
- #DEAN STOCKWELL QUANTUM LEAP FULL#
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There is a promo hole punched through the barcode in the rear insert, but everything else is in fantastic shape.
Stockwell is survived by his wife, Joy, and their two children, Austin Stockwell and Sophie Stockwell.You are bidding on a gently used copy of 'Quantum Leap: Music From The Television Series' on CD, issued by Crescendo in 1993.
Disc and artwork are in strong Very Good condition, closer to Like New overall.
… It's just one of the best feelings I've ever had". He told AP in 1989 that it was "something I've dreamed about for years. He called his success from the 1980s onward his "third career", a high point of which was his Oscar nomination. He continued playing roles, big and small, in films and TV, into the 21st century, including a regular role in another science fiction series, Battlestar Galactica. During a government experiment into time. "If people hadn't seen me in Married to the Mob they wouldn't have realised I could do comedy." With Scott Bakula, Dean Stockwell, Deborah Pratt, Dennis Wolfberg. NEW YORK, NY.- Dean Stockwell, who began his seven-decade acting career as a child in the 1940s and later starred as the cigar-smoking Al Calavicci in the.
#DEAN STOCKWELL QUANTUM LEAP SERIES#
"It's the first time anyone's offered me a series and the first time I've ever wanted to do one," he said in 1989.

#DEAN STOCKWELL QUANTUM LEAP TV#
His role as Tony "The Tiger" Russo, a flamboyant gangster, in the 1988 hit Married to the Mob led to his most notable TV role the following year, in Quantum Leap.
#DEAN STOCKWELL QUANTUM LEAP FULL#
While his career had some lean times, he reached his full stride in the 1980s. The Devil, or Satan is a character who appears in the form of several characters, including Al, who are depicted in the Season Three episode of Quantum Leap titled 'The Boogieman'. You draw on more experience.Dean Stockwell in the 1990s TV series Quantum Leap, one of his best-known roles. “But as you live your life,” he added, “you compile so many millions of experiences and bits of information that you become a richer vessel as a person. “My way of working is still the same as it was in the beginning: totally intuitive and instinctive. “I haven’t changed in the least,” he said. Stockwell said that his approach as an actor hadn’t changed since he was a child. He is survived by his wife, Joy Stockwell, and two children, Austin and Sophie Stockwell. Stockwell was nominated four times for an Emmy Award for best supporting actor in a drama series for his work on “Quantum Leap.” He never won an Emmy, but he did win a Golden Globe in 1990. Dean Stockwell, the award-winning actor who was best known for playing Admiral 'Al' Calavicci on the popular sci-fi series Quantum Leap, died on Sunday from natural causes.

O’Connor of The Times in a 1989 review as “Sam’s wiseguy colleague, who hangs around the edges of each episode, setting the scene and commenting on the action.” Mr. That show, seen on NBC from 1989 to 1993, starred Scott Bakula as Sam Beckett, a scientist who, because of a botched time-travel experiment, spends his days and nights being thrown back in time to assume other people’s identities. His next comeback would be his most successful, beginning a decade of his most critically acclaimed work. In 2002, he reunited with his Quantum Leap co-star, Scott Bakula as he took on the role of Colonel Grat in one episode of Star Trek: Enterprise (‘Detained’ S1, Ep20). His vaudevillian father was a replacement Curly in the original production of 'Oklahoma'. He quit acting again in the early 1980s, moving to New Mexico to sell real estate. Science fiction would play a major role in the final, post-Quantum Leap phase of the life and career of Dean Stockwell. Dean Robert Stockwell grew up in North Hollywood, the son of Broadway performers Harry Stockwell and Elizabeth 'Betty' Stockwell (ne Veronica). “Meanwhile, I couldn’t even get arrested.” “I even heard about a casting meeting where the producer said, ‘We need a Dean Stockwell type,’” he told The Times in 1988.

For about a dozen frustrating years, he struggled to land roles, appearing in fringe films and performing in dinner theater. That kind of freedom, imagination and creativity that arose all around was like a childhood to me.”Īfter a few years off, he returned to acting, only to learn that his time away had led Hollywood casting agents to forget him. The ’60s allowed me to live my childhood as an adult. According to Deadline, he died in his home of natural causes. “What I was looking for I was finding in another place, which was in that revolution. Dean Stockwell, a prolific actor best known for celebrated roles on the sci-fi drama Quantum Leap and the acclaimed 2000s reboot of Battlestar Galactic, died Monday. “My career was doing well, but I wasn’t getting anything out of it personally,” he told The Times in 1988.

Stockwell found comfort in the counterculture movement and the hippie ethos.
