| Mailing Contact: 2109 S. Wilbur Ave. Walla Walla, WA 99362 E-mail: Time Machine Collectibles    Fax: 509-525-0393
 
 
|  Jeff Corey's memoir is now available.
"Improvising out Loud: My Life Teaching Hollywood How to Act" 
by Jeff Corey with Emily Corey; Foreword by Leonard Nimoy 
Website:
http://www.improvisingoutloud.com
Facebook Page
https://www.facebook.com/jeffcoreyimprovisingoutloud/
Link to Amazon Pre-Order:  
			Jeff Corey's career began in Shakespearean repertory
                in New York. In 1937 He played Rosencrantz in
                Leslie Howard's Hamlet. Subsequent
                N.Y. productions included Life and Death of
                an American, and Transit. 
 Corey came to Hollywood in 1940 and helped
                establish the Actors Lab, under whose aegis he
                performed in Abe Lincoln in Illinois,
                Declaration, Miss Julie,
                To The Living,
                Prometheus, and also produced
                Juno and the Paycock. He toured with
                Ann Sothern in God Bless Our Bank,
                and played Alfieri in the La Jolla production of
                A View From the Bridge. Mr. Corey
                also performed in a production of In the
                Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer, at the
                Mark Taper Forum, and played Polonius in the
                Taper's production of Hamlet. In
                describing Mr. Corey's performance as King Lear
                at the North Shore Playhouse in Massachusetts,
                Pulitzer Prize winning critic William Henry III
                wrote, "In the part Charles Lamb called
                unplayable, he is magnificent."
 
 Corey has appeared in over a hundred features,
                including Home of the Brave,
                The Devil and Daniel Webster,
                My Friend Flicka, Bright
                Leaf with Gary Cooper, Joan of
                Arc with Ingrid Bergman, The
                Killers, Brute Force,
                Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,
                Seconds, Mickey One,
                Getting Straight, The
                Cincinnati Kid, In Cold Blood,
                Beneath the Planet of the Apes,
                Bird on a Wire, Color of
                Night, and Surviving the Game.
                He has also performed in True Grit
                and Wake of the Red Witch, with John
                Wayne, as well as delivering a memorable
                characterization of Wild Bill Hickock opposite
                Dustin Hoffman in Little Big Man.
 
 On television Jeff Corey was a regular on NBC's
                Helltown, and the CBS series
                Morning Star/Evening Star. He has
                made guest star appearances in Star
                Trek, Roseanne, Barney
                Miller, Knott's Landing,
                Baba, Gunsmoke,
                Archie Bunker's Place, Outer
                Limits, The A-Team,
                Rawhide, Night Gallery,
                Hawaii Five-0, Jake and the
                Fatman, Kojak, One Day at
                a Time, Babylon Five, and
                Lou Grant. In 1976 he played Andrew
                Jackson in the bicentennial Land of the
                Free.
 
 As a director, Corey has amassed such credits as
                The Psychiatrist, Night
                Gallery, Sixth Sense,
                Alias Smith and Jones, Sons and
                Daughters, Meeting of the Minds
                for PBS, as well as Anna and the King,
                with Yul Brynner.
 
 Mr. Corey's Professional Actors Workshop,
                attended for many years by Hollywood's most
                talented actors, directors, and screenwriters,
                has been described by Washington's The
                National Observer as, "A major
                influence in the motion picture industry."
                He was appointed Professor of Theater Arts at
                California State University in Northridge, and
                was artist in residence at Ball State, in
                Indiana, The University of Illinois in
                Bloomington, Chapman College's World Campus
                Afloat, the University of Texas in Austin, and
                the Graduate School of Creative Writing at N.Y.U.
                He has conducted seminars at Emory University in
                Atlanta, and for the Canadian Film Institute in
                Vancouver, British Columbia.
 
 Jeff Corey was also awarded three citations for
                his work as a motion picture combat photographer
                in World War II. In October 1945 he received a
                citation from Secretary of the Navy James
                Forrestal and Captain Edward Steichen with the
                following commendation, "His sequence of a
                Kamikaze attempt on the Carrier Yorktown, done in
                the face of grave danger, is one of the great
                picture sequences of the war in the Pacific, and
                reflects the highest credit upon Corey and the
                U.S. Navy Photographic Service."
 
 1914 - 2002
 He will be missed by all.
 
 
 | LA Times Article  August 18th 
 Jeff
  Corey, 88; Blacklist Led Actor to TeachingHis list of students is a who's who of the
  Hollywood elite since
 the 1950's. They include James Dean, Anthony Perkins, Jane Fonda and Jack
  Nicholson.
 "Acting is life study, and Corey's classes got me into looking at life as
  an artist."  Jack Nicholson
By
  JON THURBER, TIMES STAFF WRITER
 Jeff
  Corey, a gifted actor who was blacklisted for refusing to name names before
  the House Committee on Un-American Activities in the 1950s but emerged as one
  of the most sought-after teachers in Hollywood, has died. He was 88.
 Perhaps best-known for his post-blacklist roles in "Butch Cassidy and the
  Sundance Kid," "In Cold Blood," "Little Big Man" and
  on the TV sitcoms "One Day at a Time" and "Night Court,"
  Corey died Friday morning at St. John's Medical Center in Santa Monica of
  complications from a fall earlier in the week at his home in Malibu.
 
 To generations of actors, directors and writers, Corey's name on the blacklist
  didn't mean a thing. They came to his informal classes for his insightful
  ideas on the craft of acting and views on how to handle challenging roles.
 
 His list of students makes up a who's who of the Hollywood elite since the
  1950s and includes James Dean, Anthony Perkins, Shirley Knight, Jane Fonda,
  Peter Fonda, Robert Blake, Leonard Nimoy, Robin Williams, Rob Reiner, Robert
  Towne, Roger Corman, Penny Marshall, Taylor Hackford and a young Jack
  Nicholson.
 
 "Acting is life study, and Corey's classes got me into looking at life as
  an artist," Nicholson said years later.
 Those who knew Corey's teaching process said he was a Stanislavsky Method
  teacher but with a small "m." His process was eclectic and involved
  one-on-one work with an actor. He created improvisational exercises that
  allowed actors to engage their imaginations and subconscious minds in pursuit
  of a theme that they could apply to their roles.
 
 Corey was always pursuing a current underlying emotional and psychological
  theme in the actor's work. And in doing that, he was trying to help the actor
  relate to the here and now rather than the arcane notion of the character's
  circumstances.
 "I tell my students, 'Respect the instrument. It is you doing the
  acting,' " Corey told The Times some years ago. "By all means, you
  must be responsive to the meaning of the play, to what the author meant and to
  what the audience will ultimately see. Engage your own intuition, use your own
  frames of reference and give something which is uniquely yours; put something
  rich into your performance rather than some external result that hasn't got
  your face. Simplicity is the cherished quality."
 Corey didn't set out to be a teacher. An indifferent student in high school in
  New York City, he took a drama class and became intrigued with acting. He
  earned a scholarship to the Feagin School of Dramatic Arts, then a leading
  theater school in New York City, which he later said kept him from a career
  selling sewing machines. From there, he did work in Shakespearean repertory
  and then worked with a traveling children's theater troupe. His first meaty
  stage role was in Leslie Howard's touring production of "Hamlet," in
  which he played Rosencrantz.
 
 Corey and his wife moved to Los Angeles, and he found work, appearing in 23
  films from 1940 to 1943, including "The Devil and Daniel Webster,"
  "My Friend Flicka," and "Joan of Arc." He joined the Navy
  in 1943 and was assigned to the ship Yorktown as a combat photographer. He
  earned citations for some footage he shot during a kamikaze attack on the
  ship.
 After the war, Corey returned to Hollywood and resumed his busy career playing
  heavies in such films as "The Killers" and "Brute Force."
  He also played the role of a psychiatrist in "Home of the Brave,"
  one of his best performances.
 Corey seemed ready for even better film parts as the second lead or top
  character actor, when he was subpoenaed to testify before the House Committee
  on Un-American Activities, which had been investigating Communist influence in
  Hollywood since 1947.
 
 The actor was scheduled to appear at the hearing in downtown Los Angeles in
  September 1951. He was 37 and had a wife and three daughters to support. But
  he took the 5th Amendment and didn't work again as an actor in Hollywood for
  more than a decade, missing out on countless movie opportunities and what
  would later be considered the golden age of television.
 "Most of us were retired reds. We had left it, at least I had, years
  before," Corey told Patrick McGilligan, the co-author of "Tender
  Comrades: A Backstory of the Hollywood Blacklist" who also teaches film
  at Marquette University. "The only issue was, did you want to just give
  them their token names so you could continue your career, or not? I had no
  impulse to defend a political point of view that no longer interested me
  particularly .... They just wanted two new names so they could hand out more
  subpoenas."
 
 He found work as a laborer earning $14 a day and enrolled as a freshman at
  UCLA on the GI Bill. He eventually earned a degree in speech therapy. Corey
  would later say that he fell into teaching somewhat by accident. He said a
  student who was failing miserably in another program organized the first class
  and talked him into teaching it, which he did in the garage of his Hollywood
  Hills home. Carol Burnett, then a freshman at UCLA, was among the students.
  Word of mouth kept the classes going as Corey, a self-effacing man, didn't
  promote himself or advertise and did little to encourage enrollment. By the
  mid-1950s, he was the most sought-after acting coach in Hollywood. Studios
  that would not hire Corey as an actor because of the blacklist actively sent
  their young talent to study with him.
 
 Corey himself wouldn't start working again in films until 1962, when he was
  offered parts in the films "The Balcony" and "The Yellow
  Canary." One of his students, Pat Boone, helped him get the part in
  "The Yellow Canary" by talking the legal department at Fox into
  taking him on.Over the next 35 years, Corey appeared in more than 70 films or
  television series. He also got chances to direct. According to McGilligan,
  Corey was "an actor's actor, someone that actors loved to watch because
  he was always doing something interesting in his work."
 
 "Jeff was articulate about ideas, provocative and inspirational,"
  McGilligan told The Times on Saturday. "He was a wonderful actor who we
  never fully got to see because of the blacklist."
 
 Corey is survived by Hope, his wife of 64 years; three daughters, Eve Corey
  Poling of Atlanta; Jane Corey of Elk, Calif., and Emily Corey of Los Angeles;
  and six grandchildren.
 
 |  | FILMS (Link to IMDB) 
 Filmography
 Lottery, The (1996) (TV) .... Albert Smith
 Color of Night (1994) .... Ashland
 Surviving the Game (1994) .... Hank
 Beethoven's 2nd (1993) .... Janitor
 Judas Project, The (1993) .... Poneras
 Ruby Cairo (1993) .... Joe Dick
 ... aka Deception (1993)
 ... aka Missing Link: Ruby Cairo, The (1993)
 Sinatra (1992) (TV) .... Quinlin
 Payoff (1991) (TV) .... Don Anzia
 To My Daughter (1990) (TV) .... Travis
 Bird on a Wire (1990) .... Lou Baird
 Rose and the Jackal, The (1990) (TV)
 Tajna manastirske rakije (1989) .... Colonel Frazier
 ... aka Secret Ingredient (1989)
 Messenger of Death (1988) .... Willis Beecham
 Second Serve (1986) (TV) .... Dr. Harry
                Benjamin
 ... aka I Change My Life (1986) (TV)
 Creator (1985) .... Dean Harrington
 Father of Hell Town (1985) (TV) .... Lawyer
                Sam
 Final Jeopardy (1985) (TV) .... Derelict
 Conan the Destroyer (1984)
 Sword and the Sorcerer, The (1982) ....
                Craccus
 Cry for the Strangers (1982) (TV)
 Battle Beyond the Stars (1980) .... Zed
 Homeward Bound (1980) (TV) .... George
 Butch and Sundance: The Early Days (1979) ....
                Sheriff Bledsoe
 Up River (1979) .... Bagshaw
 Wild Geese, The (1978) .... Mr. Martin
 Harold Robbins' The Pirate (1978) (TV) ....
                Prince Feiyad
 ... aka Pirate, The (1978) (TV)
 Jennifer (1978) .... Luke Baylor
 ... aka Jennifer the Snake Goddess (1978)
 Curse of the Black Widow (1977) (TV) .... Aspa
 ... aka Love Trap (1977/II) (TV)
 Moonshine County Express (1977) .... Hagen
 Oh, God! (1977) .... Rabbi
 Last Tycoon, The (1976) .... Doctor
 Premonition, The (1976) .... Det. Lt. Mark
                Denver
 Paper Tiger (1975) .... Mr. King
 Set This Town on Fire (1973) (TV)
 ... aka Profane Comedy, The (1973) (TV)
 Something Evil (1972) (TV) .... Gehrmann
 Shootout (1971) .... Trooper
 Catlow (1971) .... Merridew
 ... aka Oro de nadie, El (1971) (Spain)
 Clay Pigeon (1971)
 Beneath the Planet of the Apes (1970) ....
                Caspay
 ... aka Planet of the Apes Revisited (1970) (USA)
 ... aka Planet of the Men (1970) (USA)
 Clear and Present Danger, A (1970) (TV) ....
                Beiseker
 Cover Me Babe (1970)
 ... aka Run Shadow Run (1970)
 Getting Straight (1970) .... Dr. Willhunt
 Impasse (1970) .... Wombat
 Little Big Man (1970) .... Wild Bill Hickok
 They Call Me MISTER Tibbs! (1970) .... Capt.
                Hank Marden
 Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969) ....
                Sheriff Bledsoe
 True Grit (1969) .... Tom Chaney
 Boston Strangler, The (1968) .... John
                Asgeirsson
 In Cold Blood (1967) .... Mr. Hickock
 Seconds (1966) .... Mr. Ruby
 Once a Thief (1965) .... Lt. Kebner
 Cincinnati Kid, The (1965) .... Hoban
 Mickey One (1965) .... Fryer
 Lady in a Cage (1964) .... George L. Brady Jr.
 Balcony, The (1963)
 Yellow Canary (1963)
 Superman and the Mole Men (1951) .... Luke
                Benson
 ... aka Superman and the Strange People (1951)
 Only the Valiant (1951) .... Joe Harmony
 Fourteen Hours (1951) .... Sergeant Farley
 Never Trust a Gambler (1951) .... Lou Brecker
 New Mexico (1951) .... Coyote
 Prince Who Was a Thief, The (1951) .... Emir
                Mokar
 Rawhide (1951) .... Lake Davis
 ... aka Desperate Siege (1951)
 Red Mountain (1951) .... Skee
 Bright Leaf (1950) .... John Barton
 Nevadan, The (1950)
 ... aka Man from Nevada, The (1950)
 Next Voice You Hear, The (1950) .... Freddie
                Dibson
 Singing Guns (1950) .... Richards
 Bagdad (1949) .... Mohammed Jao
 City Across the River (1949) .... Lieutenant
                Macon
 Follow Me Quietly (1949) .... Sgt. Art Collins
 Hideout (1949) .... Beecham
 Home of the Brave (1949) .... Doctor
 Kidnapped (1948) .... Shuan
 Alias a Gentleman (1948) .... Zu
 Canon City (1948) .... Schwartzmiller
 Joan of Arc (1948) .... Prison Guard
 Southern Yankee, A (1948) .... Union Cavalry
                Sergeant
 ... aka My Hero (1948)
 Wake of the Red Witch (1948) .... Mr. Loring
 Wreck of the Hesperus, The (1948)
 Unconquered (1947) (uncredited) .... Trapper
 Ramrod (1947) .... Bice
 Brute Force (1947) .... Freshman
 Gangster, The (1947) .... Brother-in-law
 Hoppy's Holiday (1947) .... Jed
 Miracle on 34th Street (1947) (uncredited)
                .... Reporter
 ... aka Big Heart, The (1947)
 Killers, The (1946) (uncredited) .... Blinky
                Franklin
 ... aka Man Alone, A (1946)
 Somewhere in the Night (1946)
 California (1946) (uncredited) .... Man
 It Shouldn't Happen to a Dog (1946) .... Sam
                Black
 ... aka It Couldn't Happen to a Dog (1946) (UK)
 Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man (1943)
                (uncredited) .... Bit Part
 Moon Is Down, The (1943) (uncredited) ....
                Albert
 My Friend Flicka (1943) .... Tim Murphy
 Man Who Wouldn't Die, The (1942) .... Coroner
                Larson
 North to the Klondike (1942) .... Man
 Postman Didn't Ring, The (1942) .... Harwood
                Green
 Roxie Hart (1942) (uncredited) .... Orderly
 Who Is Hope Schuyler? (1942) .... Medical
                Examiner
 Reluctant Dragon, The (1941)
 ... aka Behind the Scenes at Walt Disney Studio
                (1941)
 Devil and Daniel Webster, The (1941) .... Tom
                Sharp
 ... aka All That Money Can Buy (1941)
 ... aka Certain Mr. Scratch, A (1941)
 ... aka Daniel and the Devil (1941)
 ... aka Here Is a Man (1941)
 Lady from Cheyenne, The (1941) (uncredited)
                .... Reporter
 Mutiny in the Arctic (1941) .... The Cook
 Petticoat Politics (1941) .... Henry Trotter
 Small Town Deb (1941) .... Hector
 You Belong to Me (1941) (uncredited) .... Man
 ... aka Good Morning, Doctor (1941)
 You'll Find Out (1940) .... Mr. Corey
 ... aka Here Come the Boogie Men (1940)
 
 Director Filmography
 Night Gallery (1970) TV Series
 ... aka Rod Serling's Night Gallery
                (1970) (USA)
 
 Television
 Nothing Sacred (1997)
 Murphy Brown (1997
 Babylon 5 (1994) playing
                Justin in episode:
   
                Z'ha'dum (episode # 3.22) 10/28/1996
 Picket Fences (1992) playing
                Cancer Patient in episode:
    This
                Little Piggy 12/15/1995
 Roseanne (1988) playing
                salesman in episode:
    Death and
                Stuff (episode # 1.21) 4/11/1989
 War of the Worlds (1988) playing
                Francis Flannery in episode:
   
                Eye For An Eye (episode # 1.6)
                10/31/1988
 A-Team, The (1983) playing
                AJ 1986
 Whiz Kids (1983) playing
                Martin Beal in episode:
    Watch
                Out! (episode # 1.11) 1/14/1984
 Bionic Woman, The (1976) in
                episode:
    Daemon Creature, The 1976
 Bob Newhart Show, The (1972)
                playing Dr. Scott Rivers in episode:
   
                Old Man Rivers 1973
 Night Gallery (1970) playing
                Dr. Miles Talmadge in episode:
   
                Dead Man, The (episode # 1.1)
                12/16/1970
 Bonanza (1959) in episode:
   
                Single Pilgrim, A (episode # 12.15)
                1970
 Star Trek (1966) playing
                Plasus in episode:
   
                Cloudminders, The (episode # 3.19)
                2/28/1969
 Gunsmoke (1955) playing
                Judge Procter in episode:
    Night
                Riders, The (episode # 14.22) 2/24/1969
 Wild, Wild West, The (1965) in
                episode:
    Night of the Underground Terror,
                The (episode # 3.19) 1/19/1968
 Garrison's Gorillas (1967) playing
                Insp. Gauzmann in episode:
   
                Grab, The 1967
 Wild, Wild West, The (1965)
                playing Captain Ansel Coffin in
                episode:
    Night of a Thousand Eyes,
                The (episode # 1.6)
 10/22/1965
 Perry Mason (1957) playing
                Bascom in episode:
    Case of the
                Reckless Rock Hound, The (episode # 8.10)
                11/26/1964
 Outer Limits, The (1963) playing
                Mr. Byron Lomax in episode:
   
                O.B.I.T. (episode # 1.6) 11/4/1963
 Untouchables, The (1959) playing
                Max Frimmel in episode:
   
                Antidote, The (episode # 2.20)
                3/9/1961
 Spider-Man (1995) playing
                Silvermane
 Marshal, The (1995)
 Streets of San Francisco, The
                (1972) playing Ralph Bowen,
 U.S.
                Senator in episode: Shattered                Image
 
 
 |  |   
 Autographed Photos - 
Orders - 
Gallery - 
Time Machine - 
Links
 
 
  
  
 
   |   |   |  |