William Ching

William Ching

Acting 1913-10-02 Saint Louis, Missouri, USA

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. William Ching, also credited as William Brooks, Bill Ching and William Brooks Ching (born 2 October 1913, St. Louis, Missouri - died 1 July 1989, Tustin, California) was a United States character actor who appeared in almost 20 films and on television during the later 1940s and throughout the 1950s. By the early 21st century Ching was most widely noted for his supporting role in Rudolph Maté's 1950 film noir drama D.O.A. as Halliday, who slips "luminous poison" into the drink of an accountant visiting San Francisco for the weekend, along with his role as the overbearing boyfriend of Katharine Hepburn's character in George Cukor's 1952 Tracy-Hepburn comedy Pat and Mike. Ching began his career as a professional singer, appearing in musical comedies such as Rodgers and Hammerstein's Allegro (1947). His first film role was in 1946. He signed with Republic Pictures in 1947 and for the next dozen years acted mostly in westerns and dramas. His last major acting credit was in a 1959 episode of the television series 77 Sunset Strip. William Ching died of congestive heart failure in 1989 at the age of 75 and is buried at Fairhaven Memorial Park in Santa Ana, California. Description above from the Wikipedia article William Ching, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

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1959 Capt. Howard Poole
1958 Mark Snell (as Bill Ching)
1957 Glenn McKay
1957
1955 Rex Willard
1955 Jody Wilton
1953 Tony Warren
1953 Lt. Col. Schuyler 'Sky' Fairchild
1953 Tom Anderson
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1953 Anson Prichett
1953 Bill Adams
1952 Collier Weld
1952 Don Barlow
1951 Lt. Ted Cranshaw
1951 Bill Shanks
1951 Cpl. Donlin
1951 Sprowl
1950 Ted Barton
1950 Mike Shattay
1950 John Beauregard Hale
1949 Halliday
1947 Jim Simpson
1947 2nd Lieutenant, Mess Officer (uncredited)
1947 Steve Randolph Prescott
1947 Midshipman
1946 Jim Farrell
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