Biography
This page uses content from the Bill McKinney biography page on the English version of Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. This list of authors can be seen in the page history. Rotten Tomatoes disclaims any and all warranties as to the accuracy or reliability of the content.
Bill McKinney (born September 12, 1931 in Chattanooga, Tennessee) is an American character actor whose most famous role was Don Job, the mountain man who abused and then sodomized Bobby Trippe (Ned Beatty) in the movie Deliverance.
He had an unsettled life as a child, moving twelve times, once when his family moved from Tennessee to Georgia, he was beaten by a gang and thrown into a creek. At the age of 19 he joined the Navy during the Korean War. In his four years on active duty he served two on a mine sweeper in Korean waters as well as being stationed at Port Hueneme in Ventura County, California. Whilst on leave from this posting he would visit Los Angeles and during this time decided he wanted to be an actor. Upon his discharge in 1954 he settled in southern California, attending acting school at the famous Pasadena Playhouse in 1957. His classmates here included Dustin Hoffman and Mako. During this time, McKinney supported himself by working as an arborist, trimming and taking down trees - he continued working in this field until the mid 70s, by which time he was appearing in major films.
After Pasadena Playhouse he moved onto Lee Strasberg's Actors Studio, making his movie debut in exploitation pic She Freak, 1967. He was also busy in television, making his debut in 1968 on The Monkees and attracting attention as Lobo in Alias Smith and Jones. It was Deliverance which provided his breakthrough in 1972, and is still his signature role. In his autobiography, Deliverance co-star Burt Reynolds said of McKinney 'I thought he was a little bent. I used to get up at five in the morning and see him running nude through the golf course while the sprinklers watered the grass...'. He went on to say that McKinney got so caught-up in the sodomy scene that he was ready to bugger Ned Beatty for real. 'He always played sickos, but he played them well. With my dark sense of humour, I was kind of amused by him ... McKinney turned out to be a pretty good guy who just took the method way too far'. McKinney told Maxim magazine that all Reynolds' stories were untrue. 'If you lose control on a movie set," McKinney told Maxim, "it's not acting, it's indulgence'.
He cemented his reputation for on-screen villainy in the 1970's with appearances in several films for leading directors, Sam Peckinpah's Junion Bonner, John Huston's The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean, Peter Yate's For Pete's Sake and most chillingly as the assassin in Alan J. Pakula's The Parallax View. However it was with Clint Eastwood that McKinney would become most strongly associated with, becoming part of Eastwood's stock company after they worked together in Michael Cimino's Thunderbolt and Lightfoot. He enjoyed one of this best roles through this association, starring as 'Reg Legs' in The Outlaw Josey Wales under Eastwood's direction. He appeared in another six Eastwood films from The Gauntlet in 1977 to Pink Cadillac in 1989 when the Eastwood stock company disbanded.
Other memorable roles include a misanthrope who is done in by John Wayne's The Shootist in the eponymous film directed by Don Siegel, one of Stallone's nemeses, the initial Rambo film First Blood, 1982, Against All Odds, 1984, Heart Like a Wheel, 1983, Back to the Future Part III, 1990, and The Green Mile, 1999.
As well as films, McKinney has appeared in in the classic TV movie The Execution of Private Slovik, 1974, while guest-starring on some of the top TV shows, including Starsky and Hutch, The A-Team, Murder She Wrote and Columbo.
McKinney took up singing in the late 1990s, eventually releasing an album of standards and country & western songs appropriately titled Love Songs from Antri, reflecting Don Job's pronunciation of the infamous town featured in Deliverance.
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