Walt Barnes
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Barnes on a 1950 Bowman football card
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Date of birth | January 26, 1918 |
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Place of birth | Parkersburg, West Virginia, U.S. |
Date of death | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. |
Place of death | Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Career information | |
Position(s) | Guard |
College | Louisiana State |
Career history | |
As player | |
1948-1951 | Philadelphia Eagles |
Career highlights and awards | |
Pro Bowls | 1 |
Career stats | |
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Walter Lee Barnes (January 26, 1918 – January 6, 1998) was an American football offensive lineman in the National Football League for the Philadelphia Eagles. He played college football at Louisiana State University and was an actor in both American and European films. He appeared in several films with John Wayne, Lex Barker and Clint Eastwood.
Sports career
Barnes earned his nickname of "Piggy" from catching a piglet when a boy.[1] Playing football at Parkersburg High School, he was on the unbeaten 1938 team and played in the 1939 North-South Game.[2] Following military service in the United States Army in World War II as a Army Sergeant[3] he enrolled in Louisiana State University [4] where he became not only a football player but a college weightlifting champion. Following graduation he joined the Philadelphia Eagles football team as a guard before retiring and becoming a coach of football teams of Columbia University and Arizona State University.
While playing for the Eagles, Barnes made time to help his alma mater, LSU, by spying on the practices of the University of Oklahoma football team prior to the 1950 Sugar Bowl. After being caught by members of the OU football staff and Biloxi, Mississippi residents, Barnes fled to hide in the house of a former LSU teammate, Elbert Manuel. Both Barnes and Manuel refused OU coach Bud Wilkinson's offer to present themselves for identification to clear their names. In the end, the spying incident would have little to do with the outcome of the game, as the superior OU team handled LSU very easily 35-0.[5]
He was inducted into the Coaches' Association Hall in June 2010.
Acting career
Barnes entered acting through after appearing several times on The Eagles Nest a local Philadelphia television show. WCAU television placed him on several local shows.[6] His contacts with Walt Silver, a producer for Warner Bros. Television lead him into several appearances on television and films. Some of his more notable appearances included Bronco, Gunsmoke, Cheyenne, Bonanza, Have Gun – Will Travel and Death Valley Days. John Wayne got him a small role as Charlie the Bartender in Rio Bravo.
Tiring of small roles and seeing opportunities overseas, Barnes was one of the many American actors who moved to Italy in the early 1960s. Kirk Douglas recommended him for a role in his The Vikings television spinoff Tales of the Vikings that was filmed for Douglas' production company in Germany. From 1960 to 1969, he was first active in pirate movies, then Karl May film adaptations and Spaghetti Westerns. His popularity in Germany would lead him to receive top billing when his films played there.[7]
Barnes returned to the United States in 1969 and appeared in more films and television series, which included The High Chaparral. His friendship with Clint Eastwood on Rawhide later lead him to several roles in Eastwood's films. He retired from acting in 1987 and became increasingly ill due to his Diabetes. Barnes died on January 6, 1998. He was the father of German former actress Lara Wendel, who was born Daniela Barnes.
Other acting appearances
- Robin Hood and the Pirates (1960)
- Apache Gold (1963)
- Revenge of the Musketeers (1964)
- The Big Gundown - film (1966)
- The Moment To Kill - film (1968)
- The Magnificent Tony Carrera - film (1968)
- Bonanza - TV (1969–1971)
- Mission: Impossible - TV (1972–1973)
- Cahill U.S. Marshal - film (1973)
- High Plains Drifter - film (1973)
- Escape to Witch Mountain - film (1975)
- Mackintosh and T.J. (1975)
- Day of the Animals - film (1977)
- Emergency! - TV (1977)
- Pete's Dragon - film (1977)
- Every Which Way but Loose - film (1978)
- The Dukes of Hazzard - TV (1980)
- Bronco Billy - film (1980)
- Walking Tall - TV (1981)
- Smokey Bites the Dust - film (1981)
- Father Murphy - TV (1982)
- North and South - TV miniseries (1986)
- Stingray - TV (1986)
- Boon - TV (1987)
Notes
- ↑ http://www.lex-barker.com/index.php?med=scr&lang=eng&menu=barnes
- ↑ http://www.dailymail.com/Sports/201006021108
- ↑ http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=327192
- ↑ pp.13-14 Didinger, Ray & Lyons, Robert S. The Eagles Encyclopedia Temple University Press
- ↑ http://newsok.com/oklahoma-football-spy-scandal-before-1950-sugar-bowl-angered-the-usually-mild-mannered-bud-wilkinson/article/3918553/?page=1
- ↑ http://www.lex-barker.com/index.php?med=scr&lang=eng&menu=barnes
- ↑ p.69 Frayling, Christopher Spaghetti Westerns: Cowboys and Europeans from Karl May to Sergio Leone I. B. Tauris Press
External links
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- 1918 births
- 1998 deaths
- American expatriates in Italy
- American male film actors
- American football offensive guards
- American military personnel from West Virginia
- American military personnel of World War II
- American male television actors
- American weightlifters
- Eastern Conference Pro Bowl players
- LSU Tigers football players
- Parkersburg High School alumni
- People from Parkersburg, West Virginia
- Philadelphia Eagles players
- Players of American football from West Virginia
- Male Spaghetti Western actors
- United States Army soldiers
- Male Western (genre) film actors
- 20th-century American male actors
- Deaths from diabetes