Profession[profession not given] Related awards Resumé[resumé not given] Roles:[roles not given] caption3 caption3 caption4 IMDb profile: Booker T. Bradshaw (May 21, 1940 – April 1, 2003) was a Virginian actor and record producer. He provided the brief narration for the BIOHAZARD 2 TV-CM film short.
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- Booker Bradshaw
- Booker Bradshaw
- Booker Bradshaw
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| - Profession[profession not given] Related awards Resumé[resumé not given] Roles:[roles not given] caption3 caption3 caption4 IMDb profile: Booker T. Bradshaw (May 21, 1940 – April 1, 2003) was a Virginian actor and record producer. He provided the brief narration for the BIOHAZARD 2 TV-CM film short.
- right|thumb|200px|Booker Bradshaw 21/05/1940 - Virginia (Estados Unidos) * Fallecido 01/04/2003
- Booker Bradshaw (May 21, 1941 – April 1, 2003) was a film and TV actor, screenwriter, record producer and Motown executive. Bradshaw first demonstrated his singing talents on the Ted Mack Family Hour (1951). Disillusioned with working at his father's Life Insurance company, he studied at Harvard to earn a degree in English, where he met Joan Baez and played at Carnegie Hall, and also honed his acting skills. In the early 1960s he was given a full Scholarship to study at the Royal Academy in London. His television acting appearances included Tarzan, Star Trek (as 'Dr. M'Benga'), The Mod Squad, Insight, Bracken's World (co-starring Linda Harrison), and The F.B.I., alongside films such as Skullduggery, The Strawberry Statement and Coffy.
- His other television guest appearances include the Tarzan episode "Trek to Terror" (with Michael Ansara), the second episode of The Mod Squad (with Clarence Williams III and Tige Andrews), the Insight episode "The Poker Game" (with Jeffrey Hunter), and a first-season episode of the short-lived Bracken's World (with Warren Stevens and Madlyn Rhue). He went on to become an accomplished television writer for such series as Planet of the Apes and Diff'rent Strokes. He also wrote the TV movie Columbo: Payback, which featured TOS guest star Robert Brown in the cast.
- Er spielte Doktor M'Benga in den [[]]-Episoden und . Darüber hinaus hatte Bradshaw in seiner über 20 Jahre währenden Karriere wenige Auftritte in Film- und Fernsehproduktionen. Neben Star Trek hatte er Gastauftritte in TV-Serien wie The Girl from U.N.C.L.E. (1966, u.a. mit Brock Peters und Patrick Horgan), Tarzan (1966/1968, u.a. mit Michael Ansara und Gregg Palmer), Twen-Police (1968/1972, u.a. mit Clarence Williams III, Tige Andrews, Charlene Polite und Victoria George), Bracken's World (1969, u.a. mit Madlyn Rhue, Alan Bergmann, John Copage und Warren Stevens), FBI (1969/1970, u.a. mit Gloria Calomee), Insight (1969/1972, u.a. mit Jeffrey Hunter und Robert DoQui) und The Name of the Game (1970, u.a. mit Budd Albright, Charles Drake und Davis Roberts).
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Name
| - Booker Bradshaw
- Booker Bradshaw
- Columbo: Payback
- Skullduggery
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- tt0066384
- tt0072805
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abstract
| - Profession[profession not given] Related awards Resumé[resumé not given] Roles:[roles not given] caption3 caption3 caption4 IMDb profile: Booker T. Bradshaw (May 21, 1940 – April 1, 2003) was a Virginian actor and record producer. He provided the brief narration for the BIOHAZARD 2 TV-CM film short.
- Booker Bradshaw (May 21, 1941 – April 1, 2003) was a film and TV actor, screenwriter, record producer and Motown executive. Bradshaw first demonstrated his singing talents on the Ted Mack Family Hour (1951). Disillusioned with working at his father's Life Insurance company, he studied at Harvard to earn a degree in English, where he met Joan Baez and played at Carnegie Hall, and also honed his acting skills. In the early 1960s he was given a full Scholarship to study at the Royal Academy in London. His television acting appearances included Tarzan, Star Trek (as 'Dr. M'Benga'), The Mod Squad, Insight, Bracken's World (co-starring Linda Harrison), and The F.B.I., alongside films such as Skullduggery, The Strawberry Statement and Coffy. Bradshaw went on to become an accomplished television writer, at first working in partnership with David P. Lewis between 1973 and 1976. Among the scripts they co-wrote were TV shows such as Planet of the Apes (episode "The Horse Race"), Columbo and Ellery Queen. Bradshaw later wrote for such series as The Richard Pryor Show, Diff'rent Strokes and Mister T, and found work as a voice actor in the 1980s. He died from a heart attack in Los Angeles, California.
- right|thumb|200px|Booker Bradshaw 21/05/1940 - Virginia (Estados Unidos) * Fallecido 01/04/2003
- His other television guest appearances include the Tarzan episode "Trek to Terror" (with Michael Ansara), the second episode of The Mod Squad (with Clarence Williams III and Tige Andrews), the Insight episode "The Poker Game" (with Jeffrey Hunter), and a first-season episode of the short-lived Bracken's World (with Warren Stevens and Madlyn Rhue). Bradshaw also appeared in such 1970s films as Skullduggery, with fellow TOS guest actors Roger C. Carmel and William Marshall, and The Strawberry Statement, starring Bruce Davison and Kim Darby. His most prominent film role was "Howard Brunswick" in the 1973 blaxploitation classic Coffy, also featuring Robert DoQui and Sid Haig. He went on to become an accomplished television writer for such series as Planet of the Apes and Diff'rent Strokes. He also wrote the TV movie Columbo: Payback, which featured TOS guest star Robert Brown in the cast. Bradshaw died of a heart attack in Los Angeles, California, at the age of 62.
- Er spielte Doktor M'Benga in den [[]]-Episoden und . Darüber hinaus hatte Bradshaw in seiner über 20 Jahre währenden Karriere wenige Auftritte in Film- und Fernsehproduktionen. Neben Star Trek hatte er Gastauftritte in TV-Serien wie The Girl from U.N.C.L.E. (1966, u.a. mit Brock Peters und Patrick Horgan), Tarzan (1966/1968, u.a. mit Michael Ansara und Gregg Palmer), Twen-Police (1968/1972, u.a. mit Clarence Williams III, Tige Andrews, Charlene Polite und Victoria George), Bracken's World (1969, u.a. mit Madlyn Rhue, Alan Bergmann, John Copage und Warren Stevens), FBI (1969/1970, u.a. mit Gloria Calomee), Insight (1969/1972, u.a. mit Jeffrey Hunter und Robert DoQui) und The Name of the Game (1970, u.a. mit Budd Albright, Charles Drake und Davis Roberts). Zu seinen Filmauftritten zählen u.a.: Abenteuer in Neuguinea (1970, u.a. mit Roger C. Carmel und William Marshall), Blutige Erdbeeren (1970, u.a. mit Bruce Davison, Kim Darby, Paul Willson und Bert Remsen) und Coffy – Die Raubkatze (1973, u.a. mit Robert DoQui, Sid Haig und Bob Minor). In den 1970ern und 1980ern arbeitete Bradshaw zudem als Drehbuchautor für Serien wie Planet der Affen (1974), Columbo: Playback (1975), The Jeffersons (1976), Detektiv Rockford – Anruf genügt (1977) und Mister T (1984). Booker Bradshaw starb im Alter von nur 62 Jahren am 01. April 2003 an einem Herzinfarkt.
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