Will Hutchins (Wikipedia)
Will Hutchins is an American actor most noted for playing the lead role of the young lawyer from the Oklahoma Territory, Tom Brewster, in sixty-nine episodes of the Warner Bros. Western television series Sugarfoot, which aired on ABC from 1957 to 1961. Only five episodes aired in 1961, including the series finale on April 17. (The Encyclopedia of Television Shows erroneously indicates that Sugarfoot aired from 1957 to 1963.)
Hutchins was born in the Atwater Village neighborhood of Los Angeles, California. As a child, he visited the location filming of Never Give a Sucker an Even Break and made his first appearance as an extra in a crowd.
He attended Pomona College in Claremont, California, where he majored in Greek drama. He also studied at the University of California at Los Angeles, where he enrolled in cinema classes.
During the Korean War, he served for two years in the United States Army as a cryptographer in Paris, serving with SHAPE.
Hutchins began acting and got a role on Matinee Theatre.
Hutchins was discovered by a talent scout for Warner Bros., who changed his name from Marshall Lowell Hutchason to Will Hutchins. The young actor’s easygoing manner was compared to Will Rogers, the Oklahoma humorist.
Hutchins was also cast as a guest star on Cheyenne, Bronco, Maverick and 77 Sunset Strip.
His contract led him to guest appearances in Warner Bros. Television programs, such as Conflict, in which he appeared in three hour-long episodes, including his screen debut as Ed Masters in “The Magic Brew” on October 16, 1956.
He had small roles in the Warners movies Bombers B-52 (1957), Lafayette Escadrille(1958), and No Time for Sergeants (1958).
Hutchins leapt to national fame in the lead of Sugarfoot.
During the series’ run he guest starred on other Warner Bros shows such as The Roaring 20’s, Bronco, and Surfside 6.
Warners tried him in the lead of a feature, Young and Eager (1961) aka Claudelle Inglish with Diane McBain.
He tried another pilot for a series, Howie, that was not picked up and war in the Warners war film with Jeff Chandler, Merrill’s Marauders(1962), a picture filmed in the Philippine Islands and Chandler’s last acting role.
After this Hutchins left Warners.
Hutchins guest starred on Gunsmoke and The Alfred Hitchcock Hour.
While appearing in a play in Chicago in late 1963, he was flown to Los Angeles to shoot a television pilot for MGM, Bert I. Gordon‘s Take Me to Your Leader, in which Hutchins played a Martian salesman who came to Earth. Though the pilot was not picked up, it led MGM to sign him for Spinout, in which he co-starred as Lt. Tracy Richards (“Dick Tracy” backwards) alongside Elvis Presley.
Also in 1963, he appeared on an episode of Gunsmoke. In S8/Ep23, “Blind Man’s Bluff”, his character was Billy Poe.
In 1965, Hutchins co-starred with Jack Nicholson and Warren Oates in Monte Hellman‘s The Shooting.
In 1966, he made a guest appearance on the CBS courtroom drama series Perry Mason as murderer Don Hobart in “The Case of the Scarlet Scandal”.[6] (He later also appeared as Dan Haynes in The New Perry Mason in 1973 in the episode, “The Case of the Deadly Deeds”. Actress Jodie Foster was in this same episode.)
In 1966-1967, he costarred with Sandy Baron in Hey, Landlord, set in a New York City apartment building. The program followed Walt Disney’s Wonderful World of Color, but it failed to attract a sustaining audience against CBS’s The Ed Sullivan Show and ABC’s The F.B.I. with Efrem Zimbalist, Jr., his former Warner Bros. colleague.
Hutchins was reunited with Presley in Clambake (1967).
In 1968-69, Hutchins starred as Dagwood Bumstead in a CBS television version of the comic strip Blondie.
He travelled to South Africa to appear in Shangani Patrol (1970) playing Frederick Russell Burnham.
Back in the United States, Hutchins guest starred on Love, American Style, Emergency!, Chase, Movin’ On, The Streets of San Francisco, and The Quest. He was in The Horror at 37,000 Feet (1973), Slumber Party ’57 (1976), and The Happy Hooker Goes to Washington(1977).
Hutchins had roles in Roar (1981), Gunfighter (1999) and The Romantics (2010).
Hutchins was married to Chris Burnett, sister of Carol Burnett, with whom he had a daughter.