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Denny Miller
★ Acting

Denny Miller

1934 – 2014 · Bloomington, Indiana, USA · Active 1953–2017

Born in Bloomington, Indiana, on April 25, 1934, Denny Miller's family eventually settled in Los Angeles. As a 6'4" college student, Miller found success as the star player of UCLA's basketball team and earned a degree in physical education from the university. Following a stint in the Army, by chance Miller was discovered by a talent agent in 1958 while working a summer job and signed a multi-year contract with MGM. Miller's first starring film role was Tarzan, the Ape Man, released by MGM in 1959. Although Miller's film career never achieved great momentum, he did lots of television, includ...

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Brainwash

Brainwash

1983 ★ 6.2
as Uwe

The hard-driven Bianca Ray is the chief executive of an international advertising corporation called "Mystique" who feels the gathered executive leadership is in decline. The organization is known for its effective and successful "Executive Development Training", or EDT.[1] They are offered to take the training or face possible termination. The story highlights Jack and Lyn Nilsson, who are a decent all-American couple.[2] As an aspiring young junior executive who is up for a promotion to vice-president, Jack concludes he and Lyn must take the training or he won’t be considered for advancement. These executives (all men) and their wives are required to spend a weekend with Bianca and her training staff at a luxury resort where they are put under increasing psychological pressure.[3] As a prerequisite to the training they all sign a waiver giving the company permission to physically and psychologically debase them for the duration of the course.[2] The trainees are split into two groups by gender and are brutally forced to face their perceived shortcomings, such as obesity, alcoholism,[2] closeted homosexuality, and cross-dressing. The mostly black hotel staff, familiar with the training, watch from the sidelines providing social commentary to each other.[4] The weekend starts out pleasantly as the participants play tennis, dance and socialize. The next day the men’s training begins when the white cane wielding Bianca, flanked by brawny assistants, explains the goal is “Designed to free them from themselves. . .and throw off the biological shackles that bind their lives”. She first selects obese administrator Buddy to enter “the pit”. She compels him to strip naked, accept a harsh paddling, enter a cage and be force-fed discarded food from the trash. Bianca guides him to an epiphany that causes him to understand the reason for his overeating. Next she calls out alcoholic Ben, saying he cares for nothing but drink and is already a deadman. She orders a coffin brought to the pit, has Ben sealed inside, then buried outside by the other men. His wife watches weeping as Ben screams and pounds on the coffin’s lid. Bianca orders him released. Ben says he saw himself as a deadman but now cares, exclaiming to Jack “It really works!”, thanks Bianca and hugs his coworkers in tearful gratitude. The women’s group shows them being yelled at, slapped around (Lyn receives an especially heavy blow) and humiliated by trainer Jordan Carelli, who confronts and berates them for their failures as wives and mothers to “…relieve people of their hang-ups”. As the training proceeds, several seminar executives and their wives lose their inhibitions in the "consciousness-raising" coursework, and claim they have had a breakthrough.[5] Back in the men’s group, Bianca accuses the accountant Ted of being a self-sacrificing martyr and coward with delusions of superiority, then orders him beaten by the other men and tied to a cross. This proves too much for Jack and he decides he cannot be a party to the violence and physical abuse. Jack and Lyn decide to escape, but they are caught by Bianca and the other participants (many who sport bruises but are now enthusiastic acolytes) and taken to the room where Ted remains tied to a cross. Bianca accuses Jack of being a quitter, too distracted to stay at any one school or job for any meaningful length of time. Lyn is stripped to her underwear and restrained at one end of the room. Bianca will permit the couple to leave if Jack can successfully fight his way past all the others and get to Lyn. Jack succeeds and declares he feels incredible and successful as the others applaud while Lyn stands by dismayed. Bianca declares his future secure. But Jack then grabs Bianca, chokingly restrains her with the cane and declares the whole thing as a fraud that doesn’t work because no one has changed: Buddy is still gorging on sneaked food and Ben is still secretly drinking. Bianca allows the couple to leave along with Ted and his wife. After they are gone, Bianca announces that Jack has passed the training and is now a true leader.

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Career Highlights Top 6 by popularity · TMDB

Filmography

90 credits
2010s 1 credit
2017
Tarzan: Lord of the Movies as Tarzan (Archive Footage)
Movie
1990s 4 credits
1997
Movie ★ 10.0
1996
Movie
1993
TV ★ 7.6
1980s 19 credits
1986
Blacke's Magic as Sonny Schreiber
TV ★ 6.8
1984
More Than Murder as Tallahassee
Movie ★ 4.6
1984
Murder, She Wrote as Nils Anderson
TV ★ 7.5
1983
Movie ★ 5.0
1983
Movie ★ 6.3
1983
TV ★ 6.5
1982
Knight Rider as Big Ed Barton
TV ★ 7.5
1982
Voyagers! as Little John
TV ★ 7.5
1982
Matt Houston as Jerry Fenton
TV ★ 6.3
1982
Matt Houston as Dolclek
TV ★ 6.3
1981
Simon & Simon as Gilbert Dunn
TV ★ 6.7
1980
Caboblanco as Horst
Movie ★ 5.4
1980
Magnum, P.I. as Leon Platt
TV ★ 7.3
1980
TV ★ 5.0
1980
Beyond Westworld as Earl Case
TV ★ 5.4
1980
TV ★ 7.3
1980
Magnum, P.I. as FBI Agent Longdon
TV ★ 7.3
1980
TV ★ 7.5
1970s 38 credits
1979
TV ★ 7.0
1979
Hart to Hart as Trammell
TV ★ 6.9
1978
Dr. Scorpion as The Dane
Movie ★ 7.0
1978
The Norseman as Rauric
Movie ★ 3.4
1978
TV ★ 7.0
1978
TV ★ 6.3
1978
TV ★ 6.5
1978
TV ★ 7.1
1977
Movie ★ 7.0
1977
The Incredible Hulk as John Tobey
TV ★ 7.2
1977
Quark as Zoltar
TV ★ 6.7
1976
TV ★ 7.1
1976
Quincy, M.E. as Ben Chase
TV ★ 7.5
1976
Charlie's Angels as Helmut Klaus
TV ★ 6.7
1976
Charlie's Angels as Ed Fellows
TV ★ 6.7
1976
Charlie's Angels as Jeff Stanowitch
TV ★ 6.7
1975
Nick and Nora as Garrity
Movie
1975
Wonder Woman as Carl Schwartz
TV ★ 7.0
1975
Bronk as Mark Lynn
TV ★ 6.8
1974
Movie ★ 6.5
1974
Movie ★ 5.7
1974
TV ★ 7.3
1974
TV ★ 7.3
1974
TV ★ 7.6
1974
The Rockford Files as Chris Jenks
TV ★ 7.6
1973
TV ★ 7.0
1972
Movie ★ 6.3
1972
Doomsday Machine as Col. Don Price
Movie ★ 3.3
1972
TV ★ 7.0
1972
Emergency! as Brock Caine
TV ★ 7.9
1972
TV ★ 7.0
1972
M*A*S*H as Military Policeman
TV ★ 7.9
1971
Making It as Skeeter
Movie ★ 4.3
1971
Vanished as Big Bubba Toubo
TV ★ 5.0
1971
Sarge as The Rockhead
TV ★ 7.5
1971
Cannon as Phil Sedakis
TV ★ 6.7
1970
McCloud as Murphy Michaels
TV ★ 7.2
1960s 19 credits
1969
The Brady Bunch as Tank Gates
TV ★ 6.7
1969
TV ★ 6.1
1968
The Party as 'Wyoming Bill' Kelso
Movie ★ 7.3
1968
Hawaii Five-O as John Hayes
TV ★ 7.2
1968
The Name of the Game as Bill Beauregard
TV ★ 7.0
1967
Ironside as Matt Wratten
TV ★ 6.9
1967
TV ★ 6.8
1966
TV ★ 6.9
1966
Mission: Impossible as Arthur Norris
TV ★ 7.6
1965
Mona McCluskey as Mike McCluskey
TV ★ 7.0
1965
TV ★ 7.8
1964
Gilligan's Island as Duke Williams
TV ★ 7.4
1964
Gilligan's Island as Tongo the Ape Man
TV ★ 7.4
1963
The Fugitive as Willie Turner
TV ★ 7.3
1962
The Virginian as Joe Terry
TV ★ 6.5
1961
Love in a Goldfish Bowl as Oscar Flegler
Movie ★ 5.5
1961
Fury River as Cooper
Movie ★ 6.3
1961
Ben Casey as Welsey Boone
TV ★ 5.9
1960
TV ★ 6.7
1950s 9 credits
1959
Movie ★ 4.5
1959
The Deputy as Bill Jason
TV ★ 6.5
1958
Some Came Running as Dewey Cole (uncredited)
Movie ★ 7.0
1958
The Rifleman as Reuben Miles
TV ★ 7.1
1957
Have Gun, Will Travel as Svenska - Swede
TV ★ 7.3
1957
Wagon Train as Duke Shannon
TV ★ 6.6
1955
Gunsmoke as Lijah
TV ★ 6.7
1953
TV ★ 6.8
1953
TV ★ 6.7