April 9, 2007–Barry Nelson, an MGM contract player during the 1940s who later had a prolific theater career and was the first actor to play James Bond on screen, has died. He was 89.
Nelson died April 7, while traveling in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. The cause of death was not immediately known.
After graduating from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1941, Nelson was spotted by a talent scout and signed to MGM. He appeared in the studio's “Shadow of the Thin Man,” “Johnny Eager” and “Dr. Kildare's Victory” in 1942. He also landed the leading role in “A Yank on the Burma Road,” playing a cab driver who decides to lead a convoy of trucks for the Chinese government.
Nelson entered the Army during World War II and went on the road with other actors performing the wartime play “Winged Victory,” which was later made into a movie starring Red Buttons, George Reeves and Nelson.
After the war, Nelson starred in a string of movies, including “Undercover Maisie,” “Time to Kill” and “Tenth Avenue Angel.”
He was the first actor to play James Bond, taking the role in a one-hour TV adaptation of “Casino Royale” in 1954.
Nelson switched to the stage during the 1960s and 1970s, appearing on Broadway in “Seascape” “Mary, Mary” and “Cactus Flower.” He earned a Tony nomination in 1978 for his role in “The Act,” which also starred Liza Minnelli.
Among his other film credits were “Airport” and “The Shining,” and he also appeared on such TV shows as “Murder, She Wrote,” “Dallas” and “Magnum P.I.”
More recently, Nelson and his second wife Nancy spent a lot of time traveling. He planned to write a couple of books about his time onstage and in Hollywood. Nelson is survived by his wife. He did not have any children from either marriage.