Billy Gray's mother was actress Beatrice Gray, a longtime character
actress with small roles in such films as Otto Preminger's Laura,
and Abbott and Costello Meet the Killer, Boris Karloff. When Billy
appeared in a kindergarten play, his mother decided the boy had
"chops", and introduced him to her agent. Five-year-old Gray's
first film was a low-budget melodrama, Man of Courage. After that,
he spent much of his childhood in front of cameras, appearing in
tiny roles in several films every year. Most of his early movies
are forgettable, and his earliest film that might be available in a
video store is 1951's Jim Thorpe -- All-American, where Burt
Lancaster played the Native American athlete, and Gray played
Thorpe as a child.
In the mesmerizing science fiction epic The
Day the Earth Stood Still, 12-year-old Gray was the unintentional
comic relief. He played Patricia Neal's obedient young son,
delivering chipper dialogue peppered with lots of "Gee"s and "Aw,
Mom"s. On Father Knows Best, Gray played the adolescent son "Bud",
and aged from 16 to 22 during the show's long run. The plots were
silly, the dialogue trite, but ratings were high. In an interview
years later, Gray apologized for the sitcom that made him
famous:
"I think we were all well motivated, but what we did was
run a hoax. Father Knows Best purported to be a reasonable
facsimile of life. And the bad thing is that the model is so
deceitful. ... If I could say anything to make up for all the years
I lent myself to that kind of bullshit, it would be:
You know best."
After the sitcom was cancelled,
Gray disappeared from public view for a few years, and competed as
a speedway motorcycle racer. In 1962, his squeaky-clean image was
shattered when he was arrested for possession of "marijuana seed
and residue". Gray's arrest and a short jail term were the only
hint of scandal in his entire life, but the publicity made him
virtually unemployable in Hollywood for years.
In 1971, he had a
brief comeback in the mind-blowing junkie film Dusty and Sweets
McGee. Taking advantage of Gray's undeservedly-decadent image, he
was cast as "City Life", a greasy-haired heroin dealer who cruised
Van Nuys Boulevard looking for underaged girls to have sex with and
hook them on drugs. The film's publicity bragged that some cast
members were actual street urchins, and Gray was so believable in
his role, some viewers refused to believe he was acting: rumors of
heroin addiction have dogged him ever since.
The rumors are
false, and very frustrating to Gray, who hires lawyers to respond
when newspapers cite his alleged addiction as fact. His biggest
legal victory came against film critic Leonard Maltin, who wrote in
a review of Dusty and Sweets McGee, "Among real-life addicts and
pushers shown is Billy Gray of TV's Father Knows Best." Despite
Gray's complaints, that sentence appeared in Maltin's best-selling
annual movie guide for more than two decades, until Gray sued. The
case was settled in 1998, with an undisclosed payment, a rewritten
review, and a statement from Maltin: "I did not intend to convey
that Billy Gray was a heroin addict or pusher."
Gray now earns
his living as co-owner of BigRock Engineering. The company sells
his inventions, including the "love'n'thumb self-massager", and the
F-1 guitar pick that sticks to the player's finger.
Mother:
Beatrice Gray (actress, b. 3-Mar-1911)
Wife: Helena Kallioniotes
(div.)
TELEVISION
Father Knows Best Bud Anderson, Jr.
(1954-60)
FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
Porklips Now (1980)
Love and
Bullets (10-Aug-1979)
Werewolves on Wheels (Oct-1971)
The Navy
vs. the Night Monsters (1966)
The Seven Little Foys
(31-May-1955)
All I Desire (Jul-1953)
By the Light of the
Silvery Moon (26-Mar-1953)
The Day the Earth Stood Still
(18-Sep-1951)
On Moonlight Bay (26-Jul-1951)
Official
Website:
http://www.billygray.com/