John Phillip Law, 70; actor played blind angel in 'Barbarella'
By Claire Noland, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
May 15, 2008
John
Phillip Law, a tall, blond actor who cut a striking figure as the blind
angel opposite Jane Fonda in 1968's "Barbarella" and in other film
roles, has died. He was 70.
Law died Tuesday at his Los Angeles home, his former wife, Shawn Ryan, said. The cause of death was not announced.
Born in Los Angeles on Sept. 7, 1937, to L.A. County Sheriff's Deputy
John Law and actress Phyllis Sallee, Law decided to become an actor
after taking drama classes at the University of Hawaii.
He moved
to New York in the early 1960s, studied with Elia Kazan at the Lincoln
Center Repertory Theater and landed bit parts on Broadway. He went to
Europe and found work in a handful of Italian films, where he caught
the attention of Norman Jewison. The director cast Law as Alexei
Kolchin, a young Soviet submariner who wins the heart of a teenage
baby-sitter in "The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming," his
1966 Cold War comedy set in New England.
Law's next break came in Roger Vadim's science fiction fantasy starring Fonda, who was then married to the director.
Equipped
with oversize, feathery wings, Law's bronzed angel, Pygar, shields
Fonda's gun-toting, go-go-boot-wearing heroine in her intergalactic
adventures.
After gaining notice for his roles in "Hurry
Sundown" (1967), "The Sergeant" (1968) opposite Rod Steiger, and "The
Red Baron" (1970), Law starred as the ruthless Robin Stone in "The Love
Machine," a 1971 version of Jacqueline Susann's pulp novel. The movie
flopped.
Law, who mastered Italian and Spanish in his European
travels, worked steadily in Hollywood and abroad, appearing in such
action-adventure movies as "The Golden Voyage of Sinbad" (1974), "The
Cassandra Crossing" (1977) and "Tarzan the Ape Man" (1981), among
others. He also had a stint playing Jim Grainger on the daytime
television drama "The Young and the Restless."
At the beginning
of his career in the '60s, Law lived in a 1924 Los Feliz mansion with
his brother, Tom, who had been the road manager for Peter, Paul and
Mary.
The brothers rented rooms to up-and-coming singers and
artists, including Bob Dylan, Andy Warhol and Tiny Tim, turning the
home into a vibrant salon of emerging pop-culture icons. Life at the
Castle, as it was known, was documented in “Flashing on the Sixties,” a
1987 collection of photos and text by Tom's former wife, Lisa Law.
Besides his brother, Law is survived by a daughter, Dawn, and a grandson.
Services will be private.
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