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Michael Strong

Biography

Michael Strong

Edit

Overview

  • Born
    February 8, 1918 · Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
  • Died
    September 29, 1980 · Los Angeles, California, USA (cancer)
  • Birth name
    Cecil Natapoff
  • Height
    1.79 m

Biography

    • While never one of the big names on screen, Michael Strong was one of those excellent method actors who were often compelling to watch. Unsurprisingly, many of Michael's screen characters were typical New Yorkers, whether they be cops or thugs, and he imbued them with an edgy 'in-your-face' intensity that was all his own. He was already an established stage actor, both on and off-Broadway, with an extensive resume to his name long before transferring his talents to the screen. A graduate of the Actor's Studio, he was also part of the original crew of the Lincoln Center Repertory Company, performing in key plays by Arthur Miller, S.N. Behrman and Eugene O'Neill. Usually assigned to playing military types or proletarian firebrands, Michael eventually came to note as a young burglar in "Detective Story", written and staged on Broadway by Sidney Kingsley in 1949. Director William Wyler subsequently brought him to Hollywood to recreate his role for the 1951 motion picture.

      A couple of other good roles Michael later enacted for the big screen were his smarmy used-car salesman Stegman in the thriller Le point de non-retour (1967) and Brigadier General Hobart Carver in the Oscar-winning war drama Patton (1970). For the most part, however, television became Michael's most prolific medium. His furtive looks and nervous demeanor often suggested that his characters had something to hide - and most of them did, particularly those Eastern bloc spy types with names like Malkov and Petrovich. He was at home in just about every major police series of the period, equally adept at NYPD sergeants and contract assassins. Fans of Star Trek (1966) will also remember Michael as the unhinged Dr. Roger Korby who had his consciousness transferred into an android body in the episode "What Are Little Girls Made Of?". As tough as some of his characters, Michael continued to act right up until the end.
      - IMDb mini biography by: I.S.Mowis

Family

  • Spouses
      Diane Shalet(August 24, 1969 - September 29, 1980) (his death)
      Theda Kropf(August 1940 - 1966) (divorced, 2 children)

Trivia

  • Michael Strong and his first wife, Theda Kropf, both worked as drama teachers and performers at the integrated left-wing family resort, Camp Unity, in Wingdale, New York. They eloped in 1940, and had two children: Paul in 1942, and Ellen in the mid 1950s.
  • Best known for his role as Dr. Roger Korby, Nurse Chapel's old flame in What Are Little Girls Made Of? (1966).
  • Michael Strong's parents, Michael Natapoff (1892-1966) and Mollie (Meyer) Natapoff (1888-1975), had two other children: Susie Natapoff (1909-1910), and Gustave Natapoff (1912-1938). Michael Natapoff worked for the New York subway, and later the US Post Office.
  • Michael Strong appeared in a 1945 Soundie, "And the Great Big Saw Came Nearer and Nearer" (sung by Cindy Walker). Filmed in New York.

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