Ty Hardin, a popular film and television actor who starred as the gunman Bronco Layne in the TV Western series Bronco and worked with Henry Fonda and Kirk Douglas, has died.
Ty Hardin, a popular film and television actor who starred as the gunman Bronco Layne in the TV Western series Bronco and worked with Henry Fonda and Kirk Douglas, has died.
A resident of Huntington Beach, California, Hardin died on Thursday at the age of 87. His widow, Carolyn Pampu Hardin, told The Associated Press that he had been in failing health.
Born Orison Whipple Hungerford Jr in New York, Hardin grew up in Texas, served in the Korean War and played American football at Texas A&M under future University of Alabama coach Paul «Bear» Bryant.
He changed his name in his 20s, in homage to the outlaw John Wesley Hardin, as his acting career was taking off.
Hardin credited John Wayne for giving him a major break when the actor helped him get a contract with Warner Brothers. When Clint Walker left the TV show Cheyenne in 1958 over a contractual dispute, Hardin stepped in and continued in the spin-off Bronco, which aired until 1962.
Hardin also had a diverse film career, from the Joan Crawford thriller Berserk! to the Second World War movies Battle Of The Bulge and PT 109.
After struggling with tax issues in the 1970s, he founded an anti-tax organisation that became the extremist anti-government group the Arizona Patriots. The Patriots disbanded after federal agents raided one of its camps in 1986.
AP