Gervase Duan Spradlin (August 31, 1920 – July 24, 2011) was an American actor, attorney, and businessman. Known for his distinctive accent and voice, he often played devious authority figures or high ranking military officers. He is credited in over 70 television and film productions, and performed with actors such as Robby Benson, Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, James Garner, Charlton Heston, George C. Scott, Martin Sheen, and Johnny Depp. One of his best known roles was that of Senator Pat Geary in The Godfather Part II.
After his military service, Spradlin returned to the University of Oklahoma, where he completed a law degree in 1948.[1]
Career before acting
Spradlin's career as an attorney began in Venezuela. He transitioned to become an independent oil producer, forming Rouge Oil Company.[1]
Before he turned to acting, he was active in local politics, and he campaigned for John F. Kennedy in 1959.
Acting career
In 1964, Spradlin joined the Oklahoma Repertory Theatre.[2]
A notable break for Spradlin resulted from his work in television in the 1960s. Casting director Fred Roos had cast Spradlin in television shows such as I Spy (as the immediate superior of Pentagon spies Kelly Robinson and Alexander Scott in the episode "Tonia"), Mannix (in an uncredited role as Senator Sid Abernathy in the episode "Turn Every Stone"), and Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C. (as visiting Colonel Driscoll in the episode "Gomer Pyle Super Chef").
He worked with Jack Webb on the series Dragnet, playing multiple roles from a safecracker, a pushy conventioneer caught up in a gambling sting, and a low-level con man.[3] In 1968, he appeared as a false police sergeant, Preston C. Densmore, in S10:E13, “The Phony Police Racket”. Spradlin portrayed Commander Maurice E. "Germany" Curts, Communications Officer, U.S. Pacific Fleet, in an uncredited role in Tora! Tora! Tora! in 1970. He was also in the counter-culture film Zabriskie Point (1970).
When Roos co-produced The Godfather Part II, he recommended Spradlin for the role of Pat Geary, a corrupt U.S. senator from Nevada,[2] and Spradlin played a senator in the 1976 TV miniseries Rich Man, Poor Man Book II. In 1977, he guest-starred along with Ruth Gordon and Mariette Hartley in the Columbo episode, "Try and Catch Me". His film credits included One on One (1977) as an authoritarian basketball coach described by Roger Ebert as "a hard-nosed ace recruiter with a heart of Drano" and Apocalypse Now as General Corman, the somber officer who assigns Martin Sheen's character to the search mission.[2][4] He played the head football coach B.A. Strother in North Dallas Forty (1979), and "Carolina Military Institute" commandant General Durrell in The Lords of Discipline (1983).