Adam Williams
male

Born on November 26, 1922 (103 years old)
Passed Away on December 04, 2006
From Wall Lake, Iowa, USA
Known for Acting
Biography
Adam Williams (born Adam William Berg, November 26, 1922 – December 4, 2006) was an American film and television actor. A veteran "bad guy" actor of 1950s film and TV, he began his career after distinguished World War II military service as a United States Navy pilot, for which he received the Navy Cross. In 1952, Williams played the lead, a Los Angeles woman killer, in the film Without Warning! In 1953, he was cast as Larry, a car bomber, in The Big Heat. He had a leading role in the 1958 science fiction movie The Space Children. Other notable film roles include the psychiatrist in Fear Strikes Out (1957) and Valerian in North by Northwest (1959). During the 1950s and 1960s, he appeared on dozens of television series, including the syndicated Sheriff of Cochise, set in Arizona and starring John Bromfield, and Have Gun – Will Travel in the episode "The Reasonable Man". He portrayed private detective and murderer Jason Beckmeyer in the 1957 Perry Mason episode "The Case of the Runaway Corpse." In 1961, he was cast as Jim Gates in the episode "Frontier Week" on Joanne Dru's sitcom Guestward, Ho!, set on a dude ranch in New Mexico. In 1960, he played the role of a sailor hitching a ride in The Twilight Zone season 1 episode "The Hitch-Hiker", where he is picked up by a terrified driver played by Inger Stevens, who is compelled to pick him up so that he may offer protection and safety to her from a mysterious hitchhiker who shows up at various times and places along the road while she travels across country. Many reviewers have cited this episode as one of The Twilight Zone's "10 Greatest" of the series. He had also appeared in the Twilight Zone episode "A Most Unusual Camera". Between 1959 and 1967 he appeared in six episodes of The Rifleman and in four episodes of Bonanza, and in 1961 as Adam in "A Rope for Charlie Munday", in the ABC adventure series The Islanders. He was cast as Burley Keller in the 1961 episode "The Persecuted" of the ABC/Warner Brothers western series Lawman. He guest-starred in an episode of the 1961 NBC series The Americans, based on family conflicts stemming from the American Civil War, and in an episode of the 1961 series The Asphalt Jungle. One of his later roles was in the 1976 television movie Helter Skelter.
Cast Credits
- 2012
- 1976
- 1975
- 1971
- 1969
- 1967
- 1966
- 1965
- 1964
- 1963
- 1962
- 1961
- 1960
- 1959

North by Northwest
as
Valerian
1959

Hawaiian Eye
as
Harry Gulliver
1959

The Twilight Zone
as
Woodward
1959

Rawhide
as
Kellino
1959

Black Saddle
as
Brad Pickard
1959

Black Saddle
as
Clint Frome
1959

Bonanza
as
Muller
1959

Bonanza
as
Blackie Marx
1959

Rawhide
as
Jeb
1959

Rawhide
as
Hank Kale
1959

The Untouchables
as
Lloyd Barker
1959

The Detectives
as
Eddie Furman
1959

The Detectives
as
Soley
1959

The Detectives
as
Felix
1959

Bonanza
as
Red Twilight
1959

Bonanza
as
Hardesty
1959

The Untouchables
as
Paul Meadows
1959

The Twilight Zone
as
Sailor
1959
- 1958

Darby's Rangers
as
Heavy Hall
1958

The Space Children
as
Dave Brewster
1958

The Badlanders
as
Deputy Leslie
1958

The Texan
as
Jebb Kilmer
1958

The Rifleman
as
Jake Pardee
1958

The Rifleman
as
Corporal Troc
1958

The Rifleman
as
Jax
1958

The Rifleman
as
Russell Ganaway
1958

The Rifleman
as
Cory Platt
1958

The Rifleman
as
Mal Sherman
1958

77 Sunset Strip
as
Willie Lee Hanks
1958

77 Sunset Strip
as
Axel Derwent
1958

77 Sunset Strip
as
Spud Morrison
1958

77 Sunset Strip
as
Chuck Lynch
1958

Lawman
as
Burley Keller
1958
- 1957

The Garment Jungle
as
Ox
1957

The Lonely Man
as
Lon
1957

The Oklahoman
as
Bob Randell
1957

Fear Strikes Out
as
Doctor Brown
1957

Perry Mason
as
Jason Beckmeyer
1957

M Squad
as
Denny Sutton
1957

Maverick
as
Sam Elkins
1957

Alcoa Theatre
as
Wohlman
1957

Have Gun, Will Travel
as
Frank Gault
1957

Have Gun, Will Travel
as
Beckett
1957

Have Gun, Will Travel
as
Simon Quill
1957

Trackdown
as
Cowboy
1957
- 1956
- 1955
- 1954
- 1953
- 1952
- 1951























































