James Whitmore Jr.








James Whitmore Jr.

James Garner James Whitmore Jr. Rockford Files 1977.JPG
James Whitmore Jr. (left) as Freddie Beamer in The Rockford Files, listening as Jim Rockford (James Garner) speaks to him.

Born
James Allen Whitmore III


(1948-10-24) October 24, 1948 (age 70)

Manhattan, New York, U.S.

OccupationActor, television director
Years active1977-present

James Allen Whitmore III (born October 24, 1948), better known as James Whitmore Jr., is an American actor best known for his role as Captain Jim Gutterman on the television program Baa Baa Black Sheep, and (since the 1980s) a television director. He is the son of actor James Whitmore.[1]




Contents





  • 1 Life and career


  • 2 Director's filmography


  • 3 Actor's filmography


  • 4 References


  • 5 External links




Life and career


Born in Manhattan, New York, Whitmore has had recurring guest-starring roles on the TV series The Rockford Files and Hunter. He also appeared in two episodes of Magnum, P.I. and an episode of Battlestar Galactica before directing many episodes of series by Donald P. Bellisario, the creator of Magnum and a writer on Galactica.[2]


Whitmore occasionally acts in the episodes he directs, such as two episodes of Quantum Leap ("8 1/2 Months" and "Trilogy, Pt. 1"). In that series, as well as several others, he played different characters in each appearance, rather than recurring roles.[2]


In addition to directing episodes of shows for Bellisario (Quantum Leap, Tequila and Bonetti, JAG, NCIS, and NCIS: Los Angeles), Whitmore directed episodes of more than one series for Joss Whedon. Whitmore directed the final episodes of two different series (Dawson's Creek and the aforementioned Quantum Leap). After Leap, Whitmore again directed Scott Bakula in episodes of Star Trek: Enterprise, NCIS: New Orleans (including the Dean Stockwell reunion episode), and Mr. and Mrs. Smith. He also directed David Boreanaz in both Angel and Bones. The Pretender reunited Whitmore with many of the same writing staff as Quantum Leap.



Director's filmography



  • 21 Jump Street (8 episodes)


  • 24 (6 episodes, all from Day 2)


  • Angel (1 episode)


  • Beverly Hills, 90210 (11 episodes)


  • Bones (2 episodes)


  • Brooklyn South (2 episodes)


  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer (5 episodes)


  • The Cleaner (2 episodes)


  • Cold Case (6 episodes)


  • The Commish (8 episodes)


  • Dark Angel (2 episodes)


  • Dawson's Creek (6 episodes)


  • Dead Like Me (4 episodes)


  • Ferris Bueller (1 episode)


  • Get Real (3 episodes)


  • The Good Wife (4 episodes)


  • Hunter (23 episodes)


  • JAG (2 episodes)


  • Jericho (3 episodes)


  • Las Vegas (2 episodes)


  • Madam Secretary (4 episode)


  • Mr. and Mrs. Smith (1 episode)


  • NCIS (36 episodes)


  • NCIS: Los Angeles (11 episodes)


  • NCIS: New Orleans (first half of the NCIS backdoor pilot and 6


  • Notorious (1 episode)


  • Nowhere Man (3 episodes)


  • Person of Interest (1 episode)


  • The Pretender (7 episodes)


  • Profiler (2 episodes)


  • Providence (3 episodes)


  • Quantum Leap (15 episodes)


  • Ray Donovan (1 episode)


  • Roswell (2 episodes)


  • Star Trek: Enterprise (2 episodes)


  • Tequila and Bonetti (4 episodes)


  • The Resident (1 episode)


  • The Unit (5 episodes)


  • Witchblade (4 episodes)


  • Young Americans (5 episodes)


Actor's filmography



  • Airwolf (2 episodes: different characters)


  • Baa Baa Black Sheep (regular character: Capt. James Gutterman)


  • Battlestar Galactica (episode 7: "The Long Patrol" as Robber, 1978)


  • The Boys in Company C (1978) as Lieutenant Archer


  • The Eddie Capra Mysteries (episode "Breakout to Murder" as Dr. Faulkner, 1978)


  • The Greatest American Hero (3 episodes: different characters)


  • The Gypsy Warriors (1978) as Captain Sheldon Alhern


  • Hardcastle and McCormick (2 episodes: different characters)


  • Highway to Heaven (episode "Dust Child" as Richard Gaines, 1984)


  • Hunter (19 episodes: Sgt. Bernie Terwilliger)


  • Lou Grant (2 episodes: different characters)


  • Magnum, P.I. (2 episodes: different characters)


  • Quantum Leap (3 episodes: different characters)


  • The Rockford Files (2 episodes: Freddie Beamer)


  • Simon & Simon (3 episodes: different characters)


  • The Twilight Zone (1980s series) (2 episodes: different characters)


References




  1. ^ James Whitmore Jr. Archived 2012-04-22 at the Wayback Machine, Peterborough Players


  2. ^ ab James Whitmore Jr. Biography (1948-), Film Reference




External links



  • James Whitmore Jr. on IMDb







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