Hospital (1963)
during 1986. Doyle is best remembered for his distinctive, raspy voice
which earned him the voice role in several animated series and movies.
He died of a heart attack in Los Angeles on February 26, 1997 at age
67.