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| - __NOEDITSECTION__ Image:Information-silk.png|Character Template rect 0 0 20 20 Staff Template desc none Philip Abbott Real Name Unknown Job Titles Voice Actor First publication Unknown
- Philip Abbott (March 21, 1923; Lincoln, Nebraska – February 23, 1998; Tarzana, California) was an American character actor and occasional voice actor. Abbott was a secondary lead in several films of the 1950s and 1960s. Miracle of the White Stallions (1963). He made more than one hundred guest appearances on various television programs from 1952–1995, including NBC's The Eleventh Hour, a medical drama about psychiatry, and the CBS anthology The Lloyd Bridges Show. In 1965, he appeared in Dennis Weaver's NBC sitcom, Kentucky Jones, in the episode "The Music Kids Make".
- Philip Abbott enjoyed an active career as a character actor in a career that spanned from the early-1950s to the late-1990s. Though he worked almost every year of his career, his most regular employment was as the second lead, "Arthur Ward", on The F.B.I. (1965 - 1974). He enjoyed about the same level of success in film as he did on television, generally playing the main co-star in moderate box office successes of the 1950s-1980s.
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| - and "Deadly Countdown (Part II)"
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| - Philip Abbott
- Abbott, Philip
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| - Philip Abbott enjoyed an active career as a character actor in a career that spanned from the early-1950s to the late-1990s. Though he worked almost every year of his career, his most regular employment was as the second lead, "Arthur Ward", on The F.B.I. (1965 - 1974). He enjoyed about the same level of success in film as he did on television, generally playing the main co-star in moderate box office successes of the 1950s-1980s. He tended to play a variety of earnest professional men, especially favoring medical, legal and military roles. Almost all of his appearances were in dramatic roles. Late in life, he began to turn to animation, where he was the consistent voice of Nick Fury across two Marvel animated series running in 1995: Iron Man and Spider-Man. However, he did not live long enough to accept further roles in the genre.
- Philip Abbott (March 21, 1923; Lincoln, Nebraska – February 23, 1998; Tarzana, California) was an American character actor and occasional voice actor. Abbott was a secondary lead in several films of the 1950s and 1960s. Miracle of the White Stallions (1963). He made more than one hundred guest appearances on various television programs from 1952–1995, including NBC's The Eleventh Hour, a medical drama about psychiatry, and the CBS anthology The Lloyd Bridges Show. In 1965, he appeared in Dennis Weaver's NBC sitcom, Kentucky Jones, in the episode "The Music Kids Make". Abbott is best remembered as Assistant Director Arthur Ward on the TV series The F.B.I. He died of cancer in 1998.
- __NOEDITSECTION__ Image:Information-silk.png|Character Template rect 0 0 20 20 Staff Template desc none Philip Abbott Real Name Unknown Job Titles Voice Actor First publication Unknown
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